Great video and very useful. I think these days it's charger anxiety not range anxiety. I've recently bought a Jaguar I pace and am looking forward to my trip to Alveston hall from Kent. Hopefully I'll learn from this trip as to what range I'm really going to get on a long journey .Thanks again for your great video. 👍
Fantastic. Love seeing these real world usage. On longer journeys it's definitely nicer to stop rather than just slog it all the way to the end in one go.
Hi Nigel, great to see more of your trips. I totally agree that the biggest change with an EV on a long journey is a little pre planning. I learned early on to have a back up charger nearby, to cover any chargers not working or all in use. Especially in towns, there are normally several options as to where to charge. Also if I get to 20% charge remaining, I head to a charger unless I am now within distance of the destination that I know has charging capacity, such as back home. Being able to do destination charging back to 100% seems key to making the trips easier. I also do like you, tryto find chargers where I can go for food/drink or visit the shops!
@@EVPuzzle depends where you are, when I had a tesla I was on trips with no superchargers. To be honest I find the enyaq just as easy as the model 3 was now as there are so many more chargers than 4 years ago when I had the leaf
Really liking your videos, nice relaxed rambling style, not so sure about the very early starts though. Myrtle Mini looks like a great car, I had an original mini as my first car. I have been forced to chose a car with a longer range for my first EV, as a wheelchair user the huge stress you talk about is magnified as you have the usual worries plus will the charger be accessible. Instavolt are the main protagonists for installing inaccessible chargers, it is such a shame that they seem to be ignoring disabled drivers. It would be a great idea for fuel stations to start fitting chargers, attendants already on site, covered and well lit safer areas, has to be a win win.
Check out Warners wheeling about.This gent is a wheelchair user and runs a mini e.His uploads are really useful as he goes into accessibility in depth.
Good Video. I have a Tesla Model 3 LR and yes the long journey process is just the same but with longer legs. I quite enjoy the planning bit. We also charged at our holiday house near Keswick recently. I worked out we could slow charge overnight on the grannie charger and maybe get all the way home without charging. We drove from Keswick to Peterborough without charging. We had to do a comfort stop but no charging needed. In the end we had 48 miles range left when we got home. We did go a bit slower than we used to in the diesel (64 MPH) but that made the driving more relaxed and easier. We could easily have done the speed limit too, with a very short splash and dash but we had the time.
I do love a stop in an EV, plug it in, go for a pee and a coffee and then you're off again. 20 mins maximum stop time in our experience. If you want to stop for something to eat you have to plan to charge then move and park up or park up then charge. Eat, charge, park or park, eat, charge, or perhaps charge, park, eat; so many options.
@@EVPuzzle it is, it's really the same process we're all used with a petrol/diesel car. Park, eat and fill up with fuel on the way out. No different really, just as you say in the video takes a bit more planning until it becomes second nature.
Always good to see your adventures. This week I have a 50 round trip to Richmond, 40 mile round trip to Reading, 100 mile round trip to Southampton and 180 miles to Canterbury and back. My SLK will do it on a tank full with 3 gallons to spare. If I still had my Zoe I could do it all on home charging except the last trip which would require half an hour stop on the way home. I guess the Mini would require two quick stops. I think a 40 kWh usable in a mini would add some flexibility. Do you agree or are you happy with what you have?
Hi Nigel. Great video as always. Can you do a video on the regen braking to show how best to use/recharge. Motorways I am told kill the battery if you get a free run whereas stop/start is much better. Thanks.
Presumably things will only get even better. The only reason now for a big battery is to be able to fill it totally from free solar, and not pay anything out on the road !!
Another good reason to have a big battery is that it will degrade more slowly because of less cycling. Assuming similar chemistry and about 800 cycles of useful life, a 60kWh car should go twice as far as a 30kWh car, before terminal battery degradation. Take the figures with a pinch of salt, but I'd say the theory is robust.
