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Fat Angry Scotsman |
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 Fat Angry Scotsman World Chat Champion

Joined: 12 Jan 2021 Karma :     
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 Posted: 12:38 - 26 Jul 2022 Post subject: Electric Vehicle Economy |
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I realise I am not the standard case for EV use as the vast majority of my electricity has been taken from the ChargePlace Scotland network which costs £0.00 per kWh, so my cost to run is virtually nil on electricity.
I've had my Tesla Model 3 Long Range for a number of months now and put on her exactly 4,000 miles.
I drive mostly on motorways so my economy is pretty terrible as there's not much regenerative braking on motorway trips. I also fucking hoon it in the mornings because I am chronically running late. Driving back home in the evening is at a much more relaxed pace. The miles on the clock would have been higher but every day I don't need to take my kid somewhere in the morning I will get on the bike.
I charge the car from around 10% - 20% up to 90% and I average around 290 - 310 Wh/mi. Real world mileage from approx. 90% to 10% has been about 220 - 290 miles per charge, it genuinely varies a lot depending on the type of driving and weather conditions sometimes I get shit economy, other times I fucking hyper-mile, but, it's normally on the lower end because of my commuting habits.
So now I am interested in comparing the economy of driving electric to petrol in terms of energy usage and cost.
ENERGY:
We know the energy used by my car is about 310 Wh/mi.
We know the energy density of petrol is 46 MJ/kg.
SOURCE: https://energyeducation.ca/encyclopedia/Energy_density
We know that 1 litre of petrol is 0.74kg.
SOURCE: https://www.driverknowledgetests.com/resources/why-does-burning-1-litre-of-fuel-create-over-2kg-of-carbon-dioxide/#:~:text=One%20litre%20of%20petrol%20weighs,it's%20a%20potent%20greenhouse%20gas.
As such one litre of petrol has (46.00 MJ/kg x 0.74 kg = 34.04 MJ) 34.04 MJ/l of energy in it.
We know a UK imperial gallon has 4.546 litres in it.
SOURCE: https://www.metric-conversions.org/volume/uk-gallons-to-liters.htm
As such one gallon of petrol has (34.040 MJ/l x 4.546 l = 154.75 MJ) 154.75 MJ of energy in it.
We know the most popular car in the UK for 2022 is the Vauxhall Corsa.
SOURCE: https://www.autoexpress.co.uk/best-cars-vans/94280/best-selling-cars-2022-uks-top-10-most-popular-models
Vauxhall state the average combined mpg of 54.4 for petrol engines.
SOURCE: https://www.parkers.co.uk/vauxhall/corsa/review/mpg-running-costs/
As such the energy used per mile in the Vauxhall Corsa is (154.75 MJ/ 54.4 miles = 2.845 MJ/mi) = 2.845 MJ/mi.
We know my Tesla uses about 310 Wh/mi, so we convert this to MJ/mi = 1,116,000 J/mi = 1.116 MJ/mi.
SOURCE: https://www.unitconverters.net/energy/watt-hour-to-joule.htm
Now we know the approximate energy economy of both vehicles in Mega-Joules per mile, we can calculate how much more efficient the electric car is over a petrol car in terms of energy conversion which shows us that the Tesla is 87.30% more efficient in terms of energy used per mile travelled than the Vauxhall.
SOURCE:
https://www.calculatorsoup.com/calculators/algebra/percent-difference-calculator.php
PRICE:
We know that the average cost of petrol per litre is currently £1.86.
SOURCE: https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/advice/fuel-watch/
Therefore the cost per mile is (£1.86/(54.4mpg/4.546l)) = (1.86 £'s/l / 11.97mi/l) = £0.16 per mile.
We know that the average cost of electricity for at home charging is variable depending on the time of day, but I will assume the average at peak time of £0.19/kWh.
SOURCE: https://www.nimblefins.co.uk/average-cost-electricity-kwh-uk#nogo
Therefore the cost per mile is (0.19 £'s/1000kWh / (1000W/310Wh/mi) = (£0.19 / 3.23 mi) = £0.06 per mile.
Now we know the approximate energy economy of both vehicles in cost of energy per mile, we can calculate how much more efficient the electric car is over a petrol car in terms of cost per mile which shows us that the Tesla is 104.0% more efficient in terms of energy cost per mile travelled than the Vauxhall.
SOURCE:
https://www.calculatorsoup.com/calculators/algebra/percent-difference-calculator.php
Electric vehicles god stomp petrol vehicles in efficiency.
INB4 someone says "OH BUT DIESEL" (they're being banned mate) or "OH BUT HYBRID" (still more inefficient) or "OH BUT TESLA MORE EXPENSIVE THAN VAUXHALL" (nonsense argument, it's comparing economy on the most popular electric car versus the most popular petrol car in the UK).
The electric car is way heavier than the petrol one and still god stomps it on economy. ____________________ PRESENT: 2018 BMW S1000XR SE Sport.
PAST: 2009 Kawasaki ER-6F. 2021 Zontes ZT-125U. |
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Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Karma :  
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 Posted: 14:16 - 26 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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Well done. Wear your EV badge with pride.
Straight efficiency isn't always the be all and end all of choosing a power source whether it be cars, boats aeroplanes or whatever. We had this discussion with electric planes which I'm sure are way more efficient than a jet or turbo prop. Doesn't work though. You cannot just look at one aspect. An electric motor, even the ones we had on ships back in the days of steam power were well over 80% efficient from what I remember and I'm sure the modern ones are probably way better than that. Trouble is where the electricity is generated. Include the losses from a diesel generator and the efficiency drops way off. You are not including losses from the power generation whereas the ICE has those losses inbuilt.
And yes, the relative cost of the vehicle is a huge factor simply because -
1. A large number of people can't afford 50 grand for an EV like yours.
2. You spend 20 grand on a Corsa you have another 30 grand to spend on dino poo power before you have broken even.
You can pick facets of everything to make the case for one or the other, You are going on cost per mile, fine, we know EV's are way cheaper. Do the same with government taxes removed and tell me which would be cheaper -
Rough figures using your formula without government fuel taxes. 50% used because I really cannot be arsed to look it up.
(0.93 £'s/l / 11.97mi/l) = £0.08 per mile
Not that huge amount of difference in actual costs then so the cost per mile is an artificial figure because of government intervention.
Saying that, I'd have an EV if you could buy a second hand one with a decent range for under 10 grand but you can't. ____________________ Triumph Trophy Launch Edition |
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rpsmith79 |
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 rpsmith79 World Chat Champion

