EV Acceleration
Author
Discussion

Juanco20

Original Poster:

3,342 posts

215 months

Yesterday (20:10)
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I'm looking at purchasing my first electric car and those with a sub 4 second 0-60 are particularly enticing. For those who own such a car, does that thrill quickly wear off and you find yourself not really using it or does it still put a grin on your face everytime you put your foot down?


FeelingLucky

1,172 posts

186 months

Yesterday (20:15)
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Not yet. neither does the razor sharp throttle response.

napistonheads

93 posts

85 months

Yesterday (20:31)
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1 year and 11k miles in it still puts a smile on my face. The overall responsiveness just makes it a pleasure to drive

stef1808

1,023 posts

179 months

Yesterday (20:33)
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For me the crazy acceleration just becomes the new normal once you get used to it. Still fun but it doesnt give that huge grin every time like when you first do it. It just makes regular cars feel slow and sluggish.

It’s actually really given me a renewed appreciation for driving a proper analogue ICE car. No need to speed but just feeling the mechanical side, working the gears etc really becomes enjoyable after living with effortless EV torque. I love both

MG4XPower

168 posts

28 months

Yesterday (20:33)
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Juanco20 said:
I'm looking at purchasing my first electric car and those with a sub 4 second 0-60 are particularly enticing. For those who own such a car, does that thrill quickly wear off and you find yourself not really using it or does it still put a grin on your face everytime you put your foot down?
I have slightly got used to the acceleration, but I've never got bored of 3.8s to 60mph from a standstill. Actually - you've just jogged my memory - I'm ordering a set of Michelin PS5 tyres this week to replace the factory Bridgestone Turanza EV tyres (E005?) And I'd like to see what the traction is like. I expect the Michelin tyres to reduce range by around 10% and to have superior grip and traction in both the wet and the dry compared to the stock Bridgestones (which were fine in the dry but seemed a bit quick to give up traction in the wet).

The instant torque/throttle response never gets old. Being able to nip into gaps, or finding yourself in the wrong lane for an exit means I can nail the throttle and be in the correct lane within a second of the lights going green. Performance isn't everything, but the instant throttle response is something I don't think I could willingly give up unless I was forced to ie circumstances dictating getting rid of the EV.

I get quite a bit of enjoyment from sticking to the speed limits on my commute (A11 and A47 both have sections with average speed cameras and a limit of 40mph), so I stick to it religiously and enjoy watching dipsts behind me (usually van drivers) get visibily annoyed that I'm not exceeding the limit - to then mash the throttle pedal as we reach a NSL sign and they become a dot in my rear view within seconds. Usually takes them a mile or so to catch up and pass as I'm doing 70 and they fly by at 80+. This also seems to annoy them - but fk them - that's not my problem.

It's quite amusing when you have a Polo-wielding road man with his tin can exhaust revving his engine at the lights, while I fk off into the distance within seconds of the lights turning green and they're still wheelspinning at the lights, making a racket and a tit of themselves.

normalbloke

8,449 posts

241 months

Yesterday (20:50)
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MG4XPower said:
Juanco20 said:
I'm looking at purchasing my first electric car and those with a sub 4 second 0-60 are particularly enticing. For those who own such a car, does that thrill quickly wear off and you find yourself not really using it or does it still put a grin on your face everytime you put your foot down?
I have slightly got used to the acceleration, but I've never got bored of 3.8s to 60mph from a standstill. Actually - you've just jogged my memory - I'm ordering a set of Michelin PS5 tyres this week to replace the factory Bridgestone Turanza EV tyres (E005?) And I'd like to see what the traction is like. I expect the Michelin tyres to reduce range by around 10% and to have superior grip and traction in both the wet and the dry compared to the stock Bridgestones (which were fine in the dry but seemed a bit quick to give up traction in the wet).

The instant torque/throttle response never gets old. Being able to nip into gaps, or finding yourself in the wrong lane for an exit means I can nail the throttle and be in the correct lane within a second of the lights going green. Performance isn't everything, but the instant throttle response is something I don't think I could willingly give up unless I was forced to ie circumstances dictating getting rid of the EV.

