How far can electric cars REALLY go?? - we drive 12 until they DIE! Tesla, BYD & more | What Car?

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  • Опубликовано: 29 фев 2024
  • #EVRange #EVCar #ElectricCar #ElectricCarRangeTest
    How far can electric cars really go in the winter? We drive 12 EVs - including the Tesla Model 3, MG4, VW ID.7 and BYD Dolphin - until they die to find out.
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @sergio_azenha
    @sergio_azenha 2 месяца назад +2083

    I think I speak for all non-UK based viewers: would you please add the metric system equivalent to the miles and mph you mention during the video? A simple text overlayed on the video would suffice. Thank you!

    • @r.s.1281
      @r.s.1281 2 месяца назад +195

      I completely agree. It could be done so easily and cater to SO MUCH more people...
      But it always seems like people from the UK and the US just don't give a damn about people from the rest of the world.

    • @Tommmmmmmmmmmm
      @Tommmmmmmmmmmm 2 месяца назад +180

      They ironically probably have more viewers watching from outside the UK too

    • @kiwijonowilson
      @kiwijonowilson 2 месяца назад +99

      Yes I had my calculator out and paused the video to do calculations. Interestingly a couple of USA channels I have been watching have started showing metric units as well as imperial - which is very welcome!

    • @Dan-sk4wk
      @Dan-sk4wk 2 месяца назад +59

      I am from the UK and agree with you. Whilst this has clearly been created for the uk market, I agree that this added information would benefit many other viewers.
      Take note @whatcar

    • @briantehan2865
      @briantehan2865 2 месяца назад +40

      Yes, the last couple of recalcitrants using metrics are the UK and USA. We also use the more easily understandable kWh per 100km as the measure of efficiency.

  • @malvnathaniel
    @malvnathaniel 2 месяца назад +712

    Now I get why toyota keep saying bad stuff about EV while themself making such a bad EV. Its horrid.

    • @jodumas36
      @jodumas36 2 месяца назад +71

      I know right. Can’t believe anyone would buy that. Some people love throwing their money out the windows for the sake of “having a Toyota”.

    • @andy1243ify
      @andy1243ify 2 месяца назад +102

      Toyota simply has been left behind on ev tech. Hence they will badmouth it.

    • @2810Mad
      @2810Mad 2 месяца назад +59

      Toyota just do their own thing and that's hybrids and they've perfected them

    • @lesmotley6839
      @lesmotley6839 2 месяца назад +27

      It's hard to tell if toyota is not intentionally designing poor value EVs. How hard can it be to make an economical EV? This will bode poorly for toyota if they don't lift their game and quickly.

    • @TJPavey
      @TJPavey 2 месяца назад +30

      @@2810Madif they made a better EV they could trickle that tech into their hybrids. If their hybrids were perfected as you say the EV motors should be more efficient.

  • @Kirmo13
    @Kirmo13 5 дней назад +5

    I have a hard time comprehending how such high-budget and professionally produced piece of content can make financial sense to provide for free on the internet!
    12 brand new EVs, on a closed off private track all recorded by a team of professionals and presented by two great journalists. Really good job guys, no doubt you've got one of my likes

  • @MarekzAnglii
    @MarekzAnglii 2 месяца назад +218

    It's insane to think that just 35 years back (which, in the grand scheme of things is not that long ago), you could have bought a 2-4 bedroom house in the London suburbs within the price range of these cars!

    • @michaeldawson6309
      @michaeldawson6309 2 месяца назад +18

      Yep there still silly money for something that sits on the drive 90% of the day !

    • @drfisheye
      @drfisheye 2 месяца назад +32

      @@michaeldawson6309 well, I'm also not stting in all my rooms in my house for 90% of the day.

    • @geemy9675
      @geemy9675 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@drfisheye😂

    • @MichaelWilliams-mo1vv
      @MichaelWilliams-mo1vv Месяц назад +6

      You couldn't buy a chicken coop for that money these days

    • @philspencelayh5464
      @philspencelayh5464 Месяц назад +8

      These days a small house in London is about the price of a private jet

  • @sonofagun1037
    @sonofagun1037 2 месяца назад +730

    Ah the Jeep Avenger. Awarded car of the year before there were even pre-production test units. There definitely wasn't any back-door dealings there. Pinnacle of quality

    • @NawfalHasan
      @NawfalHasan 2 месяца назад +10

      It scored well on efficiency surprisingly though. Seems like a great car.

