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KurtVerbose



Member Since: 08 Aug 2010
Location: Les Arses
Posts: 5848

Switzerland 2007 Range Rover Vogue TDV8 Stornoway Grey
What's the MPG of your EV?

We normally see chemical energy shown as joules, or mega joules, and electrical energy as kilowatt hours, so we don't directly compare the efficiency of petrol/diesel vehicles in the same terms as EV's.

But you can convert joules to kwh easily. A litre of diesel has about 10 kwh, and a litre of petrol has about 8.75. By the gallon diesel has 45.4609 kwh and petrol 39.7782875. Multiply those numbers by your miles per kwh and you have the MPG of your EV.

Incidentally, a Tesla Model 3 does a quoted 4.4 miles per kwh, which is 200 mpg for diesel and 175 mpg for petrol. Something more Range Rover sized like BMW's iX goes 2.9 miles per kwh, which is 131 mpg for diesel and 115 mpg for petrol.

Anyway, just thought it was an interesting metric, nothing more.

Post #643179 17th Sep 2022 7:52am
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
Location: Gainsborough
Posts: 1459

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

My i3 averages 5.2 miles per kWh so 236.40 and 206.85 mpg and the RAC are stating that EV's cost more to run the the equivalent petrol or diesel car.

I often do a similar comparison by comparing pence per mile. I pay 7.5p kWh therefore my cost per mile is 1.44p. Average cost of diesel in uk is £1.82 per litre - £8.26 per gallon. That works out on a cost basis a much more impressive 573 mpg Rolling with laughter BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #643192 17th Sep 2022 11:51am
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Paul J.



Member Since: 13 Jan 2009
Location: Leafy Cheshire
Posts: 277

England 
Re: What's the MPG of your EV?

KurtVerbose wrote:
We normally see chemical energy shown as joules, or mega joules, and electrical energy as kilowatt hours, so we don't directly compare the efficiency of petrol/diesel vehicles in the same terms as EV's.

But you can convert joules to kwh easily. A litre of diesel has about 10 kwh, and a litre of petrol has about 8.75. By the gallon diesel has 45.4609 kwh and petrol 39.7782875. Multiply those numbers by your miles per kwh and you have the MPG of your EV.

Incidentally, a Tesla Model 3 does a quoted 4.4 miles per kwh, which is 200 mpg for diesel and 175 mpg for petrol. Something more Range Rover sized like BMW's iX goes 2.9 miles per kwh, which is 131 mpg for diesel and 115 mpg for petrol.

Anyway, just thought it was an interesting metric, nothing more.


Like all vehicles, the mpg is highly dependent on how you drive. You *could* get 4.4 miles per kWh in a Tesla Model 3, but not if you drive it at motorway speeds, using a/c etc. Most EVs have a relatively high performance, so the temptation is to use that performance at the expense of economy. Therefore, I repeat, you *could* get 4.4 mpkWh, but you *won’t*. Wink

I’ve just driven from Cheshire to Newcastle and back in my I-Pace, taking it easy on the way up (2.4 miles per kWh), and not so much on the way back (2.2 miles per kWh). I could have got into the mid 3s if I’d limited my speed to 40mph, and into the 4s if I’d switched of the a/c and driven at 30mph. (But then I wouldn’t be writing this because I’d still be driving) Laughing

Taking my average of 2.3 mpkWh for this journey, that’s still 90 - 100 mpg, which isn’t bad for a 400bhp car. Very Happy Gone D3
Gone FFRR L322
Gone FFRR L405
Now on the JLR electric highway ....

Post #643236 17th Sep 2022 11:06pm
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KurtVerbose



Member Since: 08 Aug 2010
Location: Les Arses
Posts: 5848

Switzerland 2007 Range Rover Vogue TDV8 Stornoway Grey

The same is true of petrol and diesel cars. Who gets near the quoted figures?

