TBH I reckon partly the point of the programme was to get people thinking about buying electric cars! Sliiiiight bit of 'propaganda' maybe if you're inclined to use that word- bit of Tesla namedropping and probably if 'the ultimate petrolhead' can be a convert, then we all can.MattWellsyWells wrote: ↑12 Aug 2021, 14:52Yeah he took his time and also managed to charge over night so it isn't really comparable with what Guy was doing.El Scorchio wrote: ↑11 Aug 2021, 21:21Did he say how long it took him though? I guess if Guy Martin had used the slowest charge points he would have got there for a lot less than £204, but spent hours and hours waiting for the car to charge! It's quite interesting, the charge time vs cost issue. Someone will always pay a premium for speed, and I wonder if the prices can be jacked up where they know there aren't many charge points? I guess at some point it'll become super fast and super cheap with an abundance of charge points, but not for a couple of years. The infrastructure development really needs to be rapid.MattWellsyWells wrote: ↑11 Aug 2021, 12:27
I also watched this documentary and it was very interesting. I was surprised when they concluded it was more expensive than ICE on long journeys. I saw a friend at the weekend who has recently bought a VW ID.3 and he says he absolutely loves it and would never go back to ICE. He doesn't do that many long journeys but said he recently drove from Oxford to Bangor (about 450 mile round trip) and that it only cost him about £15!
To be honest I'm surprised they had Guy Martin do that show because he's always been pretty old school and a sort of "the more oil and dirt the better" kind of person. I think he is right though that EVs are good for a minority currently and will probably never be right for some others but hopefully in a couple of years the infrastructure and costs will be at a level that make them viable for most people
They covered the main concerns people would have- 'is it fast enough?', 'is it too expensive?', 'How easily can i charge it or drive long distances?', 'How safe are the batteries?' But intertwined with the world record attempt/build/science experiments and how it works aspect. (I also quite enjoyed the history aspect of saying the tech has been around for donkey's years, but the abundance of cheap oil and ease of using it led to the ICE being the technology of choice for the motoring industry.)
Despite it being a tiny bit of an under the radar sales pitch (in my opinion), I think they did do a very balanced and honest job of it, pointing out both the cons of going electric as well as the pros as well as saying the ICE will probably always be around in some form. Seems like if you won't ever deplete the battery during a journey (ie don't ever drive far) then it's well worth considering it, but if you do, then maybe not yet.