I get quite a bit of enjoyment from sticking to the speed limits on my commute (A11 and A47 both have sections with average speed cameras and a limit of 40mph), so I stick to it religiously and enjoy watching dipsts behind me (usually van drivers) get visibily annoyed that I'm not exceeding the limit - to then mash the throttle pedal as we reach a NSL sign and they become a dot in my rear view within seconds. Usually takes them a mile or so to catch up and pass as I'm doing 70 and they fly by at 80+. This also seems to annoy them - but fk them - that's not my problem.

It's quite amusing when you have a Polo-wielding road man with his tin can exhaust revving his engine at the lights, while I fk off into the distance within seconds of the lights turning green and they're still wheelspinning at the lights, making a racket and a tit of themselves.
Ah, he’s arrived.

MOBB

4,296 posts

149 months

Yesterday (21:27)
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761bhp in launch mode is pretty horrible to be honest, it’s the instant throttle response that’s more useful day to day

TheDeuce

31,116 posts

88 months

Yesterday (22:19)
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By far and away the best benefit of a sub 4 second EV is it's 30-70mph overtaking punch and ability to dart into any gap.

But practicalities aside... The actual 0-60 never gets boring. I've only ever engaged launch control a few times but even lazily stomping the pedal when the lights change, on a whim, delivers the sort of acceleration that is simply fun - whatever the detractors say.. of course it's fun smile

Cheap too! And quiet, no engine roar, no wheelspin. If plod watches you leave the lights like that I'm not sure what they'd have to complain about - providing you lift ahead of actually speeding...

cliffords

3,537 posts

45 months

Yesterday (22:33)
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We should enjoy whilst we can. I ride motorcycles too and I can see the fun being removed from EVs at some point . Australia looking at it now as well as Singapore, overall limited performance on new EVs sold from 2029.

Mammasaid

5,245 posts

119 months

Yesterday (22:40)
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cliffords said:
We should enjoy whilst we can. I ride motorcycles too and I can see the fun being removed from EVs at some point . Australia looking at it now as well as Singapore, overall limited performance on new EVs sold from 2029.
Please let us know what your evidence is for this. Australia's New Vehicle Efficiency Standard makes no mention of it.

https://www.infrastructure.gov.au/infrastructure-t...

TheDeuce

31,116 posts

88 months

Yesterday (22:45)
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cliffords said:
We should enjoy whilst we can. I ride motorcycles too and I can see the fun being removed from EVs at some point . Australia looking at it now as well as Singapore, overall limited performance on new EVs sold from 2029.
Have you got a link to the plan Australia are looking at? I've never heard of it. They have their new driver limits of car performance, but new drivers tend not to have high powered EV's of course.

I do wonder if at some point legislation will cap car performance in some way, these cars are getting very powerful... But every other time in history that such a plan has been mooted, the car makers have come up with their own supposed internal agreements to not exceed certain limits - which they always ultimately ignore a short while later.

Even if such legislation were to be introduced, it wouldn't apply to cars bought before the rule change - so no reason to worry about buying one 'today' smile

MG4XPower

168 posts

28 months

Yesterday (22:46)
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normalbloke said:
Ah, he s arrived.
Meaning?

TheDeuce

31,116 posts

88 months

Yesterday (23:02)
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Mammasaid said:
cliffords said:
We should enjoy whilst we can. I ride motorcycles too and I can see the fun being removed from EVs at some point . Australia looking at it now as well as Singapore, overall limited performance on new EVs sold from 2029.
Please let us know what your evidence is for this. Australia's New Vehicle Efficiency Standard makes no mention of it.

https://www.infrastructure.gov.au/infrastructure-t...
I've googled it, and asked 2 AI's, can't find anything - other than the existing P1/P2 licence performance limits and the new limit on emissions for certain car types. As for Singapore... Who cares? The country is more or less one huge city grid anyway, with existing very strict traffic laws confused

Come to think of it, a common complaint in Australia is new car models not reaching their shores... Such a policy would only make that frustration grow and wouldn't be a vote winner!


uktrailmonster

9,350 posts

222 months

Yesterday (23:17)
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Juanco20 said:
I'm looking at purchasing my first electric car and those with a sub 4 second 0-60 are particularly enticing. For those who own such a car, does that thrill quickly wear off and you find yourself not really using it or does it still put a grin on your face everytime you put your foot down?
The instant torque at any legal speed never wears off. Most ICE cars feel agricultural once you get used to it.