Post #643240 18th Sep 2022 7:15am
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rvbush



Member Since: 08 Jan 2016
Location: Leamington Spa
Posts: 519

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Vogue TDV8 Stornoway Grey

The trouble with all of these sort of cost comparisons is they don't take into account the fixed costs of financing an electric vehicle in the first place, which tend to cost, like for like, rather more than their petrol/diesel equivalents. Obviously the more miles you do, then the less this impacts on cost per mile, but it's a factor nevertheless. but then servicing costs as lower (or should be) and nobody seems to have costed in the eventual disposal cost of the nasties in the batteries, where does it end? Drives:
2010 FFRR TdV8 Vogue - Stornoway Grey
2010 FFRR TdV8 Vogue SE - Zermatt Silver
1998 BMW E36 M3 GTII

Post #643242 18th Sep 2022 8:47am
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Full-fat-Lance



Member Since: 06 Feb 2022
Location: Essex
Posts: 112

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Autobiography 4.4 V8 Orkney Grey

It a lot of cases, the batteries apparently go on to have second lives as power wall batteries or similar.

Post #643256 18th Sep 2022 11:36am
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
Location: Gainsborough
Posts: 1459

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

rvbush wrote:
The trouble with all of these sort of cost comparisons is they don't take into account the fixed costs of financing an electric vehicle in the first place, which tend to cost, like for like, rather more than their petrol/diesel equivalents. Obviously the more miles you do, then the less this impacts on cost per mile, but it's a factor nevertheless. but then servicing costs as lower (or should be) and nobody seems to have costed in the eventual disposal cost of the nasties in the batteries, where does it end?


People that highlight the costs of EV's also dont take into account the final value when sold and the lower depreciation either. Add on to this the much lower fuel costs, a lot of the time free, zero road tax and lower servicing costs and it does build into a very nice package.

I'm sure the road tax wont last but who knows.......

The batteries have a second life after duty in a vehicle for home storage batteries, once they're depleted the various components can be recovered for recycling. BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #643272 18th Sep 2022 2:20pm
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SamThomas



Member Since: 12 Nov 2021
Location: South East
Posts: 293

United Kingdom 2003 Range Rover Vogue Td6 Baltic Blue

rvbush wrote:
The trouble with all of these sort of cost comparisons is they don't take into account the fixed costs of financing an electric vehicle in the first place, which tend to cost, like for like, rather more than their petrol/diesel equivalents. Obviously the more miles you do, then the less this impacts on cost per mile, but it's a factor nevertheless. but then servicing costs as lower (or should be) and nobody seems to have costed in the eventual disposal cost of the nasties in the batteries, where does it end?


Don't forget the costs of installing chargers to factor in.

As for second owner value ? probably quite high, but when EV's are out of the dealer network (because of the costs) what will the value be ? Very little I suspect, they will be out of the scope of local garages because of the costs of the software required & that's assuming the manufactures will provide it.

There will of course be some indy's who will invest & probably specialise in makes but there will be a lot of incompetents out there too.

Post #643293 18th Sep 2022 9:03pm
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rvbush



Member Since: 08 Jan 2016
Location: Leamington Spa
Posts: 519

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Vogue TDV8 Stornoway Grey

I'm not anti EV per-se, but there are a lot of things that don't get costed properly in order to support the Government agenda of forcing us down the wrong path. EV's for city use, absolutely! But banning ICE vehicles completely, why? Surely with modern tech you could limit ICE vehicles in certain areas to so many 'visits' per year or something like that. Technology will solve the pollution problem, but politicians with no knowledge of the issue just a desire to get votes, won't! They are just leading us up the wrong garden path. Drives:
2010 FFRR TdV8 Vogue - Stornoway Grey
2010 FFRR TdV8 Vogue SE - Zermatt Silver
1998 BMW E36 M3 GTII

Post #643311 19th Sep 2022 8:30am
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
Location: Gainsborough
Posts: 1459

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

[quote="SamThomas"]

rvbush wrote:
The trouble with all of these sort of cost comparisons is they don't take into account the fixed costs of financing an electric vehicle in the first place, which tend to cost, like for like, rather more than their petrol/diesel equivalents.