@@EVPuzzle I thought the charging cycle quotation by Hyundai for the Kona was 800 and something? Good enough for about 200k miles if average real world range is 250 miles. Some of Bjorn's recent degradation tests show that it's quite high on the smaller battery Kia Soul with the 24kWh pack. Not sure how BMW/mini differ, or how much buffer there is to mitigate degradation over time.
Great video. Getting a test drive on Sunday. One garage said they are only selling model 2&3 right now as wiring harnesses come from Ukraine. Not sure if that’s true or not. One question. Are you using MINI servicing or local indie garage. I prefer to support local garages and also no mini service centre near me. Any thoughts on this?
Did you inform the house owner you were charging the car ? Did they charge extra? Interesting to know as you wouldn’t get fee petrol from a holiday rental, and I assume it’s going to get more common
Hi Nigel. As I previously stated. South Africa has a scarcity of EV's. Till last year, we only ever received: 1st Gen Nissan Leaf 24kWh BMW i3 in all battery capacities and all having the REx Jaguar I-Pace Mini Cooper SE Volvo XC40 P8 Recharge Porsche Taycan Only got the the BMW iX in December This year Audi E-tron BMW iX3 (this month) Complications: No Chademo - but it is being phased out. Majority of DC charging 30kW, few above 60kW and none over 100kW. Oh yes, South Africans want to drive long routes and do it in as short as possible of a time. Pro's for me 1. Planning your routes 2. Keeping me relaxed 3. Giving my ETA's to point and contacting my liaison (family member to say I arrived, and if my plans will be adjusted for the trip) 3. A stop shorter then 30minutes annoys me, because I want to stretch my legs, and peacefully want to buy my snacks for the trip if I didn't put anything in. 4. If you calculate each activity a stop should never be less then 30minutes. Or are people made to take out the full bladder and replace it with an empty bladder and stomach for no bathroom breaks. And what do they use to stay hydrated and fueled as a human? Sarcasm doesn't suite me. 5. The CCS (DC) chargers are mostly located close to the food courts. Makes me happy. But looking at human needs and requirements, then comparing it to charging times required. You are not inconvenienced unless you doing your roadtrips on an unsafe manner of fastest time and less relaxation and a bigger likelihood of falling asleep behind the wheel. Being a relaxed driver, and free to drive slower, stopping longer, and not chasing your grave, makes the best roadtrips. Or is my 42 year old female driver saying the wrong thing. Boys and Men don't get me wrong. Speed is fun, but doing it in an unsafe manner isn't cool, so a racetrack yeah. I needed to attend to way too many accidents where people needlessly lost their lives because of a person driving like a looney toons.
@@EVPuzzle Nigel, you are bringing the, "You don't need all that range, and you just need to take a trip as having fun and exploring. Inadvertently giving you less or no anxiety as you continue with the vehicle. If I may say, like people always said small city cars are for the city, but it doesn't limit you to the city. Just a bit of planning and checking where you can refuel or charge. And as long as the vehicle can make it to the next stop, you are good to go. Stressing about the range and size of the vehicle will only leave you to never push yourself out of your comfort zone. As you'll be surprised in what smaller vehicles can do comfortably, by just modifying what you pack and the speed you drive. And yes, while playing you will find what you and your vehicle are capable of.
@Michele Heynes I like to challenge the norm, it's just who I am Michele. The Mini is surprising as its actually really comfortable I long trips, more so than some of the huge crossovers and SUVs that are out there. I've just got out of a Polestar 2 and hot to say the Mini rides better and crashes less. Who'd have thought that. The Mini just lacks space. Who oh why haven't they built the Clubman in EV form yet. I'd buy it today. Literally today. The countryman hmmmm not a fan, but ugly etc but may well be a comfy car too. I really can't stand those people that say they need a huge car for taking rubbish to the tip or for th huge xmas shop or the once a year holiday. Those are the times you cram the car full. I don't want to buy a car for its space, I want comfort and feel, space I can compromise on. Each to their own though.
