The new one is not yet on the show room floor so I think you might be referring to the older model?It’s been around quite a while now. My daughter has one on order for delivery late January. It also recoups charge by regeneration during braking.
Toyota are a bit later to the party than most which is surprising given it’s over 10 years since the Prius was introduced.
PS The point is it was a very good deal via NHS leasing, it allows her to act as chauffeur evenings on electric, or pop to the shops without starting the engine, and do her community nursing on petrol without having to look for charging points. So not a total waste.
Okay so the one on order may have a few less miles on electric. When she was loaned one by the dealership she got about 8 miles on electric. Be interesting to see what arrives.The new one is not yet on the show room floor so I think you might be referring to the older model?
I think the new one you can plug in. I posted about it in the tow cars section?Okay so the one on order may have a few less miles on electric. When she was loaned one by the dealership she got about 8 miles on electric. Be interesting to see what arrives.
A question does it actually use its engine to recharge the battery. Seems inefficient use of fuel other than to keep emissions down in urban areas? Regeneration comes for free.
That’s not a self charging hybrid it’s a PHEV. Since Toyota introduced a later version of its Corolla hybrid in 2021 my daughters will be pretty up to date as far as the SC model is concerned.I think the new one you can plug in. I posted about it in the tow cars section?
I wonder where this is taking us and EVs long term?
The expansion of the GWR line to Bristol via Bath has been abandoned due to cost as indeed has part of HS2.
As one who has warmed to the idea of EVs the question now is this the correct economic way to go🤔🤔or is something green wagging the wrong tail🤔🤔
I think the problem with the electrification of that line and the one into South Wales was the substantial escalation in costs way above budgets. Like the HS2 and the new Cross Rail line under London that is over budget and over time. Our problem seems to be an inability to estimate, plan and undertake major infrastructure projects of this type. I just get very disappointed when visiting countries with far less resources and wealth than UK and find their rail infrastructure is electrified and has been for a long while. Yet it has been well known even before emissions became a topic that electrified rail has lower life cycle costs than diesel.I wonder where this is taking us and EVs long term?
The expansion of the GWR line to Bristol via Bath has been abandoned due to cost as indeed has part of HS2.
As one who has warmed to the idea of EVs the question now is this the correct economic way to go🤔🤔or is something green wagging the wrong tail🤔🤔
DustyI agree Clive.
The problem is we want to be green but at what cost? If the rail companies can’t make it work is there a chance for us mere mortals?
Your EV could supply the underfloor heating when off grid. Then call Green Flag for a quick boost to get you to a charging point 😂And here I am wondering if we should sell our Buc and the Navara and go for a Ioniq ev 6 and a 1600kg caravan-not sure we would want to be without the underfloor heating (ever again) though-or the luxury but there are some nice vans out there and we could get electric underfloor maybe!
I am not convinced there is any point at the moment as the charging network is not reliable or good enough at the moment with only a handful of sites that can take a car towing a caravan. I think that things will change as EV's move up the size scale but that is someway ahead. The range of any EV towing still seems to be little more than 100 miles so that has to increase as refuelling twice on a longer journey is not acceptable to me.And here I am wondering if we should sell our Buc and the Navara and go for a Ioniq ev 6 and a 1600kg caravan-not sure we would want to be without the underfloor heating (ever again) though-or the luxury but there are some nice vans out there and we could get electric underfloor maybe!
And here I am wondering if we should sell our Buc and the Navara and go for a Ioniq ev 6 and a 1600kg caravan-not sure we would want to be without the underfloor heating (ever again) though-or the luxury but there are some nice vans out there and we could get electric underfloor maybe!
We had an Adria with electric underfloor heating (which was unexpected as it wasnt in the advertised spec). Why it was there I dont know, but it was absolute rubbish. It worked off 230v but was 24v heat panels in the floor. We never bothered with it. There was conventional gas/electric heating too.
I don't suppose it will be much fun arriving on a site and then having to "book" a slot to charge your vehicle and you are at the back of the queue and you are leaving the next morning. I cannot see many caravan sites installing individual charging posts on pitches as it will take them a very long time to recoup that outlay never mind the cost of the electric.It isn't range that bothers me-we don't like going over 150 miles before stopping over usually anyway -it's the on site charging-needs to be guaranteed and it isn't at the mo!
Caravan site charging of EVs will be best done overnight at a slow charging rate - but that'll still need site electrics upgrading especially if caravans are all-electric.I don't suppose it will be much fun arriving on a site and then having to "book" a slot to charge your vehicle and you are at the back of the queue and you are leaving the next morning. I cannot see many caravan sites installing individual charging posts on pitches as it will take them a very long time to recoup that outlay never mind the cost of the electric.