GordonH
Novice Member
I have a wall socket 3 pin plug. I read it will take a very long time to charge and I need to charge overnight as fully as possible, what advice can anyone give me please
The key to success with granny charging at home is not to let the battery get too low. Before my Podpoint was installed I always kept the car topped up to 80%I have a wall socket 3 pin plug. I read it will take a very long time to charge and I need to charge overnight as fully as possible, what advice can anyone give me please
When all cars are electric does this mean we go back to the middle ages where only the few venture further than their own village...., I would not buy an EV if I did not have an off road charging facility ..., nor for long trips involving charging away from home - horses for courses etc.
Yes, if all the villages are more than 100 miles apart.When all cars are electric does this mean we go back to the middle ages where only the few venture further than their own village.![]()
Please do check your daily needs. At 4500-5500miles pa for us no need for a 7kw unit upgrade. Likewise with Octopus GO tariff our daily KW needs (vs cheap rate for EV charging) I could save approx £2 per month. Apologies if this does not fit with most, but the maths (Octopus GO vs standard fixed tariff) suggest similar cost.
I won't call you Shirley, but one post with no reply to any of the many useful comments made would seem to strongly back up your assertion...Does anyone else think the OP was possibly a troll/wind up/anti EV comment. Shirley I can't be the only cynic on here.
It really is down to your daily mileage if the granny charger will be sufficient.I have a wall socket 3 pin plug. I read it will take a very long time to charge and I need to charge overnight as fully as possible, what advice can anyone give me please
No sign of any grants for equipment install though.........I suppose I was one of the fortunate EV owners that benefitted from a UK government grant of £500 to install an EV charge point back in 2016 when I had an Outlander PHEV, it was topped up by the Energy Saving Trust through Home energy Scotland, they paid back my instalment of £240 so was net zero cost to me. I just had a look at gov.uk to see if there is any existing help for new EV owners and came across this concept that might be of interest to those of you considering battery storage as a solution. Families could use electric vehicle batteries to power homes and save on bills as government backs new charging technologies
IMO, it was one of the worst decisions UK government made was to withdraw home charge point incentive funding for those switching to BEV's.
I agree, although as far as worst decisions by the UK government goes, there's a hell of a lot of competition out there.IMO, it was one of the worst decisions UK government made was to withdraw home charge point incentive funding for those switching to BEV's.
IMO, it was one of the worst decisions UK government made was to withdraw home charge point incentive funding for those switching to BEV's.