inactionman wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 12:23 pm
Hal Jordan wrote: ↑Wed Apr 13, 2022 12:10 pm
With the battery lease Zoes, the man maths is working out the savings on the purchase price as against paying the lease for the period you intend to have the car - you can come out ahead.
Yep, it's going to about 9k for a 28kish mile car on a 16 plate, so they are cheaper than anything comparable, even adding £500-600 a year for battery lease. There are very few non-lease versions of that age, vintage and price, the only other option appears to be a 2014/2015 Leaf which I'm not that sold on.
The plan is to keep it a few years and then to see where new electric car prices have gone. I'll admit I was quite interested in the electric corsa but wanted to wait a few years to get a reasonably priced used model.
One concern is that the Zoe gets so outdated that the price crashes, just a risk we'll have to take - it is the 22kwh model, not the updated 41kwh. Range likely to be less than 100 miles, but it's going to be a nursery run and local shopping car, we've the Land Rover for longer trips. Which will unpick any environmental benefit we may have brought with the Zoe.
I was going to say to be aware that all the Podpoint charge points in Edinburgh seem to be AC, which means your maximum charge rate will be 7kW (which is limited by the on-board charger, so even a 22kW AC charge point will only charge your car at 7kW). To go faster, you need DC charging (not sure if the Zoe can do that) - some of the Chargeplace Scotland have 50kW DC available.
However, if you're looking at the 22kWh battery, and you're going from 20% to 80%, that'll only take you a couple of hours on AC. If you need to charge 0% to 100%, it'll take about 3 hours - so check that Tesco don't have a time limit on their car park.
A couple of other things to note & plan for:
Try and run it between 20% and 80% full - don't charge it up to 100% unless you absolutely need to for a longer journey.
Don't leave it with a high SOC (state of charge) for any length of time - so if you're going away for a few days, don't be tempted to fully charge it so it's ready for when you get back.
Try and park (and charge it) it in the shade in the height of summer - the batteries don't like getting really hot (yeah, I know, Edinburgh...)
Cold weather will give you less range (batteries work better when warm, plus you'll probably use the heater)