    • @savedfaves
      @savedfaves 2 месяца назад +43

      It's like Hyundai Ioniq 6 receiving car design of the year award, when it is clearly one of the ugliest cars in motor history. It's uglier than Hyundais own Coupé/Tiburon from twenty years ago. It looks like a banana with a load of stupid spoilers added on the back. Hyundai Coupé and Saab 900 had a baby. To make things worse, the concept version of it was beautiful. Car makers have the make-a-beautiful-concept-car-but-an-ugly-production-car thing down to a fine science.

    • @NawfalHasan
      @NawfalHasan 2 месяца назад +34

      @@savedfaves yes "clearly". Looks are never subjective, that much this guy has figured out.. I for one find it good looking

    • @DeeKay1911
      @DeeKay1911 2 месяца назад +22

      My first thoughts "Awarded car of the year.. Has the worst range of them all.." So the number one concern for EV buyers - range - is terrible. Yeah let's give this thing a major award!

    • @davidbrayshaw3529
      @davidbrayshaw3529 2 месяца назад +25

      Well, given Jeep's excellent reputation for design, build quality, reliability and after sales service, they would never have been given COTY if anyone had actually reviewed them.

  • @ManfredvonHolstein
    @ManfredvonHolstein 2 месяца назад +366

    Excellent. Would have loved to see the Ioniq 5 and 6 and Model Y in this too…

    • @hishamg
      @hishamg 2 месяца назад +13

      Me too. I’m surprised that they left those 3 out, especially the TMY.

    • @savedfaves
      @savedfaves 2 месяца назад +4

      ​ @hishamg Given the Y sells more units than the 3 I would have liked to see it too. Assume 30% less than claimed range is always a safe bet on EVs. Maybe 25% less for the Y.

    • @andreverville9492
      @andreverville9492 2 месяца назад +20

      Ioniq 6, especially the one with 18 inch wheels, would certainly have challenged the winners.

    • @MrLangson
      @MrLangson 2 месяца назад +2

      Where was NIO ? 150 kw battery range 650 miles !

    • @timothyi6492
      @timothyi6492 2 месяца назад +5

      @@MrLangson It's China only. They get all the good stuff.

  • @Wooster77
    @Wooster77 2 месяца назад +4

    RUclips should just use Ai to add an auto converter for weights and measurements that would briefly appear on screen whenever needed.

  • @don.timeless4993
    @don.timeless4993 Месяц назад +34

    as James May said, it's more likly recharge anxiety not range anxiety. & i can't agree more

    • @gerrys6265
      @gerrys6265 3 дня назад +2

      Yup...recharge anxiety is more of an issue with us too....esp since we fell for the BZ that was available at the time while everything else (or even another BZ) was n 18 month wait and our previous car just finally fell apart. I still can't believe that a joint operation between two major and reliable car manufacturers could put out something ten years behind its time. The dealer we bought from (Like many other I suspect) don't have a clue about electric cars and don't seem interested in going to bat for us on the things that need attending to....i.e. Port Alberni Toyota.
      Our reliable range is only 320 km (with 10% reserve to allow for non-functioning chargers) allows us to go most places as stations are installed in more places. AND finally BC Hydro is charging for kW and not minutes so we get a break on that at least. Used to cost us twice as much as everybody else due to the incredibly slow charge uptake. Strange that they use the same batteries as ever9one else but insist on keeping the charge rate low. Last Toyota ever for me.

  • @tomhv9
    @tomhv9 2 месяца назад +167

    For context, the Tesla superchargers price right now ranges from 0.38p to 0.55p/kWh, much less than £0.79p/kWh.... but not just that! it shows you the price in the car, for that day, with a bar chart which shows the varying prices at different times of the day.

    • @sz4128
      @sz4128 2 месяца назад +21

      Hence why tesla makes more sense than anything else.

    • @tomaskoranda504
      @tomaskoranda504 2 месяца назад

      @@sz4128it comes down to where you charge, when you are charging home the tesla network advantage plays no role in that equation for the consumer, but certainly is great benefit for others who charge frequently on the road.