But if theyre comparing either put cost of financing on both sides of the comparison or leave it off both sides.

Quote:

Obviously the more miles you do, then the less this impacts on cost per mile, but it's a factor nevertheless. but then servicing costs as lower (or should be)

That pans out, £525 one off payment for 3 years servicing & MOT's direct with BMW.

Quote:

and nobody seems to have costed in the eventual disposal cost of the nasties in the batteries

Theres a good reason for that, the disposal of the EV battery nasties only exists in ICE drivers heads. The traction batteries have a second life in home energy storage and then the component parts can be recycled.

Quote:

where does it end?

It will only ever end with education of the masses that simply repeat hearsay and continue to spread the myths.

Quote:

Don't forget the costs of installing chargers to factor in.

Most EV's come supplied with a charger.

Quote:

As for second owner value ? probably quite high, but when EV's are out of the dealer network (because of the costs) what will the value be ?

Not so, they hold their price well, my i3 is worth more now than when I bought it 3 years ago, my FFRR only attracted half the price when I sold it after 18 months.

Quote:

Very little I suspect, they will be out of the scope of local garages because of the costs of the software required & that's assuming the manufactures will provide it.

Does this not ring true for any vehicle? do Land Rover make their software readily available? Arent many jobs out of scope for local garages?
The truth is with EV's there are more and more garages doing the required training, the systems and fault finding whilst be different are much simpler.

Quote:

There will of course be some indy's who will invest & probably specialise in makes but there will be a lot of incompetents out there too.

Again, no different to ICE car garages. BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #643320 19th Sep 2022 11:33am
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Martin2



Member Since: 15 Jun 2020
Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 713

England 

I think it’s too early to have a firm view on residuals of EVs, especially as the development is moving fairly quickly.

Comparing residuals on an old RR when the market was poor (or normal) to a little city car when the market is crazy is just daft! Laughing

I’ve had my car nearly 2.5 years, have added over 30k miles to it and it’s worth £8-9k less than I paid for it. On that basis, a FFRR is the cheapest cars I’ve had in a long, long time…..that’s just luck / timing.

A quick look on the Jaguar configurator for a fairer comparison puts an IPace about £200 a month more than a D300 F Pace, based on £10k down / 10k miles a year. You’d have to have zero cost electricity and save a bit on servicing to break even. MY23 Panamera E-Hybrid
MY19 SDV8 Autobiography - Sold

Post #643342 19th Sep 2022 3:54pm
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SamThomas



Member Since: 12 Nov 2021
Location: South East
Posts: 293

United Kingdom 2003 Range Rover Vogue Td6 Baltic Blue

[quote="AJGalaxy2012"]

SamThomas wrote:
rvbush wrote:
The trouble with all of these sort of cost comparisons is they don't take into account the fixed costs of financing an electric vehicle in the first place, which tend to cost, like for like, rather more than their petrol/diesel equivalents.

But if theyre comparing either put cost of financing on both sides of the comparison or leave it off both sides.

Quote:

Obviously the more miles you do, then the less this impacts on cost per mile, but it's a factor nevertheless. but then servicing costs as lower (or should be)

That pans out, £525 one off payment for 3 years servicing & MOT's direct with BMW.

Quote:

and nobody seems to have costed in the eventual disposal cost of the nasties in the batteries

Theres a good reason for that, the disposal of the EV battery nasties only exists in ICE drivers heads. The traction batteries have a second life in home energy storage and then the component parts can be recycled.

Quote:

where does it end?

It will only ever end with education of the masses that simply repeat hearsay and continue to spread the myths.

Quote:

Don't forget the costs of installing chargers to factor in.

