Specmaster wrote: ↑Wed Mar 15, 2023 6:14 pm
@Cerebus, nope, sorry your reply just demonstrated that either you did not watch the video or if you did, you never listened to what he said in it.
Please do not make ridiculous claims when I very obviously did watch it, otherwise how would I know where he'd ended up, or that he DID have a charging lead with him.
Specmaster wrote: ↑Wed Mar 15, 2023 6:14 pm
I have driven through all kinds of blizzards in my time in cars, coaches and lorries and never once has my fuel usage shot up to the extent that the range went to less than 50% of normal. He never complained about the lack of grip / traction with the car apart from the time in Buxton when he attempted to get into and away from the various chargers which had not cleared or gritted and as he said, he had to clear away snow with his bare hands to the rough depth of 30 to 40 cm where the wind had created drifts, some of which could be seen in the hotel grounds.
He was driving in an EV with a limited range and ran low on charge because he hadn't planned and ignored the impending weather and ended bumbling about for hours. That's it. If he isn't adult enough to deal with planning for the limited availability of charging, or smart enough to plan for it, that's down to him. At the extreme he could carry one of the charge leads that will operate from a standard 13A socket, keep it in the boot (I do) and negotiate with anyone who has a 13A socket to charge from it for a small consideration to get enough charge to get to the next place he was guaranteed a fast charger. They cost less than £300, his Porsche £75,500+. He got stuck because he didn't plan, and didn't take the limitations of his vehicle into account, End of story.
Specmaster wrote: ↑Wed Mar 15, 2023 6:14 pm
Also sorry but all the public chargers that I have come across have all had the charging cables firmly and permanently attached to the chargers, unless the flipping thieves have been at them and cut the cables off to extract the copper, so you will see from the photo that there is nowhere to plug your own cables in.
Let's get this right, you're telling a guy that you know has a plug-in EV, who has charged it at public points many times (last time yesterday), that you, a man who has never plugged his car in to charge it, that you have better knowledge of the public EV charging infrastructure in the UK. OK, good luck with that. How about this: I have ONLY EVER plugged my car in to charge at public charging points with my OWN charging cable, NEVER using a fixed one. The sockets are quite small, they are almost always there i
n addition to the fixed cable at charge points with fixed cables, you just don't know to look for them, and the majority (90%) of charging points do not have fixed cables at all (e.g. the bank of 10 chargers at the local supermarket are all plug in cables cable only, no fixed cables.). If there is a fast DC charger that doesn't have a Mennekes socket on it, I'll bet that there are several in adjacent parking bays - you just don't notice them because the fast DC chargers are huge, the AC chargers with Mennekes sockets on are small, usually just a rather fat post serving two vehicles.
My car charging, along with 4 others, with 5 charging bays free. Can you even spot the charge points? Hint, there's only one you can see, the rest are obscured by vehicles.
Cars charging.jpeg
Specmaster wrote: ↑Wed Mar 15, 2023 6:14 pm
Are you cables that you brought designed to be plugged into a 13A socket outlet, I wonder. If so then there is noway that you are ever going to be to fast charge the car and if I'm not mistaken yours is a Plug in Hybrid Electric Vehicle, which is a completely different system to a complete fully electric vehicle, designed to charged from a system with which I think starts at 7KW and can go upto 250KW with the right charger fed from a 3 phase supply.
You are not comparing apples with apples here, more like apples with acorns.
Is the object to get going after you've backed yourself into a corner, or only to get going with a full charge? An hours charge at 10A on a 13A plugin 3kW charger, will get you perhaps 4 miles. An overnight charge at the same, at any bed and breakfast, 32 miles. An overnight charge on a free 7kW charger (exactly the same as I charge from at the supermarket, making my journey there free) at a Travelodge or similar 74 miles. If you've planned your journey so that it doesn't put you within range of a fast charger if you're going to possibly need one then you shouldn't be allowed out in an EV without adult supervision.
EVs have range limitations, the current charging network is sparse compared to petrol stations. If you don't take that into account when you set out you will get the shit that you're asking for. His guy got the shit that he was asking for, and is whining like a baby because he didn't think.
For the record, what rate of charging you can get using just the standard Mennekes (type 2) 'slow' AC cable is limited by your vehicles built in AC charger, the rating of the cable you carry around with you, and the current limit set on the charge point. Free charge points tend to abstemious, 32A single phase for 7kW charging rate. BUT, you can get up to 80A single phase, or 3 x 63A three phase on AC charging over the standard Mennekes (type 2) 'slow' chargers. That's 18 kW single phase, or 43 kW three phase - 22kW three phase (32A) is a common (limited) option. No fancy DC chargers, just a suitably beefy standard 230/440V hookup to the local mains.
It's really simple, Mr. Idiot put himself in this position by failing to plan for the weather and the type of vehicle he set out in, and yet somehow it's the fault of the vehicle, or the government, or no doubt the bloody illuminati that it all went pear-shaped.
Specmaster wrote: ↑Wed Mar 15, 2023 6:14 pm
Edit, Also the car did not cost him £75,000+, it as he stated it is a lease vehicle and as such can be returned and a deal done to cancel the contract.
It's still a £75,500+ car, whether he's leasing it or bought it outright. What do you think the monthly lease payments on £75k+ are? Chickenfeed? No, n initial payment of £14,759.29, then £789 a month for 35 months if you lease the base model Taycan from Porsche. Total expenditure over 3 years £42,374.29 or £1177.06 per month amortised over the 36 months. You'll also pay 14.4p per mile over 10,000 miles in a year. If at the end of the lease you opt to purchase the car you'll cough up another £50,556.16.
So Mr. Numbnuts is not short of a bob or two, but that doesn't manage to compensate for him being short of brains, or the inability to accept responsibility for his own fuckup. The car did nothing unexpected. The charging points didn't fade away in the night. The possibility that some charging points might be out of action didn't suddenly appear out of nowhere (which is why people use facilities like zap map, where users will leave a note if there's problems with an individual charger). Neither did the snow magically appear without warning in a area of the UK that is notorious for traffic chaos if it snows.