Nice people, stupid people, Tesla lovers, strokes of marketing genius and the highs and lows of the charging network
Jim Holder
17 September 2019

Earlier this year, as part of a long-term test review, I had six months to discover just how good the Kia e-Niro is. But as the time neared its end, it became apparent that the car's real-world 250-300-mile range meant I hadn’t driven anywhere that necessitated the use of the UK's public charging network.

So it was that I took the plunge, adding further jeopardy by making this pioneering journey with my entire family in tow, off on our summer holidays to West Wales.

At worst, I wouldn’t return just on a flatbed truck but also divorced and with children who no longer wanted to know me.

The challenge was complex, because we needed to travel to and from Wales on the motorway networks, whereas we would be looking for every kind of charger available while we were there, from rural public spots to those provided by local car dealers and even, on occasion, three-pin plugs where we were staying.

However, 800 miles later and with two journeys of more than 250 miles under our belts, we were back home and still on speaking terms. It took some planning and there were fleeting moments of inconvenience and lost time, but it worked out just fine, a few ultimately minor dramas aside.

Here, then, are some of the lessons learned from a trip that proved to me once and for all that the capability of today’s EVs and charging network make the switch from a petrol or diesel car far easier than most people imagine.

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1. Electric car people are nice people

I’ll be honest, I had my doubts. Social media is awash with virtue-signalling EV evangelists who jump at the chance to strike out at anyone who dare suggest even the slightest compromise of electrification. But everyone I met in an electric car was friendly, helpful and informative, and many went out of their way to help and educate me. This is the kind of advocacy needed to persuade anyone with doubts to switch to electric motoring, and it was a joy to discover a positive subject that bound people together in a common goal.

2. Some people can’t help behaving like idiots

Based on my journey, 'some people' is actually mostly made up of BMW drivers. The chap who parked his diesel X6 in a charging bay and left its engine running for 20 minutes? Idiot. The BMW 5 Series plug-in hybrid buyer who dropped it in a charging bay but then got ticketed because he wasn’t smart enough to plug it in? Bigger idiot. The only upside was that they weren’t using disabled bays, I guess.

3. The Tesco/Pod Point/Volkswagen tie-up is a stroke of genius

Parked up in Tesco in Cardigan taking on a quick top-up, I must have encountered close to 100 shoppers wanting to know what I and my Hyundai Ioniq-driving neighbour were up to. It helps, of course, that there are big signs and a video screen to catch the attention, but for most people I spoke to, it was the prospect of free fuel that had them intrigued and - from the quality of the questions - off to research more about electric cars. Greater news for EV uptake, even greater news if you’re about to launch the ID 3.

4. 7kW charging on the motorway is useless

You don’t need big energy to charge overnight at home, but it’s all you want when you’re trying to get somewhere. Incredibly, I encountered numerous motorway outlets that could only trickle around 20 miles of range into the car in the maximum 45 minutes of charging allowable. That's nigh-on useless and underlines that as well as expanding the network, providers must focus on upgrading it where appropriate.

5. Ecotricity’s motorway network needs urgent improvement

I have pondered over naming and shaming, but the weight of evidence against Ecotricity is overwhelming, both from the fact that my only disrupted or failed charges came at its hands and the catalogue of complaints online. The company isn’t without its positives, but it's regularly providing the sort of experiences that would put off many people from making the switch to an electric car and prompt hugely damaging headlines. If it won’t improve its act, someone else should be asked to step in.

6. Planning ahead isn’t that hard - but it helps to do it

It sounds obvious, but if you’re like me, the only planning you’ve thought about ahead of long trips previously is trying to avoid rip-off motorway prices. Driving an electric car requires more care, but not much, and of course you get better with experience. There are apps to tell you where chargers are, how fast they charge, whether they’re working and whether they’re available to use. Even if you hate planning ahead, you’re looking at five minutes of homework.

