when we run out of oil
maybe but bio diesel does not work on all cars. some manufactures actively recommend not using it.That might not be soon with development of bio diesel etc
Thought this would be a interesting thread.
How far off are we in battery technology to eliminate electric cars shortcoming like range, cost, and charge times?
Where will this leave the classic car market?
no for a while yet but emmissions controls will get incredible in the nest 10 years and with lightweight carbon fibre technology.
I think we will see really impressive cars that will achieve 100 mpg with almost zero emmisions but cars are going to cost a lot more.
Nissan website says its £16k OTR?When they stop making you pay to lease the batteries and have an included 100k 10 year warranty with them.
Second hand zoes have the battery lease so you buy the car then find you have to pay another £500+ a year minimum to even use the thing as Renault can remotely disable them if the lease isn't paid.
It is interesting to see just how cheap the EV cars are when they're second hand. The leaf is about £30k new. Within 3 years they're down to about £7-8k. You can get pre regs for half the list price. They're over priced and unwanted at the moment.
Normal fuel cars won't die. Hybrids are a far better answer. You remove pollution in the stop start traffic but allow unlimited range. The lexus hybrids and pious are far better solutions.
Nissan website says its £16k OTR?
I agree they do seem over priced. The batteries are expensive but surely they're making savings elsewhere? Much less labour intensive to build i would imagine?
Wow that's bonkers price! How can they get away with saying on the road price!They are £16k for base model. That doesn't include the battery. You have to rent that on top. They're another £5k if you want the battery! The top model now is £25k if you want the battery (including 5k plug in grant) so list is effectively still £30k.
Wow that's bonkers price! How can they get away with saying on the road price!
a battery is a fuel tank not fuelProbably because the battery could be classed as fuel.
OTR price for a normal car does not include fuel costs.
Wow that's bonkers price! How can they get away with saying on the road price!
a battery is a fuel tank not fuel
This!The problem is that Electric cars and hydrogen cars are using second generation energy. Electricity has to be generated and hydrogen made.
Some sort of fuel cell is probably the best option to generating the necessary electric power. It only needs to be capable of keeping a battery reservoir topped up, and not necessarily produce variable power.
I think that is way overspecced and unrealistic. None of my current cars have that kind of reach and it isn't a problem. Nearly always drive to Spain or Italy.electric cars will only make head roads when you can drive 500 miles on a charge and then get it recharged in 5 mins or a new battery for the next 500 miles. i must say a 1000 would be better plus carry 4 people and luggage to spain or france
I think you need to look into modern cars and engines more, loads of manufacturers have sub 100g/km cars. You can even buy large cars that don't produce a lot more. Manufacturers are cleaning up their engines all the time, with cylinder deactivation when power isn't needed, direct injection and pfi, again to reduce emissions when the power isn't required, stop start, the list is growing all the time.we just need to carry on taxing emmissions to death, the car industry will then provide solutions.
at the moment they can continue to sell the rubbish they sell as its just not costing the users anything.
until anying over 100g/km is £1000/year we won't see the industry get its act together.
it would be good if car travel could be funded via advertising like the web is - a vehicle would take you 'for free' to your destination but there would be video screens with targeted ads inside the vehicle and you would have to option to 'subscribe' for ad-free travelDo you think the lkes of apple and google being the future of car manufacturing or will the current car manufactures keep there stronghold?
I think you need to look into modern cars and engines more, loads of manufacturers have sub 100g/km cars. You can even buy large cars that don't produce a lot more. Manufacturers are cleaning up their engines all the time, with cylinder deactivation when power isn't needed, direct injection and pfi, again to reduce emissions when the power isn't required, stop start, the list is growing all the time.
Really we had a Prius and it barely did 470 miles on its tiny little tank. But the car was so rubbish that I never have a Toyota again; tiny and plastics. Replaced by out anti Prius; a Mercedes GL AMG.My current b200 does 500 miles on a tank with ease so did my previous Toyota Prius. So I don't think that I am asking to much from new technology
And that is without further depreciation taken into account. Our Prius was the worst car we've ever owned for depreciation. It was horrendous.Checked the zoe prices and for 3000 miles a year you have to pay £540 a year for 3 years if you want the battery for 3 years. If you do it yearly then it's £780! If you work out fuel costs in a 50 mpg petrol car
fuel is now about £5 a gallon for vpower or similar for a stinking diesel they're much less. I think it was about £300 for both.
At 3000 miles a year and £780 it's about 17mpg in vpower for the annual payment and about 25mpg for the 3 year. They don't make any financial sense whatsoever to me.
What models and what engines manual or autoCurrently got a two year old Golf; no chance. Got a 10 year old Audi; no chance. And got a two year old Mercedes GL AMG and whilst it can do that, it is only because it has a 95 litre tank.
It's irrelevant, lots of vehicles on the market today that do not have a 500 mile range that sell lots. I'm sure it's a valid use case for you, it just doesn't mean it is for everyone.What models and what engines manual or auto