AndyBoBandy wrote: » I see the new Renault Kangoo EV with it's 44kWh battery (265km WLTP) can AC charge at up to 22kW.. Great that at least 1 manufacturer is looking at a network of 22kW chargers, and deciding their EV offerings should be able to fully utilise them..... Those Kangoo's should fly off the shelf as taxi's (and if wheelchair accessible, the full @25k grant). Add in the ability to add in 50% of charge in 1 hour at any AC22, and they'd be a really attractive prospect!!!
slave1 wrote: » This is what An Post switched to in my area before XMas, great except they charge to full every night despite having 2-3 days capacity on a full charge
AndyBoBandy wrote: » Would they be similar to most in that the sweet spot is between 20% - 80%? Or would they have a big top buffer?
liamog wrote: » It's an extremely small list of cars that need to operate with the sweet spot of 20% to 80%.
Kramer wrote: » Apparently Tesla now recommend charging to 100% once per week, for some models. It's all getting very confusing these days & not conducive to more mainstream adoption IMO. A 2020 Model 3 shouldn't be charged beyond 90% but a 2021 needs to be charged to 100% weekly. KISS principle is gone out the window. ICE - put petrol in, drive. Repeat. EV - don't charge past 80%, or discharge below 20%, or do charge to 100%, when necessary for an occasional long trip, or charge to 100% weekly, if you own these model years..... OK, I'm overthinking it :pac:.
Kramer wrote: » Apparently Tesla now recommend charging to 100% once per week, for some models. It's all getting very confusing these days & not conducive to more mainstream adoption IMO. A 2020 Model 3 shouldn't be charged beyond 90% but a 2021 needs to be charged to 100% weekly.
AndyBoBandy wrote: » And how do Renault batteries cope with going to 100% on a daily basis? Would they be similar to most in that the sweet spot is between 20% - 80%? Or would they have a big top buffer?
innrain wrote: » Renault was always betting on AC22. They've push it with AC43 but nobody else got on board so they've dropped it.
unkel wrote: » A load of bollocks. Just charge your car up when you need to.
whippet wrote: » with the new leaf coming next week - I've just realised that I'll need a 10m cable if I want to be able to park the PHEV and BEV side by side and able to charge. the 5m cable just won't stretch far enough ... so it would mean moving cars around to charge ... where is the best place to get a decent 10m cable ?
unkel wrote: » From another Energia tariff (mid-contract) without charge. And I specifically asked was this open to all Energia customers to switch without penalty and they confirmed
DrPhilG wrote: » Just off the phone to Energia, who refused to switch my tariff until the end of my contract, insisted that this was the same for all customers, and there would be no exception. Arseholes.
liamog wrote: » There is a €50 break fee on the contract, if it's going to save you more than that it's worth breaking the contract and switching the account into your partners name
DrPhilG wrote: » They switched unkel without any fuss and told him that anyone else could do the same.
Kramer wrote: » have the manager's personal email address etc
DrPhilG wrote: » It's just the inconsistency that pisses me off. They switched unkel without any fuss and told him that anyone else could do the same. Then someone else calls up and they deny all knowledge.
unkel wrote: » LOL Honestly, after I got moved onto the new EV package (mid-contract), I specifically asked the girl was this ok for any other Energia customer to do. I asked this so I could share it here on boards.ie. She had to go back to her supervisor again and came back to me and confirmed that yes, any Energia customer could do this too.