@@EVPuzzle Nigel, for once I agree with a male counterpart. I wouldn't mind owning the Volvo XC40 even in P6 single motor form. But the Mini makes a better proposition for me. Smaller, mostly one person in the car, maybe two. Why oh why have a car with rear doors, and if I need more packing space, down goes the rear seats. Before some man says I can't park, I can reverse parallel park a Ford Ranger Double Cab that is about 5 meters in length, in one move on a good day, and 2 maybe 3 on a bad day. So don't think people that drive small cars never drove or can't drive bigger vehicles. It's about the enjoyment, not just the capabilities of the vehicle you going to use once or twice a year. I understand if it is a few times a months or more, then it isn't a fruitless expenditure, but an essential part of your life. But if it's for 1-3 people that doesn't do long trips, a teenie weenie polkadot bikini car makes perfect sense, unless you massive and need to sit on the back seat of the Mini to drive it (kind of very tall). I'm just between 5'8 and 5'9 (5'8½), so not that tall and not that short.
I can't wait to get my EV and do "cheap" trips like this. Sadly my order that was due May 30th now has no ETA 😞 Ordering a new EV at the moment is not a pleasant experience. 9 months of hassle.
I totally understand your dilemma.I ordered an Ioniq5 way back in November. I was predicted to be delivered in early May ,after contacting my dealership I was told that they couldn't guarantee delivery date as it wasn't even in build.I gave up and bought my Jaguar I pace ,,which was an ex demonstration car.
@@fsr170409 Oh my ID3 order was worse. Ordered start October 2021, told March delivery. January I get a message saying looking at July/August delivery. February get another message saying December delivery. I cancelled start of March as Vauxhall said they could deliver in 13 weeks..... When I cancelled my ID3 they said I would be looking at March/April for delivery. So 18 - 19 month wait for a VW. If my Mokka does not arrive before October though I will be gutted I didn't just wait for the ID3. Fun times!
That's why I went for an ex demonstration model.I did have the old mokka but the new one looked smaller. They're great cars though and have been getting great reviews. My friend got the last I'd 3 that was in the London area last year ,it was just the basic model and he loves it.
if there were charging places with the amount of chargers as petrol station pumps have. as often as there are petrol stations. instead we have 1 or 2 chargers at places that are some times not as easy to find as no signage to show you were they are. that's more why it is harder to do. many people just look at cost for charging saying that instavolt is 57p and that's too much. when you have to really take in other costs. 1 - road tax. 2 - No servicing ( oil, oil filter, spark plugs, etc) that an ev does not need. no oily driveway. stop in any traffic and use up fuel not moving. you need to look at all the companies that need to use fuel or electricity to make all the parts a petrol car uses over its life. and all the waste of used parts going to landfill'
True but on this journey petrol stations had cars in them ,chargers were mostly empty . Like for like isn't needed and it's improving all the time , it's exciting to be part of this huge change
Hi Nigel. As I previously stated. South Africa has a scarcity of EV's. Till last year, we only ever received: 1st Gen Nissan Leaf 24kWh BMW i3 in all battery capacities and all having the REx Jaguar I-Pace Mini Cooper SE Volvo XC40 P8 Recharge Porsche Taycan Only got the the BMW iX in December This year Audi E-tron BMW iX3 (this month) Complications: No Chademo - but it is being phased out. Majority of DC charging 30kW, few above 60kW and none over 100kW. Oh yes, South Africans want to drive long routes and do it in as short as possible of a time. Pro's for me 1. Planning your routes 2. Keeping me relaxed 3. Giving my ETA's to point and contacting my liaison (family member to say I arrived, and if my plans will be adjusted for the trip) 3. A stop shorter then 30minutes annoys me, because I want to stretch my legs, and peacefully want to buy my snacks for the trip if I didn't put anything in. 4. If you calculate each activity a stop should never be less then 30minutes. Or are people made to take out the full bladder and replace it with an empty bladder and stomach for no bathroom breaks. And what do they use to stay hydrated and fueled as a human? Sarcasm doesn't suite me. 5. The CCS (DC) chargers are mostly located close to the food courts. Makes me happy. But looking at human needs and requirements, then comparing it to charging times required. You are not inconvenienced unless you doing your roadtrips on an unsafe manner of fastest time and less relaxation and a bigger likelihood of falling asleep behind the wheel. Being a relaxed driver, and free to drive slower, stopping longer, and not chasing your grave, makes the best roadtrips. Or is my 42 year old female driver saying the wrong thing. Boys and Men don't get me wrong. Speed is fun, but doing it in an unsafe manner isn't cool, so a racetrack yeah. I needed to attend to way too many accidents where people needlessly lost their lives because of a person driving like a looney toons.
