dashoonage wrote: » So right...as your ev's get older, and the battery degrades , so does the range , eventually are you just left with a shell and some dead batteries?
dashoonage wrote: » Ok cool. Wasnt trolling. Should have googled. Genuinely didn't know much about how long it would take for the degrade etc and that it would be longer than the life if the body. Cheers
Silent Running wrote: » OK Sorry for the sarcasm so. Your question came fully loaded, so I assumed the usual. As you'll find elsewhere on here, the batteries can be used for storage in a solar PV system after they've finished duty in an EV. In the early days of EVs, the batteries were an unknown quantity, but as they served well in initial cars, and better in later cars, it became clear that the batteries could outlast the cars. The range would reduce as deterioration occurs, but not to the stage where it becomes a problem early in the life of the car.
[Deleted User] wrote: » For example a new cat had 500km range
DrPhilG wrote: » Poor wee sod will be knackered!
krissovo wrote: » I met a Leaf driver this evening at a charger who put additional clothes on getting into the car, Woolley hat, gloves, scarf, puffer jacket and extra pair of jeans over the leggings. I had to laugh out loud but she said it will save a stop on the way home with as much turned off as possible and some eco driving. At what stage of EV ownership do we adopt these practices? I am still driving like I stole mine.
physioman wrote: » Yeah I'd love an ev but it must be within budget and have good range. I do laugh at passing out LEAF drivers on the m50 doing 80kph. I'd want an ev but not that restriction
September1 wrote: » I used to own 1st gen LEAF and driving with those restrictions was quite an adventure. I would do 500km trips even though I had an ICE car. I would come back cold and tired, but satisfied that I managed to do it again.
ELM327 wrote: » My longest trip in my l24 was 600km, but back then you could actually use the public network :P
from_atozinc wrote: » How much was a Nissan Leaf 24kw when brand new? I know different years etc, let’s say the 2014 version.
slave1 wrote: » Then get a new battery pack, place in Netherlands fitting 40 battery packs to 2011 Nissan Leafs, also fitting extender batteries into the boot for even longer range!
McGiver wrote: » Do you have a link to the company? NINJAEDIT - this one? https://muxsan.com/
dashoonage wrote: » ohhhh thats pretty cool. Wonder what it costs.
from_atozinc wrote: » Quick q. A 142 leaf with 27,000 KM on the clock (very low), what would you expect the status of health to be
tom_tarbucket wrote: » see attached screen grab from: nissan.ie > ownership > nissan connect do I use Nissan connect OR Nissan car wings