Fully Electric Cars
Re: Fully Electric Cars
Just been down in Devon for a few days ... Just of the A361 near Barnstaple theres a new Service Station with huge High Speed Charging area (around 15 bays I think) nearby huge solar panel field(s) and 2 Wind Turbines to charge the DC battery storage facility.
Their fuel (petrol/deisel) also cheaper than anything else we saw including Supermarkets.
Their fuel (petrol/deisel) also cheaper than anything else we saw including Supermarkets.
Re: Fully Electric Cars
Nuclear power is both clean, reliable and cheap. To get the equivalent power out of a wind farm it generally has to be a lot of square miles in area.CoolClaret wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 3:54 pmAye course they aren't Shaggy - what credentials do you have to make such a claim?
Wind farms are expensive and have a shorter life span. That’s before we even go into the likes of maintenance and reliability costs
Re: Fully Electric Cars
Wind turbines also tend not to require their spent fuel to be buried for 10,000 years.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
Ah no credentials then, thanks for clearing that up.Shaggy wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 5:04 pmNuclear power is both clean, reliable and cheap. To get the equivalent power out of a wind farm it generally has to be a lot of square miles in area.
Wind farms are expensive and have a shorter life span. That’s before we even go into the likes of maintenance and reliability costs
That's the beauty about offshore wind - we have a lot of space available with perfect mean wind speeds for energy extraction, why would you not want to use it?
Nuclear is great - will be, of course, used to meet peak demand, but let's not pretend that nuclear doesn't have sky-high maintenance costs, and needs a highly skilled workforce present around the clock at one plant.... and what happens when nuclear plants reach their lifecycle end?!
Not to mention that if we adopt more smart grid technology and build wind farms onshore, we can decentralise them and have them supply local areas - that's the great thing about renewable energy!
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
I’m not here to preach at all, just share my personal experience.
I needed to change my car this year, fully intended to get another huge petrol engine to enjoy before they are outlawed. I’ve loved several previous V6 engine cars.
Started to look around in February at cars that I expected to be able to afford and the pricing had rocketed. I then decided I wanted something quick and a high spec.
Took my wife with me to test drive the Tesla Y which was in budget but only to prove that I needed to increase the budget.
I couldn’t fault the car, I’m sure there might be better electric cars out there but this was absolutely perfect- massive spec, quick and great value.
Had it 5 months now, had to change my mind set in many ways, as people have said already but so far I can’t fault it at all.
As someone said above - when away from home just add what you need. Charging the car overnight at home is not only dirt cheap, it’s more convenient than going to a petrol station.
At first panicking when the battery is 30% - I’d start to charge my phone at that stage, but that’s still 100miles. Tesla charging network is superb so far
I’m really happy with it.
I needed to change my car this year, fully intended to get another huge petrol engine to enjoy before they are outlawed. I’ve loved several previous V6 engine cars.
Started to look around in February at cars that I expected to be able to afford and the pricing had rocketed. I then decided I wanted something quick and a high spec.
Took my wife with me to test drive the Tesla Y which was in budget but only to prove that I needed to increase the budget.
I couldn’t fault the car, I’m sure there might be better electric cars out there but this was absolutely perfect- massive spec, quick and great value.
Had it 5 months now, had to change my mind set in many ways, as people have said already but so far I can’t fault it at all.
As someone said above - when away from home just add what you need. Charging the car overnight at home is not only dirt cheap, it’s more convenient than going to a petrol station.
At first panicking when the battery is 30% - I’d start to charge my phone at that stage, but that’s still 100miles. Tesla charging network is superb so far
I’m really happy with it.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
Looking at the state of the roads in and around Burnley ,how on earth are the council going to repair them when the road is flooded with super heavy EV’s and where is all the revenue coming from to replace the huge duty on conventional vehicles ,or does Ed Milliband have a magic money tree ?
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
My old motor had 'iconic sounds', it had a V8 engine.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
Much as I would lije to agree with you, Shaggy is right.CoolClaret wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 3:54 pmAye course they aren't Shaggy - what credentials do you have to make such a claim?
Turbines are literally ******* into the wind.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
Much as I would like to agree with you, Shaggy is right.CoolClaret wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 3:54 pmAye course they aren't Shaggy - what credentials do you have to make such a claim?
Turbines are literally ******* into the wind.
Re: Fully Electric Cars
If you can charge at home, and can afford/bear to spend the money needed to get a decent one, then electric cars are fine. If you don't have home charging or don't want to spend silly money on a car, then stick to petrol.
Re: Fully Electric Cars
Presumably the various taxes levied on the purchase of your 40mn new EVs next year.Holmechapel wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 6:34 pmLooking at the state of the roads in and around Burnley ,how on earth are the council going to repair them when the road is flooded with super heavy EV’s and where is all the revenue coming from to replace the huge duty on conventional vehicles ,or does Ed Milliband have a magic money tree ?
You’re, like, really bad at this, man.
Re: Fully Electric Cars
The wind literally pushes into the turbine. That’s kinda how they work.dougcollins wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 7:00 pmMuch as I would like to agree with you, Shaggy is right.
Turbines are literally ******* into the wind.
One way I can convince you they are good though. Wind turbines are usually white, so you can paint a flag on it.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
Why are you so confident in stating that?dougcollins wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 7:00 pmMuch as I would like to agree with you, Shaggy is right.
Turbines are literally ******* into the wind.
I (quite literally) research this stuff. Offshore wind is mega.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
And do you think it’ll stop there ,remember Gordon Brown and diesel cars ,10 yrs down the line EV’s will be toast ,what’s this ‘man’ business ? makes you sound like some stupid hippy.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
Last time I checked they weren't even hitting 5% of overall requirement. They'd need that many there'd be one in your garden.
Thanks for the tip about the flag though.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
I do apologise, it was meant to be 25%.
Re: Fully Electric Cars
clean until it leaks.Shaggy wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 5:04 pmNuclear power is both clean, reliable and cheap. To get the equivalent power out of a wind farm it generally has to be a lot of square miles in area.
Wind farms are expensive and have a shorter life span. That’s before we even go into the likes of maintenance and reliability costs
Reliable until it leaks
Cheap except to build and then dismantle and a constant risk to us all.
Re: Fully Electric Cars
Yeah, I'm with you. I'm only pointing this out, not advocating it.
I'm not remotely convinced by replacing batteries on a daily(ish) basis. Building the heaviest part of the vehicle INTO the body is surely the only way to ensure integrity?
Having points of failure built in for a few minutes convenience seems ridiculous to me. In any case, you'd need to drive up to/into these facilities anyway - and surely they would be less common than charging stations? Much more expensive to construct/run? It doesn't make any logical or economic sense to me, beyond the basic principle being 'interesting'.
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Re: Fully Electric Cars
.apologies, link didn’t work as expected
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