Hi Nigel could you do a video on the mini charging card and the features please I’m studying your videos and finding them very helpful .
Mini charging scheme isn't something I'm interested in. Scheme uses unreliable network so not for me
Great video and very useful. I think these days it's charger anxiety not range anxiety. I've recently bought a Jaguar I pace and am looking forward to my trip to Alveston hall from Kent. Hopefully I'll learn from this trip as to what range I'm really going to get on a long journey .Thanks again for your great video. 👍
Fantastic. Love seeing these real world usage. On longer journeys it's definitely nicer to stop rather than just slog it all the way to the end in one go.
Hi Nigel, great to see more of your trips. I totally agree that the biggest change with an EV on a long journey is a little pre planning. I learned early on to have a back up charger nearby, to cover any chargers not working or all in use. Especially in towns, there are normally several options as to where to charge. Also if I get to 20% charge remaining, I head to a charger unless I am now within distance of the destination that I know has charging capacity, such as back home. Being able to do destination charging back to 100% seems key to making the trips easier.
I also do like you, tryto find chargers where I can go for food/drink or visit the shops!
There's much more choice now to suit all our needs.... Which are different as always
Great video Nigel, very much the same thing as I am trying to do with my videos, showing people you can do these sort of trips with ease in an EV
To a Tesla driver it's easy but to a new EV driver Mini or other it's all new so it all helps.
@@EVPuzzle depends where you are, when I had a tesla I was on trips with no superchargers. To be honest I find the enyaq just as easy as the model 3 was now as there are so many more chargers than 4 years ago when I had the leaf
Very ture, it's much much easier no than it was a few years ago
Thanks for another great update video take care and safe travels everyone
Really liking your videos, nice relaxed rambling style, not so sure about the very early starts though. Myrtle Mini looks like a great car, I had an original mini as my first car. I have been forced to chose a car with a longer range for my first EV, as a wheelchair user the huge stress you talk about is magnified as you have the usual worries plus will the charger be accessible. Instavolt are the main protagonists for installing inaccessible chargers, it is such a shame that they seem to be ignoring disabled drivers. It would be a great idea for fuel stations to start fitting chargers, attendants already on site, covered and well lit safer areas, has to be a win win.
Check out Warners wheeling about.This gent is a wheelchair user and runs a mini e.His uploads are really useful as he goes into accessibility in depth.
I do prefer an early start but it does impact efficiency being colder, the Mrs isn't so keen. I bribe her
Good Video. I have a Tesla Model 3 LR and yes the long journey process is just the same but with longer legs. I quite enjoy the planning bit. We also charged at our holiday house near Keswick recently. I worked out we could slow charge overnight on the grannie charger and maybe get all the way home without charging. We drove from Keswick to Peterborough without charging. We had to do a comfort stop but no charging needed. In the end we had 48 miles range left when we got home. We did go a bit slower than we used to in the diesel (64 MPH) but that made the driving more relaxed and easier. We could easily have done the speed limit too, with a very short splash and dash but we had the time.
I'm sure range will keep improving but I've learnt a good lesson about stopping
Big battery is great for storing solar power though
I do love a stop in an EV, plug it in, go for a pee and a coffee and then you're off again. 20 mins maximum stop time in our experience. If you want to stop for something to eat you have to plan to charge then move and park up or park up then charge.