7. Charging needs to be simpler

That said, the infrastructure providers and legislators need to bang their heads together fast. I was delighted to discover a Welsh Government initiative trying to pull together the mishmash of providers under an umbrella scheme, so that users could access all the chargers using one app or card, rather than having to sign up to a patchwork of providers. Rumour has it there are more than 50 providers in the UK; someone needs to get the patchwork working together or make contactless payment easier, becuase it’s not unreasonable for people to reject anything that makes life harder.

8. Range doesn’t just get you from A to B, it gives you options

For all the headlines about there being more chargers than fuel stations in the UK now, one of the electric car owner’s biggest fears must be crawling up to a charger only to discover it's either busy or broken. It actually happened to us, but whereas the 100-or-so-mile Nissan Leaf and Renault Zoe owners were trapped in line, we could motor on to the next set of chargers. If you’re buying, don’t just consider what’s enough, consider what will give you freedom whatever the circumstances.

9. Everyone wants a Tesla

Every car maker is either launching or developing a so-called Tesla-killer, yet it only takes half a day on the road to realise just how lazy a line that is. Yes, Tesla has many issues to overcome and yes, it faces mounting opposition from the establishment, but be in no doubt that it remains the maker of the most desirable electric cars on the planet today, as well as garnering something of a cult status among children, the next generation of car buyers. It’s far from a perfect car company, but write it off at your peril. The Supercharger network is a major bonus, too.

10. Don’t underestimate the three-pin plug

It’s a crime that some car makers sell electric cars without the choice of what kind of cable you get with it. My advice would be to have both fast/rapid and three-pin options, as supplied by Kia. The latter may take days to fill a car like the e-Niro from empty to full, but it’s a great way to top up in remote locations and earn a few more options for where you can get to once you get going again.

11. The cars and the charging infrastructure are good enough today

I know there’s a mountain of obstacles still to overcome, but the number of mainstream media articles showing long-distance electric car journeys ending in disaster, prompting widespread disbelief at how the country will never be ready to switch, are nonsense. I know it’s possible because I did it and met tens of drivers who've happily taken on far more ambitious journeys without issue. Cars like the e-Niro with 250-plus miles of real range transform the capability, and there are more than enough performing chargers out there to keep most people moving. It’s not for everyone, I know, but I truly believe that for most of the people, most of the time, switching would be no barrier to their lives as they know them today.

12. Don’t forget what you’ve forgotten

As I write this, the e-Niro has gone to find a new owner, its loan having ended a week ago. Yesterday, I took my new test car - a perfectly brilliant diesel-powered seven-seat SUV - for its first fill. I’d forgotten how dirty fuel pumps are, how much time you end up spending at them and - above all - how expensive they are, to the extent one 500-mile tank cost me £75. That's precisely half what I estimate the e-Niro to have cost me over 10,000 miles, thanks to my access to some free and much relatively cheap home charging. Charging sounds a faff, and it can be, but 99% of the time I plugged in and forgot about it until it was time to get in the car again. That is an infinitely preferable experience to going to a fuel station and parting with wads of cash.

Read more

Kia e-Niro long-term review

EVs need paying and charging conformity, says top charger maker

Electric chargers should offer card payment by 2020

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Comments
26

17 September 2019

Point number 4 is incorrect:

there are almost zero 7kW chargers at motorway services in the U.K.. It looks like you have plugged into the AC charger on a rapid charger (capable of 43kW into a Zoe) but your car can only handle 7kW so that is all it can take of the 43kW.

if you had connected to the same equipment using the DC connector you would have got closer to 50kW charge rate (and more if it was me of the newer >100kW units).

17 September 2019
PB1975XS wrote:

Point number 4 is incorrect:

there are almost zero 7kW chargers at motorway services in the U.K.. It looks like you have plugged into the AC charger on a rapid charger (capable of 43kW into a Zoe) but your car can only handle 7kW so that is all it can take of the 43kW.

if you had connected to the same equipment using the DC connector you would have got closer to 50kW charge rate (and more if it was me of the newer >100kW units).

