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AFLW 2024 - Round 9 - Indigenous Round - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
I'd still choose a hybrid over either option at the moment for my current circumstances.
And in a line of work where long drives on highways were required, there'd be reasons relating to driving range and recharging times why a company would purchase petrol-fuelled cars over hybrids or EVs, particularly the lower-priced EVs which are likely to have even less range.
Whilst its great that EV options are increasing, and I hope they continue to become more affordable, your statement regarding purhasing decisions could be more flexible. Not everyone's circumstances are the same.
My step mum has an MGB, nice to look at, fun to drive when it's on the road but British engineering always left a little to be desired. I'd assume the Chinese might learn from that.
BMW/Mini likes this.
Who?Not a MG driver I’ll bet
Spending the same amount of money on a hybrid makes no sense, especially if you have the ability to charge your car at home. Even more so if you have solar.
With 2 way charging, your EV will not only save you money on petrol but will reduce your home power usage, with the ability to run your entire house power needs during peak periods. Allowing you to buy power when it’s cheap.
Not everyone is you Nut. You seem to think everyone has your personal circumstances.
Not everyone lives in a house. Solar panels not normally an option.
Not everyone owns their property. Makes installing batteries difficult.
Not everyone drives around the city.
Not everyone has time to micromanage their electricity consumption.
Go back and read why hybrids were being discussed.
Personally , if i had a plug in Hybrid like the Outlander or BYD, i would be able to charge it most nights ( on coal, i don't have a battery and current circumstances are that i would be unwise to install one, will be selling up soon. ) and drive to work and back on full electric. I do enough long distance travel on weekends that i don't want to be stuffing around hunting down country charge stations for a full EV. The modern hybrids have a lot of different operating modes, so even if you are driving on petrol, you are still regeneratively braking and optimizing your economy according to how the car's computer sees fit.
So you have the ability to charge.
Range of EVs now pushing 500km+
Charge for free on weekends, Using renewables.
Add on top of that 385k range on the freeway, I don’t really want to charge it below 20% or above 80% so it becomes every 230km that I’m stopping.
In full support of EVs and would absolutely go for it if all I did was city driving but I don’t. Also don’t have the luxury of 2 vehicles right now.
Yeah its not. It never has been.Its probably better than 100% charging an EV off coal,
Yeah its not. It never has been.
No idea why people continue to say it is.
Its going to continually improve, but Govts need to get infrastructure right.So you have the ability to charge.
Range of EVs now pushing 500km+
Charge for free on weekends, Using renewables.
yes pollution is bad, but that doesn't help your argument in any caseExcep pollution not in heavily populated area
Market/GovtWhy is it govts responsibility and not ‘the market’?
Yeah its not. It never has been.
No idea why people continue to say it is.
Your anecdotal observations are never going to be greater than credible studies done to determine EVs even powered by coal are more efficient/less polluting.Yeah it can be .
Here's why i say it can be. So now you have an idea.
Burning coal produces more CO2 than burning Oil. There are also transmission losses along the way and even charging losses.
The Hybrid Nissan, is essentially an oil burning generator. Like a Diesel electric train. The engine is optimised for efficiency rather than drive ability.
It benefits from the efficiency of an electric drive train ( regeneration ).
The PHEV vehicles at least have potential to run on renewables.
A Nissan X-Trail Hybrid uses 6.1 Litres per 100km petrol, ( test results ) which will produce 14.6 Kg CO2 per 100km ( 2.4 kgCO2 per litre burned - average for ic engines ).
A Tesla 3 uses 14.7kwh/100km ( published results ) . In Victoria The average CO2 per KwH is 0.86 ( official govt value ) , but it could go as high as 1.2 on still nights or as low ( my estimate - based on aemo coal percentage and power station reported figures ) as 0.5.
If you mainly charge your Tesla at night, it could be responsible for as much as 17.6 kg CO2 per 100km.
Average victorian rate, 12.6 KgCO2 per 100km, or at best around 7kg CO2/100km. Have a home setup like Nut, and you can go emission free.
The Nissan is a bit of an oddball. The Hybrid only gets around 20% better efficiency than the regular drive train X-Trail.
Its just a petrol car with a more efficient drive train.
Your anecdotal observations are never going to be greater than credible studies done to determine EVs even powered by coal are more efficient/less polluting.
Edit - just to be clear, I do get the argument for some people to buy a hybrid given the current EV market, but ultimately they are nothing more than a stop gap.
And which of my "observations" were "anecdotal".
Better at English than Maths in school weren't you.
No is telling you to rush out and spend money, the consensus is, run your existing one out and when you need a new one consider it.All these cars are equally low pollution when sitting in a driveway which in a lot of cases is all but 100- 200 hours a year.
99% of the time
Excuse me for not rushing to spend $50k and thinking I’m saving the planet.
Spend on rooftop solar, battery and it’s working at least 30% of the time
I'm not convincedMaybe Aussies aren’t so dumb after all