Joined: 31 Jan 2017 Karma :   
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 Posted: 14:30 - 26 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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Economy is one thing, but cost is another, what is the PCP difference between a Tesla and an Corsa???
Nobody is denying EV's are economical, but they are ludicrously expensive for anyone who doesn't have the luxury of company car ownership (ie about 97% of car owners)
I mean yeah, we all know an electric motor is going to way more efficient than any ICE engine, purely from the fact an electric motor has 1 moving part, and generates negligable heat as a by-product
Compare that 2 an ICE engine with many hundreds of moving parts, all generating friction and heat, not-withstanding the fuel being burnt also generating heat, that heat is mostly useless, and only ever used in cold weather, after that the energy in that heat is 'lost' to atmosphere
It's hardly rocket science ____________________ Current Bike: Honda CG125 ES4 // Honda CB600FS Hornet // Triumph Street Triple R
Last edited by rpsmith79 on 14:37 - 26 Jul 2022; edited 3 times in total |
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A100man |
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 A100man World Chat Champion

Joined: 19 Aug 2013 Karma :   
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 Posted: 14:33 - 26 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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Some good point and use of SI units but..
My home electric (Shell) is 29p /KWh which I don't think is unusual at the moment, also according to Pod Point cost for public fast chargers is 44p/KWh.
The efficiency sidetrack is somewhat irrelevant since there are too many wasy electricity is generated and they all have different enviro impacts. ____________________ Now: A100, GT250A, XJ598, FZ750
Then: Fizz, RS200, KL250, XJ550, Laverda Alpina, XJ600, FZS600 |
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chickenstrip |
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 chickenstrip Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Dec 2013 Karma :    
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 Posted: 15:19 - 26 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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EVs? Never!
Did the dinosaurs go extinct for nothing?
#DinosaurLivesMatter ____________________ Chickenystripgeezer's Biking Life (Latest update 19/10/18) Belgium, France, Italy, Austria tour 2016 Picos de Europa, Pyrenees and French Alps tour 2017 Scotland Trip 1, now with BONUS FEATURE edit, 5/10/19, on page 2 Scotland Trip 2 Luxembourg, Black Forest, Switzerland, Vosges Trip 2017
THERE'S MILLIONS OF CHICKENSTRIPS OUT THERE! |
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Easy-X |
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 Easy-X Super Spammer

Joined: 08 Mar 2019 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:46 - 26 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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Factor in depreciation and maintenance.
A 50,000 mile, 5yo Tesla S ~ £40,000. List price new £95,000.
Corsa is a bit weak, a 2017 5-series BMW would be a little more equivalent, comfort-wise @ ~ £18,000. List price new £42,000
The Tesla still needs tyres, brakes, suspension looking at like any car. I'll assume the motors would need very little (compared to ICE) in 5 years. Batteries though? The BMW would obviously cost more, ongoing, but I doubt it's range and power would drop much over 5 years.
Apples versus Oranges. ____________________ Husqvarna Vitpilen 401, Yamaha XSR700, Honda Rebel, Yamaha DT175, Suzuki SV650 (loan) Fazer 600, Keeway Superlight 125, 50cc turd scooter |
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The Shaggy D.A. |
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 The Shaggy D.A. Super Spammer

