cb15035
Standard Member
If you're travelling on the M62 at rush hour every day, you've surely not got much to worry about speed-wise!
Only get stuck in traffic every other Friday on the way back ?
If you're travelling on the M62 at rush hour every day, you've surely not got much to worry about speed-wise!
7kw charger is going to put in about 20 mph charge in winter when you’re looking for 100 mile range (assuming about 3 mi/kWh). So if your trip is about 50mi that’ll give you about 2.5hr charging to full.
The good thing about destination chargers like 7kw ones is that they’re untethered, and generally simpler, I find they’re more likely to work. And they actually take as long to charge as you’re intending to stay.
And if they’re giving free juice too, what’s not to love?
I need to try it out, it seems slighty too good to be true.
I'm still learning about the different types of charge point. This afternoon I took the car to the village charge point to check everything was working and that I knew what to do. My brand new ChargePlace Scotland card worked fine. I chose the Type 2 connector and in the 45 minutes allowed on the charger the battery went up from about 47% to 60%, putting in a bit more than 4KWh. (It was a bit of a whim and I hadn't pre-heated the battery so it might have been slower due to that.) I'm catching on that if I want more than that in the time I should use the CSS connector. I'll try that some time next week after running the battery down going to the cinema on Monday.
Conversely, as you say, the slower chargers are good if you actively want to leave the car for a longer time. I've heard people speak about "destination chargers" but I wasn't quite sure what they were. I'll need to figure out how the ones at Cambridge Street work. I see they are all type 2 connectors, no option for CSS, so that bodes well that they expect people to leave their car there for a few hours. It's unusual for an opera performance to run to more than three hours overall, so it could work very well. If Scottish Opera ever get back to doing Wagner, well there will be a long interval if the car has to be moved.
Knowing that the village charger has a 45-minute time limit made me think that all public chargers were like that, but I'm realising that they vary a lot.
Best thing to do is download ZapMaps on to your phone it’s Free and you will find there almost every type of charge point across the UK and beyond plus prices in most cases directions on how to get to them and the ability to chose to search for any type or Charing providers you like to use. There are others out there but I would suggest ZapMaps is about the best in many ways.Do you know anything about the M6 between the border and the Kirkby Lonsdale turnoff? I had great luck finding cheap petrol about 100 yards from an interchange near Carlisle just before Christmas, but charging points are a closed book to me!
True of Scotland, but if you’re having a good length stop because you’re having a bite and stretching your legs then you’re not going to mind getting 70kw ish versus 90+ with the battery heating.Most of the trips I'll be doing will be at temperatures below about 20C...![]()
As I have a 7kW home wall box, when doing a long journey I just bite the bullet and use the GridServe chargers at Gretna Green. Yes, they cost (last time I was there) 79p per kWh but that's still around the same p per mile cost as for an ICE car (when filling from a local garage, not factoring in motorway prices). For the rare times I need to use rapid chargers I don't think messing around looking for cheaper options is worth my time.Do you know anything about the M6 between the border and the Kirkby Lonsdale turnoff? I had great luck finding cheap petrol about 100 yards from an interchange near Carlisle just before Christmas, but charging points are a closed book to me!