Sorry for going off topic.......... but there's a misconception or bad generalisation. To be fair, it's a developing tech. Similar to when general public didn't realise benefit of matured digital camera in the late 90's. Or 2008 where people still insist their Nokia is a smart phone, you need a keyboard to type with, and believe 1 day battery life is an issue. EV is currently equivalent to 2008 of smart phone years.
- Any Tesla (range 200+ miles, drive 180 and supercharge in 45min to over 80% state of charge)
- Jag I-Pace (one battery size, has range of 250 miles, drive 200 miles and charge at 50kW for 45min to regain 100 miles. The car is capable of rapid charging at 100kW)
Cheaper:
- Hyundai Ioniq (one 30kWh battery size, range of 120 miles, drive 100 miles between two 30min stops, the car can also capable of 100kW charging, possible to cut each charging time by half)
- Nissan Leaf 40kWh (range of 150 miles, but it doesn't have battery temperature management, depend on ambient temperature, you may need to wait longer at charging stops)
Coming later this year:
- Kia Niro EV / Hyundai Kona EV (long range version has 64kWh battery, good for 200+ miles, also has 100kW charging, so it perform similar to I-Pace at more affordable price)
- Nissan Leaf 60kWh (200+ miles range, has battery temperature management, making one 45min stop possible)
Then there's the question of how often do you drive 300 miles. The cost saving of running on electricity vs expensive fossil fuel alone
may be worth the effort of being restricted to charging spots along the way due to currently lacklustre infrastructure. It costs me 2.5p per mile in my EV whereas my 55mpg diesel costs me over 10 per mile not including non-service maintenance: timing belt and DSG oil changes (£180 for 40k miles, so need to +0.45p per mile)
By 2021, you should be able to buy a
second hand Leaf 60 or Niro/Kona EV for £15k, similar price to a pre-reg similar sized ICE car. It is able to cover most of Britain with 2 rapid charging breaks. Daily use cost less than 3p per mile.
Currently, I'm considering to hiring a Tesla from White Car in Edinburgh and drive the North Coast 500 as a week and half long holiday. If B&B's provide overnight charging, I wouldn't have to worry about managing the car's energy. Unlike my Skoda diesel, only 500 miles per tank, I'd have to pay extortionate price at a remote petrol station.