    • @virtualcircuit
      @virtualcircuit 2 месяца назад +6

      Ionity for the Mercedes/Volkswagen etc is £0.53p/kwh in the UK. In France i was getting 0.35c/kwh on the Ionity superchargers which is an absolute bargain!

    • @davidlewis4399
      @davidlewis4399 2 месяца назад +15

      @@sz4128Tesla makes no sense like any EV in the current market just a pointless depreciating money pit.

    • @staticfive
      @staticfive Месяц назад +14

      @@davidlewis4399clearly hasn’t driven one

  • @wasbeen
    @wasbeen 2 месяца назад +225

    The heat pump makes a much bigger difference with short daily journeys, bringing the batter and cabin temperature up from cold, to body temperature each time. Constant driving makes less difference.

    • @tomerberman3424
      @tomerberman3424 2 месяца назад +27

      But in short drives there is no range anxiety whatsoever, so again it, doesn't make much of a difference

    • @noelinsua7261
      @noelinsua7261 2 месяца назад +15

      Well, if you can pre-heat the car directly from the plug I guess it also works. I think heat pump is for countries with really harsh winters or cars with a small battery where you have to squeeze every km out of it.

    • @jonathancamp1460
      @jonathancamp1460 2 месяца назад

      It does, it means you will get improved efficiency and therefore reduced cost. Short journeys are far more common than a constant speed drive which is not realistic for most drives @@tomerberman3424

    • @renofischa
      @renofischa 2 месяца назад +9

      And it would also make a larger difference with other manufacturers than VW-Group, because their heat pump is way worse than pretty much everyone else (Tesla, Hyundai, ...). I've had an ID.3 with heat pump for about 3 years now and if I'd buy a VW again I'd buy it without a heat pump.

    • @DBGE001
      @DBGE001 2 месяца назад +14

      @@noelinsua7261Below -15°C, the heat pump coefficient of performance is typically the same as a resistive heater. The heat pump makes the most sense between 0°C and 18°C.

  • @DanBurgaud
    @DanBurgaud Месяц назад +2

    15:05 would be great if you added another number miles per price tag

  • @hba5417
    @hba5417 Месяц назад +4

    Insane test! Best comparison i've ever seen! Well done!

  • @rimizoem
    @rimizoem 2 месяца назад +57

    An interesting test would be to repeat this on the same cars but with them all being 3 years old...
    Nice work!

    • @spicesmuggler2452
      @spicesmuggler2452 2 дня назад +1

      That implies all the cars were taken care of the same way, which is just not consistent between people. It makes little sense doing that.

  • @michaelhastings7441
    @michaelhastings7441 2 месяца назад +78

    I think an interesting test would be new against 5yrs old second hand cars range and depreciation and costs involved .

    • @jeffgrimston4565
      @jeffgrimston4565 2 месяца назад +3

      Good idea. We have 2019 M3LR pre heat pump with 60,000 miles. Seems to have changed very little from new. Summer 270 Winter 230. Latest model is better.

    • @richmaniow
      @richmaniow 2 месяца назад +1

      Yep, the used EV market is going to grow rapidly in the next few years.

    • @Lrules364
      @Lrules364 2 месяца назад +4

      I agree, but 95% of these cars won't be around in 5 years. Most of them need a battery replacement by that point, and their owners usually trade them in on something else rather than eat the cost.

    • @bigglyguy8429
      @bigglyguy8429 Месяц назад +7

      @@richmaniow Not for me mate, wouldn't touch one. There's simply no way of knowing the true health of the battery. With an engine I know what to test, I can even bring my compression tester, but a battery? Even the maker can't tell you how much life it has left.

    • @omg_720s
      @omg_720s Месяц назад

      ​@@bigglyguy8429 Whilst it doesn't show in the Tesla app, the battery health for a Tesla can be monitored with a third party app and it measures the degradation over time. My car is 4 years old and has 35k miles on it and the battery degradation is at 3%. This is the sort of thing that all EV manufacturers should make available and would help people decide on which used car to buy.

  • @SimonEllwood
    @SimonEllwood Месяц назад +2

    Well Done What Car, a very well put together video. I think you have been listening to the comments!

