ELM327 wrote: » I will not, ever, under any circumstances drive a made in China car. Not a hope.
Deleted User wrote: » Even a Chinese made Tesla? They can make good stuff when necessary, but they are a real threat to western car makers.
Deleted User wrote: » They don't care. They'll prosper on domestic demand supplemented by value conscious buyers in Europe and Middle East who will be fed these on the Silk Road Economic Belt as fast as they roll off the production line.
JPA wrote: » They used to say the same about Japanese cars.
JohnC. wrote: » There's likely loads of chinese in whatever you drive now anyway.
graememk wrote: » Maybe it's a case of "want it now!"
cruisey1987 wrote: » You say that but it's worth bearing in mind that you're probably posting to this website on something made in China They can do good quality control when they want to, the problem is a lot of companies there go for the cheapest possible option and don't do any quality checking at all
ELM327 wrote: » Just parked the Tesla and collected my rental for the next 3 days. A 191 Skoda Octavia diesel manual. With manual "dumb" cruise. I have to do nearly 1000km over the next two days (medical reasons) so this will be fun. Not. Although, I filled it up for 35 quid from 3/8ths full. Probably 50 euro per tank, range showing as 950km on full. So far it's a nice car but not even as nice inside as my Skoda Superb 2009 CR 170 DSG , let alone the tesla. Seems to retail around 20k (its a 191). I can think of many, many cars I'd spend 20k on before this!
Laviski wrote: » so since buying electric earlier this year, today was the first morning with frost. Already had car set to preheat before leave, left house sat in warm car heated steering wheel with clear windows and saw neighbour scrapping ice of their ICE. Some call this an unnecessary perk but i say worth it
obi604 wrote: » Sorry for the ignorance but would the Tesla not do the bulk of that driving with a coupe of quick charges? Or no fast chargers on route is it.
cruisey1987 wrote: » Absolutely my favourite feature of owning an EV, just click the heating on from the phone and watch the frost melt, then get into a nice warm car It is useful to remotely control the car in the way, especially as winter sets in - it’s not a feature that’s unique to EV mind you and I have similar on a diesel estate
obi604 wrote: » Sorry for the ignorance but would the Tesla not do the bulk of that driving with a couple of quick charges? Or no fast chargers on route is it.
Silent Running wrote: » Would it be too much trouble for us to follow the UK lead on this and have every charger able to give a charge with a swipe of a debit or credit card, without being a member of any 'club'?
zg3409 wrote: » This was discussed here before. In UK all NEW chargers need to have credit card reader and ESB in London have bolted a separate card machine to outside of same chargers used in IRL. Easygo said their Cork 50kW will have a reader in the future but it involves replacing the display with a new one, if it works well they intend rolling out to their 50kW units. However there are additional fees to the user or company for micro payments which might be relatively high, and they want users to have their app so they can only see their chargers, and they might need to be forced by legislation. That is possible but it would need a campaign to tie it with future rollouts. Even in UK they are not required to retrofit and you can pay for a single charge session via credit card via the website without an account, but its not simple
cruisey1987 wrote: » Absolutely my favourite feature of owning an EV, just click the heating on from the phone and watch the frost melt, then get into a nice warm car Another good thing is the climate control timer most EVs have now. It's proven useful during lockdown to give the car a decent airing every day and stop any damp or mould building up
MJohnston wrote: » In addition to this, another favourite feature of EVs for me is the complete lack of gears. I’m absolutely out of the manual gearbox game as I hate it intensely and it’s awful for your back. But even automatics still have that shifting interference with acceleration. An EV is just pure comfort.
innrain wrote: » Yeah, these are features that are nearly not advertised by the salesreps. It's such an easy and relaxing drive. I rented a van few months back for few hours and it was a complete ... travel in time. We get stuck in arguments about range, charging network but never about how more advanced these machines are. How better experience is driving an EV through the city in a cold day. Have you ever kept the distance from the car in front of you worrying about the fumes?
cruisey1987 wrote: » I had to drive the missus's car last summer to a wedding as it involved a double charge with the Leaf which is just a bit too inconvenient when you're on a deadline First 30 seconds in the car went like this: Wife: "You remember how to drive this car right? Like it's got gears and stuff" Me: "Ah yeah, it'll be grand" (Tries putting car in reverse without clutch, grinds gears) Me: "Okay, maybe I'm a little out of practice" Interestingly, she hasn't insisted I drive her car any more since then
MJohnston wrote: » One other thing having an EV has done has drastically increase my irritation with driver reaction time, like "ugh I've gotta wait for them to find first and then first to second and second to third" - it seems like most Irish drivers like to react far too slowly and drive far too quickly.
MJohnston wrote: » One other thing having an EV has done has drastically increase my irritation with driver reaction time, like "ugh I've gotta wait for them to find first and then first to second and second to third"