Eat, charge, park or park, eat, charge, or perhaps charge, park, eat; so many options.
Its a problem isn't it with cars like the tesla that charge too quick , you have ti move the car. Mini seems similar, slower but fills up fast
@@EVPuzzle it is, it's really the same process we're all used with a petrol/diesel car. Park, eat and fill up with fuel on the way out. No different really, just as you say in the video takes a bit more planning until it becomes second nature.
Super video thanks...
Always good to see your adventures. This week I have a 50 round trip to Richmond, 40 mile round trip to Reading, 100 mile round trip to Southampton and 180 miles to Canterbury and back. My SLK will do it on a tank full with 3 gallons to spare. If I still had my Zoe I could do it all on home charging except the last trip which would require half an hour stop on the way home. I guess the Mini would require two quick stops. I think a 40 kWh usable in a mini would add some flexibility. Do you agree or are you happy with what you have?
Hi Nigel. Great video as always. Can you do a video on the regen braking to show how best to use/recharge. Motorways I am told kill the battery if you get a free run whereas stop/start is much better. Thanks.
I did one using the Kona testing efficiency in level 0,1,2 and 3
Presumably things will only get even better. The only reason now for a big battery is to be able to fill it totally from free solar, and not pay anything out on the road !!
Another good reason to have a big battery is that it will degrade more slowly because of less cycling. Assuming similar chemistry and about 800 cycles of useful life, a 60kWh car should go twice as far as a 30kWh car, before terminal battery degradation.
Take the figures with a pinch of salt, but I'd say the theory is robust.
More than 800. Home battery is thousands of cycles car will be more as thermally managed
@@EVPuzzle I thought the charging cycle quotation by Hyundai for the Kona was 800 and something? Good enough for about 200k miles if average real world range is 250 miles.
Some of Bjorn's recent degradation tests show that it's quite high on the smaller battery Kia Soul with the 24kWh pack.
Not sure how BMW/mini differ, or how much buffer there is to mitigate degradation over time.
@@martinwray7001 guess that depends on how much you rapid it. Car batteries have a the benefits to last longer but have the highest loads too
Great video. Getting a test drive on Sunday. One garage said they are only selling model 2&3 right now as wiring harnesses come from Ukraine. Not sure if that’s true or not. One question. Are you using MINI servicing or local indie garage. I prefer to support local garages and also no mini service centre near me. Any thoughts on this?
I'm going to use cleevely EV, James from TH-cam /twitter fame. Dealers no where near as good except for maybe software updates and maps
Ask Mini dealer for latest servicing packs. They are no longer called TLC (like years ago) but they do offer servicing for a fee.
i have one as well best mini ever
Did you inform the house owner you were charging the car ?
Did they charge extra?
Interesting to know as you wouldn’t get fee petrol from a holiday rental, and I assume it’s going to get more common
Asked about the plug before we booked . Never met anyone who didn't offer free charging , it's standard these days. Just a couple of ££
Hi Nigel.
As I previously stated. South Africa has a scarcity of EV's. Till last year, we only ever received:
1st Gen Nissan Leaf 24kWh
BMW i3 in all battery capacities and all having the REx
Jaguar I-Pace
Mini Cooper SE
Volvo XC40 P8 Recharge
Porsche Taycan
Only got the the BMW iX in December
This year
Audi E-tron
BMW iX3 (this month)
Complications:
No Chademo - but it is being phased out.
Majority of DC charging 30kW, few above 60kW and none over 100kW.
Oh yes, South Africans want to drive long routes and do it in as short as possible of a time.
Pro's for me
1. Planning your routes
2. Keeping me relaxed
3. Giving my ETA's to point and contacting my liaison (family member to say I arrived, and if my plans will be adjusted for the trip)
3. A stop shorter then 30minutes annoys me, because I want to stretch my legs, and peacefully want to buy my snacks for the trip if I didn't put anything in.
