Sorry guys, I have found this thread.......
Who has one? Do you like it?
I (well, my wife) have had a Nissan Leaf for almost 5 years now, late 2014 car bought in 2017. It is used as daily car and works very well. I commute with it when my wife doesn't need it. Still manages my 60 miles commute from spring to autumn. Taken odometer from 18k, to ~53k now, mileage slowed down recent years as I WFH and wife's mileage is very low, only drives it locally and school runs. Wife is very used to the car and we plan to run this into the ground, I don't expect any problem with the battery or drivetrain. Even if it can only do 30 miles on a full charge, it'll be fine as local car and charged overnight.
I drove 56 miles on Sunday, to my parents and then around all the shops trying to find air-con stock for them. The Leaf were brilliant: pre-condition the cabin so it's not too hot, easily manages the drive from 100%. I re-charged back to 100% overnight and used 13 kWh, which translates to a cost of £1 at Octopus Go 7.5p/kWh tariff. Daytime is fixed at 35p/kWh fixed for 1 year, whereas price-cap variable tariff is expected to change to around 40p/kWh in October.
(if we drove my parent's ageing S40 petrol, ~30mpg, it would cost £14 at £1.90/l)
As more and more need to go to the office and my son starting Mon-Fri primary school in September. I have decided to get rid of my (or the long range family car) Skoda Octavia for a Tesla Model Y. I was waiting for a reasonably priced
second hand Model 3, but unfortunately
second hand prices are crazy right now. When decided to buy new, wife veto'd the 3 due to the beam across the rear seat and perceived downgrade from Octavia boot space. Model Y is bigger everywhere.
The Model Y and 3 are quoted over 300 miles, I expect around 250 miles any weather at motorway speeds and thus at least 200 miles between rapid charging stops. More than what we usually drive between comfort break. Recent day trips we took were all under 200 miles, so no need to think about charging just like current diesel.
Another benefit running EV as much as possible during high petrol/diesel prices is that there's a chance you can avoid paying full price all-together. I last purchased diesel when they were £1.76 in April. There's just under half-tank left as I drove the EV and used the ever improving rapid charging infrastructure to top up. I'm hoping I can wait it out until price goes back down below £1.80 for my last few diesel refuels.