I am betting 90 is the best case probably 30 in the winter.If you had a 20 km commute it would be awesome. Much warmer than an ebike in the winter. More than double the range you need so no fear of running out.
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I am betting 90 is the best case probably 30 in the winter.If you had a 20 km commute it would be awesome. Much warmer than an ebike in the winter. More than double the range you need so no fear of running out.
there are pretty cost effective third party Leaf battery upgrades.Mimico - Just found a used 2012 Leaf for $2500 and the guy says he gets 90km out of a 10 bar battery life.... @Relax you're looking for a cheap entry point!
How much is insurance, parking, financing etc? If the fixed costs are too high and the mileage driven too low an EV doesn't offset ICE fuel ups.I am betting 90 is the best case probably 30 in the winter.
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I'd take that leaf over an LSV anyday. About 10K cheaper, similar operating cost, not subject to political whims (LSV program could be cancelled), and safer if you get in a wreck. Really, there are no upsides to the LSV program as they have structured it. That is why the uptake is incredibly close to zero.Being retired we make things work with one vehicle figuring the couple of thousands in savings will pay for cabs and public transit. A light electric car (Glorified golf cart) would physically work but at $10K and with the structural integrity of a tin can, not worth it.
LSVs appeal to the illiterate. Approved in Ontario but they don't read "Must also be approved by municipalities." I've seen a couple in Mississauga where they are not approved.I'd take that leaf over an LSV anyday. About 10K cheaper, similar operating cost, not subject to political whims (LSV program could be cancelled), and safer if you get in a wreck. Really, there are no upsides to the LSV program as they have structured it. That is why the uptake is incredibly close to zero.
While driving or charging? I hope driving. Heat pump EV in the garage would be interesting. It's heating the battery which would be cooling the garage which I don't want.Even with heat pumps EV's still use more power to heat the battery and cabin during this time.
Wall charger usually.When you pre-heat an EV while plugged into your home charger, does it only use the wall current, or does it dip into the battery?
Just found a used 2012 Leaf for $2500 and the guy says he gets 90km out of a 10 bar battery life.... @Relax you're looking for a cheap entry point!
Volt would use the car battery and wall current I believe to preheat the car while plugged in. It would dip down from 100% and would recharge within a few min as it didn’t take a lot of juice.When you pre-heat an EV while plugged into your home charger, does it only use the wall current, or does it dip into the battery?
It’s is dirt cheap but I did the math and some research on some forums….that car would barely get me to work in the cold (52km) and wouldn’t charge back fast enough on L1 to actually get me home.Thanks, that's dirt cheap if it runs, and I only have a 24 km round trip commute now, 2 days per week. Just not loving the look of it.
I can let the cat out othe bag now. I was looking at a 2014 Tesla Model S with unknown mileage because the battery was drained and the seller didn't know how to open the doors. Apparently bought that way, so the previous seller was equally dumb. Advertised for $8,000, but then price kept dropping over the past week $7500, $6500, $6000. I was trying to get a ScanMyTelsa cable so I could go see it, but it sold today for $5000 sight unseen. Seller just wanted it gone. If I could have gotten a cable sooner, I would have gone over, opened the doors and scanned it to see if the drive battery was OK. Even if it only had 100 kms range I would have bought it and planned for a battery swap down the road.