4. If you calculate each activity a stop should never be less then 30minutes. Or are people made to take out the full bladder and replace it with an empty bladder and stomach for no bathroom breaks. And what do they use to stay hydrated and fueled as a human? Sarcasm doesn't suite me.
5. The CCS (DC) chargers are mostly located close to the food courts. Makes me happy.
But looking at human needs and requirements, then comparing it to charging times required. You are not inconvenienced unless you doing your roadtrips on an unsafe manner of fastest time and less relaxation and a bigger likelihood of falling asleep behind the wheel.
Being a relaxed driver, and free to drive slower, stopping longer, and not chasing your grave, makes the best roadtrips. Or is my 42 year old female driver saying the wrong thing.
Boys and Men don't get me wrong. Speed is fun, but doing it in an unsafe manner isn't cool, so a racetrack yeah.
I needed to attend to way too many accidents where people needlessly lost their lives because of a person driving like a looney toons.
All very true, the thing I try to get across, is I thought I was one of them... But once you've gone EV things seem different and you see the light
@@EVPuzzle Nigel, you are bringing the, "You don't need all that range, and you just need to take a trip as having fun and exploring. Inadvertently giving you less or no anxiety as you continue with the vehicle.
If I may say, like people always said small city cars are for the city, but it doesn't limit you to the city. Just a bit of planning and checking where you can refuel or charge. And as long as the vehicle can make it to the next stop, you are good to go.
Stressing about the range and size of the vehicle will only leave you to never push yourself out of your comfort zone. As you'll be surprised in what smaller vehicles can do comfortably, by just modifying what you pack and the speed you drive. And yes, while playing you will find what you and your vehicle are capable of.
@Michele Heynes I like to challenge the norm, it's just who I am Michele. The Mini is surprising as its actually really comfortable I long trips, more so than some of the huge crossovers and SUVs that are out there. I've just got out of a Polestar 2 and hot to say the Mini rides better and crashes less. Who'd have thought that.
The Mini just lacks space. Who oh why haven't they built the Clubman in EV form yet. I'd buy it today. Literally today. The countryman hmmmm not a fan, but ugly etc but may well be a comfy car too.
I really can't stand those people that say they need a huge car for taking rubbish to the tip or for th huge xmas shop or the once a year holiday. Those are the times you cram the car full. I don't want to buy a car for its space, I want comfort and feel, space I can compromise on. Each to their own though.
@@EVPuzzle Nigel, for once I agree with a male counterpart.
I wouldn't mind owning the Volvo XC40 even in P6 single motor form. But the Mini makes a better proposition for me. Smaller, mostly one person in the car, maybe two. Why oh why have a car with rear doors, and if I need more packing space, down goes the rear seats.
Before some man says I can't park, I can reverse parallel park a Ford Ranger Double Cab that is about 5 meters in length, in one move on a good day, and 2 maybe 3 on a bad day. So don't think people that drive small cars never drove or can't drive bigger vehicles.
It's about the enjoyment, not just the capabilities of the vehicle you going to use once or twice a year. I understand if it is a few times a months or more, then it isn't a fruitless expenditure, but an essential part of your life. But if it's for 1-3 people that doesn't do long trips, a teenie weenie polkadot bikini car makes perfect sense, unless you massive and need to sit on the back seat of the Mini to drive it (kind of very tall). I'm just between 5'8 and 5'9 (5'8½), so not that tall and not that short.
Across humber Bridge is red sails. Really close osprey chargers
Very handy to know thanks
Hi Nigel, any reason you don’t use the HUD?
Sudan doesn't like it, I use it
Aaaaawwwww is your dog enjoying the journey....
Great video , very informative.
Could do with adding a K to Yorshire in the title :-)
Well spotted
Hi Nigel. I' ve notice Cracker in the back of your Mini. I believe it is even happier than you with this Mini. 😬
He loves it and loves his "ride in the car ". Haven't tried him in the back seat yet but that's on our list
I can't wait to get my EV and do "cheap" trips like this. Sadly my order that was due May 30th now has no ETA 😞 Ordering a new EV at the moment is not a pleasant experience. 9 months of hassle.