The problem is that Ecotricity's CCS charging often doesn't work, so can only deliver AC. Jim probably didn't do anything wrong, other people have the same issue. When Ecotricity loses their exclusivity deal for motorway services, it will be a major boon to EV drivers.

Anyway - agreed with just about everything in this article. Very refreshing.

289

17 September 2019

The Group SUV EV test was more representative.

Jim states that 500 miles worth of Diesel cost him half of what 10,000 miles in the e-Niro, but this included free top-ups....not fair comparison.

Far more accurate was the group test where 100 miles of electricity had cost £12.69  (and one and a quarter hours) equating to £63.45 for 500 miles hardly any difference if you take the current lack of VAT into account (which wont last).....nor will the current cheap electricity.

And how long did it take to put 500 miles worth of Diesel in the SUV 5- 10 minutes? Certainly not 6.25 hours!

Someone on the forum stated that he was paying 5p per kw for his electricity....this is a very low figure, even for economy 7, which most people (anyone with Gas or Oil central heating wont have access to.

With regard to the X6 owner, I have always thought that you have to be a special kind of idiot to buy a 'coupe Sport Utility' that actually has no Utility in its DNA. But in fairness other than the thoughtless parking, it looks a sunny day in the photo, so he was probably running the engine for Air Conditioning purposes- something all coach drivers do in summer. The EV owners are probably jealous of this as they couldnt spare the electricity to run their A/C!  Well, not if they wanted to get home ;-)

 

17 September 2019

To be fair to the idiot in the X6, loads of people still idle their cars for minutes on end, for absolutely no reason. It's baffling. It's as if they don't know that idling still uses fuel ( they probably don't ).

 

The fact that he did it in a charging bay just makes him a bigger idiot. Or an A-hole.

 

 

17 September 2019

Very positive, especially like the bit about the existing charging infrastructure being good enough, it'll only get better too!   (unlike the BMW X6 owner)

 

typos1 - Just can’t respect opinion

17 September 2019

Personally i think you should not have covered the licence plate number of that BMW owner. 

As for doing 800 miles in a week, well i assume you set off with a full 250 mile range? So you needed to plug in three times in a week? And once was from the domestic supply, and once was from free tesco fuel? So its not exactly hard. Having said that, there is no way i would rely on the Ecotricity chargers at all.

As for the experience of filling your diesel SUV, well if it had been petrol it wouldnt have been half as dirty an experience and as for the cost, if you knock off the tax, its really not that much to pay is it. Why EV drivers feel they should get free fuel, and the little they do pay for, not pay tax on it is beyond me. If you dont compare like with like there really isnt much point is there?

 

 

 

17 September 2019
artill wrote:

.... as for the cost, if you knock off the tax, its really not that much to pay is it. Why EV drivers feel they should get free fuel, and the little they do pay for, not pay tax on it is beyond me. If you dont compare like with like there really isnt much point is there?

Next time I'm at the petrol station I'll ask them to take the tax off, wonder if it'll work. 

No EV driver expects free fuel they just take what's offered, in the instance of the Model S it was part of purchase package.

This is how works for the consumer! 

typos1 - Just can’t respect opinion

17 September 2019
artill wrote:

and as for the cost, if you knock off the tax, its really not that much to pay is it. Why EV drivers feel they should get free fuel, and the little they do pay for, not pay tax on it is beyond me. If you dont compare like with like there really isnt much point is there?

 

Nope, don't understand your point here.  No-one expects free fuel.  But as it stands, there's nowhere near the same amount of tax on electricity as there is on carbon based fuels.  So, they are comparing like for like, as in, how much actually comes out of my pocket to run this car?

 

Meh

17 September 2019

Typical of a BMW X6 driver!!!! Park anywhere because I'm the king of the road! Should have slashed his tyres. The reason why he was letting his car idle was because he was letting his turbo-charger cool down after a good old thrashing on the motorway.

17 September 2019

Yes, this story just confirms my suspicions about the kind of people who drive X6s!

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