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You want to spend £85,000+ to be able to drive 31 miles???
Oh i know, the whole image of the industry and what cars are used for is f**ked. In the last ~20 years average commuting distance has barely moved, neither has the distribution curve. What you do have, is a lot more cars on the road. So it's still something like 80-85% of the european population would be best served for the huge majority of their driving by a small electric hatchback with a sub 100km range, then hire for the 3 occasions in a year when they a) go to IKEA b) go to Aunty Doris's place or c) drive to the Alps for a holiday. And a good chunk of the 80-85% should really be on a bus/bike/foot. But we haven't got any buses, cyclists are being scared off (at least in the UK) and a lot of the infrastructure is designed so badly that walking or cycling is really not an option.highlandsflyer":2hebzfy1 said:That is not necessarily a bad trade off. Lots of drivers do a daily run of less than 50km, so potentially could restrict fossil runs to longer trips.
Yeah, i posted that converted mini a few months ago, that's currently sized to do his "worst case" daily drive, so -20 degrees, normal traffic levels and about 100km to work and back + a margin of about 20%. When it's not in pieces for updates, repairs, playing with, he uses it pretty much every day.highlandsflyer":2hebzfy1 said:We are hoping to get a 100 mile range out of a 4x4 conversion. That would cover us for more than a couple of days.
Smaller tank. Not no tank.legrandefromage":1kzxzr21 said:You want to spend £85,000+ to be able to drive 31 miles???
No, i don't. I wouldn't spend that much on a car, but lots of people do. At at least, they want to limit their BIK on the company car.legrandefromage":1stypdpu said:So you still want to spend £85000 just to drive 31 miles.
Maybe, maybe not, i get slightly more than the rated range on the hybrids i borrow, around 8-10%. But i don't have a typical commute.legrandefromage":1stypdpu said:Because I doubt you'll get that much before the petrol engine has to rumble into life.
As ever, 99% of it is how you drive it. I can get the same car from over 60mpg to under 30mpg on the same test cycle/route taking almost the same time (within 5 minutes over 90 minutes). One is generally referred to as "driving like a c##t" the other isn't. If i didn't have to keep my licence, i could get the 30 down into the low teens without a struggle. And that's a very large hybrid estate car.legrandefromage":1stypdpu said:The current new mini countryman hybrid - customer bought it and was happy to get one and a half journeys to work and back. Great, what its designed for even if it's the size of a house. What really pissed him off was the woeful 30mpg on a trip from Bedford to Sheffield. Losing any supposed benefits of the work trip.
It's an emissions fudge as well. Fleet average, WLTP, NEDC and so on. None of them bare more than a passing resemblance to actual driving in an actual car.legrandefromage":1stypdpu said:Please explain how or why this car and others are sold as 'green' vehicles. Other than a VAT scam I cant think of any.
Hopefully the next set of changes to emission standards will fix the issue.
I've been partly involved in creating and reviewing the early drafts/structure for it. It'll change a lot by the time it gets implemented.xerxes":2sjootj7 said:Hopefully the next set of changes to emission standards will fix the issue.
I wouldn't hold your breath; although given the air polution, that's not a bad idea.