It'll get there. I know that pain waiting . It'll be worth it to
@@EVPuzzle it's not all bad. The delay has freed up some funds for another eco purchase 😂
I totally understand your dilemma.I ordered an Ioniq5 way back in November. I was predicted to be delivered in early May ,after contacting my dealership I was told that they couldn't guarantee delivery date as it wasn't even in build.I gave up and bought my Jaguar I pace ,,which was an ex demonstration car.
@@fsr170409 Oh my ID3 order was worse. Ordered start October 2021, told March delivery. January I get a message saying looking at July/August delivery. February get another message saying December delivery. I cancelled start of March as Vauxhall said they could deliver in 13 weeks..... When I cancelled my ID3 they said I would be looking at March/April for delivery. So 18 - 19 month wait for a VW. If my Mokka does not arrive before October though I will be gutted I didn't just wait for the ID3. Fun times!
That's why I went for an ex demonstration model.I did have the old mokka but the new one looked smaller. They're great cars though and have been getting great reviews. My friend got the last I'd 3 that was in the London area last year ,it was just the basic model and he loves it.
if there were charging places with the amount of chargers as petrol station pumps have.
as often as there are petrol stations. instead we have 1 or 2 chargers at places that are some times not as easy to find as no signage to show you were they are. that's more why it is harder to do.
many people just look at cost for charging saying that instavolt is 57p and that's too much. when you have to really take in other costs.
1 - road tax. 2 - No servicing ( oil, oil filter, spark plugs, etc) that an ev does not need. no oily driveway. stop in any traffic and use up fuel not moving.
you need to look at all the companies that need to use fuel or electricity to make all the parts a petrol car uses over its life.
and all the waste of used parts going to landfill'
True but on this journey petrol stations had cars in them ,chargers were mostly empty . Like for like isn't needed and it's improving all the time , it's exciting to be part of this huge change
Hi Nigel.
As I previously stated. South Africa has a scarcity of EV's. Till last year, we only ever received:
1st Gen Nissan Leaf 24kWh
BMW i3 in all battery capacities and all having the REx
Jaguar I-Pace
Mini Cooper SE
Volvo XC40 P8 Recharge
Porsche Taycan
Only got the the BMW iX in December
This year
Audi E-tron
BMW iX3 (this month)
Complications:
No Chademo - but it is being phased out.
Majority of DC charging 30kW, few above 60kW and none over 100kW.
Oh yes, South Africans want to drive long routes and do it in as short as possible of a time.
Pro's for me
1. Planning your routes
2. Keeping me relaxed
3. Giving my ETA's to point and contacting my liaison (family member to say I arrived, and if my plans will be adjusted for the trip)
3. A stop shorter then 30minutes annoys me, because I want to stretch my legs, and peacefully want to buy my snacks for the trip if I didn't put anything in.
4. If you calculate each activity a stop should never be less then 30minutes. Or are people made to take out the full bladder and replace it with an empty bladder and stomach for no bathroom breaks. And what do they use to stay hydrated and fueled as a human? Sarcasm doesn't suite me.
5. The CCS (DC) chargers are mostly located close to the food courts. Makes me happy.
But looking at human needs and requirements, then comparing it to charging times required. You are not inconvenienced unless you doing your roadtrips on an unsafe manner of fastest time and less relaxation and a bigger likelihood of falling asleep behind the wheel.
Being a relaxed driver, and free to drive slower, stopping longer, and not chasing your grave, makes the best roadtrips. Or is my 42 year old female driver saying the wrong thing.
Boys and Men don't get me wrong. Speed is fun, but doing it in an unsafe manner isn't cool, so a racetrack yeah.
I needed to attend to way too many accidents where people needlessly lost their lives because of a person driving like a looney toons.