Most EV's come supplied with a charger.

Quote:

As for second owner value ? probably quite high, but when EV's are out of the dealer network (because of the costs) what will the value be ?

Not so, they hold their price well, my i3 is worth more now than when I bought it 3 years ago, my FFRR only attracted half the price when I sold it after 18 months.

Quote:

Very little I suspect, they will be out of the scope of local garages because of the costs of the software required & that's assuming the manufactures will provide it.

Does this not ring true for any vehicle? do Land Rover make their software readily available? Arent many jobs out of scope for local garages?
The truth is with EV's there are more and more garages doing the required training, the systems and fault finding whilst be different are much simpler.

Quote:

There will of course be some indy's who will invest & probably specialise in makes but there will be a lot of incompetents out there too.

Again, no different to ICE car garages.


The above looks a bit of a mess......

I'm pretty sure the comment you were quoting on regarding chargers referred to the cost of installing the power supply for the chargers.

Personally, I think you made a wise choice with the i3 holding it's money. The same may or may not be true of other makes. Clearly, you are in the happy position to be able to take a knock on your now gone RR & purchase an EV - many, many people (including myself, are not).

I'm aware that manufactures keep their software close to their chests - my view is that they will keep EV software even closer, especially with software updates.

AFAIK there are no garages in my area investing in equipment to service EV's.

Post #643344 19th Sep 2022 4:14pm
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RRover



Member Since: 17 May 2021
Location: Sussex
Posts: 278

2012 Range Rover Westminster TDV8 Causeway Grey

The BIGGEST EV SCAM in HISTORY! Porsche are removing functions from YOUR Electric Car. SHAME ON YOU!

Just watched this on the Tube of You...

I think the real deal is starting to appear way before they intended it to...

This guy had functions that came with the car removed/deleted/exterminated on a tech upgrade and was asked to pay extra to have them added again...

Fun EVs heh?!?

Sheep

Post #643349 19th Sep 2022 5:21pm
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Martin2



Member Since: 15 Jun 2020
Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 713

England 

AJGalaxy2012 wrote:
My i3 averages 5.2 miles per kWh so 236.40 and 206.85 mpg and the RAC are stating that EV's cost more to run the the equivalent petrol or diesel car.

I often do a similar comparison by comparing pence per mile. I pay 7.5p kWh therefore my cost per mile is 1.44p. Average cost of diesel in uk is £1.82 per litre - £8.26 per gallon. That works out on a cost basis a much more impressive 573 mpg Rolling with laughter


We’ve been here before….quite recently….it’s 7.5p for you for now and if I remember correctly, that’s because you’ve invested a lot in solar/batteries to get down to that cost along with a mileage that means 4 hours a day is enough. Most people I know with EVs at work are struggling to get to 10p a mile and that’s those with a cheap overnight rate plus they’re not taking into account the extra they’re paying for the other 20 hours a day. The higher cost per mile is because they’re traveling a fair distance most days (in a larger EV), but that’s why you can’t use your own situation and assume someone else will be the same.

I have some empathy as I under-recover for my business miles, but no sympathy as they are paying Censored all company car tax and it’s their choice and running an EV as a company car is still cheap motoring. MY23 Panamera E-Hybrid
MY19 SDV8 Autobiography - Sold

Post #643350 19th Sep 2022 5:35pm
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AJGalaxy2012



Member Since: 11 Jun 2018
Location: Gainsborough
Posts: 1459

United Kingdom 2012 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

SamThomas wrote:


I'm aware that manufactures keep their software close to their chests - my view is that they will keep EV software even closer, especially with software updates.

AFAIK there are no garages in my area investing in equipment to service EV's.


Looking at the HEVRA map, south East doesnt look too shabby:


 BMW i3 Electric Car
2012 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 (now gone)
2006 VW Touareg 3.0 TDi V6

Post #643356 19th Sep 2022 7:12pm
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