  • @markchisholm2657
    @markchisholm2657 Месяц назад +58

    So basically, the average EV has about a 30% lower range than claimed. Frankly that's appalling and this level of inaccurate reporting by manufacturers should be illegal.

    • @dogjennings1171
      @dogjennings1171 Месяц назад +22

      The range is based on standardised test conditions, not the real world. The same is true of mpg and l/100km figures for ICE vehicles. They are a benchmark for the comparison of vehicles only. Real world range is affected by air temperature, altitude, humidity, road surface conditions, driving style, wind speed, wake effects from other vehicles etc.

    • @lesliecooper3404
      @lesliecooper3404 Месяц назад +7

      The range in your ice car range also depends on weather so is that illegal . Your range on the dash is just hypothetical range.

    • @robertbroadbent3038
      @robertbroadbent3038 Месяц назад +2

      Isn’t the claims made by EV manufacturers being investigated?

    • @dogjennings1171
      @dogjennings1171 Месяц назад +3

      @robertbroadbent3038 read your car's specification and tell me the last time you got that mpg out of your car?

    • @dogjennings1171
      @dogjennings1171 Месяц назад +3

      @robertbroadbent3038 if all the manufacturers claimed mileages are wrong by roughly the same amount, then the problem isn't the manufacturers claims, its the test procedure that all the manufacturers use (WLTP). This is also the procedure used for ICE vehicles to work out mpg, which is also why those figures don't reflect the real world. The solution to the problem is to amend WLTP to more accurately reflect real world conditions.

  • @TVstudioTrnka
    @TVstudioTrnka 2 месяца назад +55

    Did you also measure how much energy the cars needed to full charge again? That is much more interesting than calculate efficiency acoording to claimed usable size of battery. VW for example works in reality with some 72 kWh instead of claimed 77 kWh according to many other test and measurements.

    • @Kurouzzz
      @Kurouzzz 2 месяца назад +9

      This would indeed be very interesting and relevant to know, since the charging losses differ as well.

    • @Alberto-mq7gw
      @Alberto-mq7gw 2 месяца назад +3

      Yes, that would be the most relevant metric for efficiency. I suspect that BYD is giving the gross battery capacity instead of the net capacity. Most manufacturers give both, and even then the real usable figure is slightly less than the claimed one. So charging back to 100% seems the most realistic measurement.

    • @Zedus-rl9hp
      @Zedus-rl9hp 2 месяца назад

      @@Alberto-mq7gwIt always depends on what you want to look at. The consumption without charging losses is relevant for the range.
      Including charging losses (except with a Tesla on a SuC, as only the kWh that actually reach the battery are charged) in the cost calculation

    • @bencze465
      @bencze465 2 месяца назад

      It's not clear whether they displayed the net or gross battery capacity. It's not the same thing of course.

    • @drfisheye
      @drfisheye 2 месяца назад +1

      They said they used the 'usable battery' for their calculations. I thought Tesla doesn't say what that is, though, so those efficieny numbers might be off.

  • @dhrabarchuk
    @dhrabarchuk 2 месяца назад +5

    Cheers from Canada where 11*C is tropical. 😅Fantastic video. Thank you!

  • @paulcollinson2440
    @paulcollinson2440 Месяц назад +1

    Well here in Ipswich South East Queensland we complain when winter temperatures are less than 10°c but our problem with batteries is when our summer temperatures exceed 35°c.
    In parts of western Queensland summer temperatures can exceed 45°c
    From what i have read batteries also hate heat.
    Could you please give some insight into battery performance in hot climates.
    Also how about a cost analysis of an electric vehicle versus a hybrid on a drive from London to Lands End and return in the shortest possible time.
    Thanks forvyour informative comparison.

  • @ollieknox3983
    @ollieknox3983 2 месяца назад +96

    Is it just me or is it outrageous that on average these are 30% short of claimed range. What’s that about?

    • @danwiddon3854
      @danwiddon3854 Месяц назад +1

      Range isn’t an issue. Charging infrastructure and recharge speed (a factor of charging infrastructure) are. Build them and they will come.

    • @qubes8728
      @qubes8728 Месяц назад +26

      @@danwiddon3854lol. Not here in Australia they won’t.

