- Joined
- Apr 30, 2005
- Messages
- 34,596

I love electric vehicles – and was an early adopter. But increasingly I feel duped | Rowan Atkinson
Sadly, keeping your old petrol car may be better than buying an EV, says actor Rowan Atkinson
However, I have concerns about having to find charging points if I were to drive a long journey for work-related trips.
Interesting points. I understand installing a charging area in your own garage can be pricey too! No idea what the cost would be on your electric bill to fully charge a car either. 2030 is only seven years away - this industry will have to come a long way in a short time!
Hmmmm- if you plug into a “normal” outlet (110volts) the car charges very slowly- gaining about 5 miles per hour of charging. That’s not really practical- and maybe what Gary’s son was talking about.Gary's son is a machnic
he says every week they get Teslas in because they arnt charging fully
turns out the house just cant provide enough juice and need to upgrade their connections which is not cheap
In UK, the infrastructure for EVs is still very patchy, with one public charging point for as many as 85 cars in some areas!!!
I have a house and with its own drive, so I can install a charging point if I were to switch to an EV.
However, I have concerns about having to find charging points if I were to drive a long journey for work-related trips.
I shall wait a few more years before I switch to an EV, ideally, a self-charging one and not a hybrid as they are also being phased out eventually.
DK![]()
How long does it take to charge an EV when you're on the road?
We have the same issue with home heat pumps(this also warms the EV engine), which is why backup heating is still required in all homes with them. They fail in winter.
The heat is still on at my house because we had another cold snap. It's normal here to have heat on full time until the beginning of June.
Another thing I don't see mentioned often ...
In your location, what is used to generate your electricity?
In 2021 here is where America's electricity is from:
61% coal, natural gas, and petroleum
19% from nuclear power
20% from renewable energy sources
Source: https://www.eia.gov/energyexplained...y-in-the-us-generation-capacity-and-sales.php
That said, your EV is NOT really the clean vehicle it is hyped to be.
Well we are in a less than ideal climate for an electric car here considering how cold winter can get in the Northeast.
Also here in CT, Eversource, one of two major electricity suppliers in the state, raised its electric rates significantly right before winter started, the standard delivery rate went from 12.1 cents per kilowatt-hour to 24.2 cents per kWh, compared to 11.5 cents per kWh last winter. As a result many customers saw their bills increase 50% as of January 1st, that is a significant increase especially combined with inflation.
Taking that into consideration, we would be in a vulnerable position financially and give more profits to Eversource by buying an electric car. Doesn’t seem like the wise choice for us at this time.
24.2c?! Electric rates are one of the only reasons I'd want a EV, so I could charge cheaply at home. We pay 6.25c! Once you factor in all the fees it's still not cheap, but the fees are tacked on whether its used much or not at all.