Joined: 12 Sep 2008 Karma :  
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 Posted: 17:39 - 26 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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Aye, but the Corsa's fuel tank doesn't shrink with age  ____________________ Chances are quite high you are not in my Monkeysphere, and I don't care about you. Don't take it personally.
Currently : Royal Enfield 350 Meteor
Previously : CB100N > CB250RS > XJ900F > GT550 > GPZ750R/1000RX > AJS M16 > R100RT > Bullet 500 > CB500 > LS650P > Bullet Electra X & YBR125 > Bullet 350 "Superstar" & YBR125 Custom > Royal Enfield Classic 500 Despatch Limited Edition (28 of 200) & CB Two-Fifty Nighthawk > ER5 |
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Fat Angry Scotsman |
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 Fat Angry Scotsman World Chat Champion

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WD Forte |
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 WD Forte World Chat Champion

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rpsmith79 |
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 rpsmith79 World Chat Champion

Joined: 31 Jan 2017 Karma :   
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ThunderGuts |
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 ThunderGuts World Chat Champion

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Easy-X |
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 Easy-X Super Spammer

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 Posted: 14:42 - 27 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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Price per mile? Okay, so people are gonna wear it that an EV Corsa pays the same as an EV BMW, that doesn't sound fair
Could do more for the environment by crushing the rail unions and bringing down the cost of the alternatives to road travel. ____________________ Husqvarna Vitpilen 401, Yamaha XSR700, Honda Rebel, Yamaha DT175, Suzuki SV650 (loan) Fazer 600, Keeway Superlight 125, 50cc turd scooter |
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ThunderGuts |
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 ThunderGuts World Chat Champion

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Fat Angry Scotsman |
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 Fat Angry Scotsman World Chat Champion

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Easy-X |
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doggone |
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 doggone World Chat Champion

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Bhud |
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 Bhud World Chat Champion
Joined: 11 Oct 2018 Karma :   
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 Posted: 20:17 - 27 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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I just don't see electric as a simple drop-in replacement for what we've got at the moment. If you take all the cars on the road at the present time, and imagine them swapped for EVs, are there even enough rare earth minerals that would be needed for the batteries? In addition, the power grid would have to be significantly upgraded. There is a single new nuclear power station that's been authorised in the south east, but that's not a substitute for decades of underinvestment. The railway network is well below par, compared with other western European countries, plus it's very expensive and unreliable. Therefore, for the past few decades, the obvious transport solution for everyone has been either the car or the bus. It has been the norm to learn to drive, and to commute using a car to places that are out of town. People are more mobile than in some European countries (such as Spain) because of the car, yet (apparently) 50% of car journeys are under 5 miles long. It's now reached that tipping point where urban overcrowding, limits on development, street design and planning, and environmental and climate concerns all together will cause something to give way. My guess is, the shopping-trolley-car paradigm will simply bite the dust. Someone in this thread mentioned the £200/month ICE hire purchase small car vs the £350 EV hire purchase small car being a big deal for a certain type of buyer. I don't think that sort of customer will be around for much longer - habits are already changing quite fast. |
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kgm |
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 kgm World Chat Champion
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kgm |
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 kgm World Chat Champion
Joined: 04 Jun 2015 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:09 - 27 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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I agree with everything you've said there. I don't think that the average household will be running EVs in the future. I think the average household will be priced out of the market and simply won't own a car. I think it's going to happen quicker than people might think too as interest rates go up and cheap PCP deals dry up. |
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doggone |
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 doggone World Chat Champion

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panrider_uk |
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 panrider_uk World Chat Champion

Joined: 23 Sep 2007 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:24 - 27 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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kgm wrote: |
I agree with everything you've said there. I don't think that the average household will be running EVs in the future. I think the average household will be priced out of the market and simply won't own a car. I think it's going to happen quicker than people might think too as interest rates go up and cheap PCP deals dry up. |
The average household doesn't live in London though with its good public transport infrastructure and therefore will still need a car. ____________________ Current bikes: Hondas - Forza 750, ST1100A |
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Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

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M.C |
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spnorm |
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 spnorm Crazy Courier
Joined: 18 Aug 2007 Karma :   
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 Posted: 06:56 - 29 Jul 2022 Post subject: |
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I also have a Tesla Model 3 Longe Range company car and it’s boring to drive (like playing a video game at warp speed) and really poorly built for a £50k car. I much prefer my Abarth 595 convertible for weekend fun and touring as it’s a real scream to drive; like a 1980’s rally car I had to change my bike from an R1250GS to an S1000XR as the Tesla made my GS feel a bit sluggish
The Tesla is very cheap to run IF charged at home overnight at 5p/kWh = £3.75 for 300 miles range. It’s not so cheap of I have to use a Supercharger on the road, but still cheaper than a diesel car. I also quickly learnt to seek out free destination chargers when driving around the country on business.
Mine is at its most economical on the motorway at 72mph on the speedo. Thrashing it around the Yorkshire Dales reduces the range by 50% to 200 miles.
Would I but one with my own money? Definitely not as they’re too expensive and the smaller ones don’t have enough range to get me to the Lakes or North York Moors and back without charging on the road. My M3LR does. |
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Fat Angry Scotsman |
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 Fat Angry Scotsman World Chat Champion

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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 2 years, 281 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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