    • @bastogne315
      @bastogne315 Месяц назад +2

      Brilliant cars. 😂

    • @MrJ4ckie
      @MrJ4ckie Месяц назад +20

      Batteries perform worse in cold weather.
      The ranges are calculated using the WLTP test with standardized conditions, whereas the conditions here were significantly worse. I think the WLTP also has climate control deactivated.
      This is pretty well-known, however, if you've looked into electric cars for a second.
      It's also not any worse than the claimed fuel efficiencies which - even with normal to sedate driving behavior - are almost never reachable.

    • @keithrobinson5752
      @keithrobinson5752 Месяц назад +3

      Sorry it very much is , along with price. These are the main blocks to those that want to buy don't buy EV.

  • @raakkyanabayan7487
    @raakkyanabayan7487 2 месяца назад +4

    Doug and Will..
    Well done mates..
    Nice and clear informations about EVs😊

  • @SassePhoto
    @SassePhoto 2 месяца назад +64

    Glad I bought the Tesla Model 3 long-range. Homecharging in BC Canada is 9c / kWh so it is very impressive

    • @yuxuan130411
      @yuxuan130411 2 месяца назад

      23 cents/kw in California

    • @GaboTX
      @GaboTX 2 месяца назад

      0.19€ in Slovakia or free in Kaufland stores

    • @ataksnajpera
      @ataksnajpera 2 месяца назад +1

      @@yuxuan130411 kw?

    • @julienhonor5869
      @julienhonor5869 2 месяца назад

      Electricity cost here in France varies from 0,13 to 0,27€ /kWh, depending on the type of contract you subscribed to.

    • @skipskipper
      @skipskipper 2 месяца назад

      9 cents in North Carolina, USA

  • @eduardbass839
    @eduardbass839 Месяц назад +51

    My bigger question is how long can it drive after 7 years

    • @shawncooper8131
      @shawncooper8131 Месяц назад +7

      In Norway, the 10y old tesla is 10-15 % loss... but i think that if you know battery care and how to charge in a healthy way. CATL is releasing its 1000km battery packs and dropping the prices with BYD on batteries by 25 to 50%. So in the next ten years, EVs will be laughing.

    • @4rzaluz
      @4rzaluz Месяц назад +7

      ​@@shawncooper8131If you know "battery care" you are already at a 40% loss since you ain't using the top 15% and the bottom 25%.

    • @Jackie-fk6zc
      @Jackie-fk6zc Месяц назад +1

      For me I don't care about the battery health as the fuel save is enough to buy a new one.
      I always charge my Nissan Leaf 2014 to 100% full and usually runs to 20%, the SOH is around 74%, and this is the battery chemistry come from 10 years ago.
      And I know there is Leaf 2011 still on road and battery haven't been replaced which is amazing!

    • @weekendwet1
      @weekendwet1 Месяц назад +5

      As importantly, what would it be worth after 7 years? - or even after 3 years?

    • @zarthemad8386
      @zarthemad8386 Месяц назад +3

      at 10 years... its zero miles... due to battery failure

  • @PiefacePete46
    @PiefacePete46 Месяц назад +1

    Excellent! I do wish you had included metric equivalent figures , in smaller text, and bracketed maybe... NOT in the spoken info though; that would just be an avalanche of numbers!
    Predictably, for every question you answered, you raised new questions!

  • @markdawson4625
    @markdawson4625 2 месяца назад +81

    Thank you gentlemen for thoroughly explaining the importance of efficiency and that it is not all about ‘range’.

    • @MyRealName
      @MyRealName 2 месяца назад +6

      I'll have range over efficiency, and so will everyone who uses a big car for bigger journey which is what a big car is intended for. So, EV is out of question.

    • @Cyrribrae
      @Cyrribrae 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@@MyRealNameI don't understand why you think this is a dichotomy. They're saying that both are important. Which is true in ICE vehicles too. The soccer moms buying gas SUVs and minivans ALSO care about miles per gallon when they choose a car. Even if they never drive the back roads of Nevada with a hundred miles to the next station, the inefficiency directly translates to MONEY spent on fuel.
      It has always mattered, in big cars especially because the numbers are already so low, so any impact hurts even more.

    • @enrobsorussell
      @enrobsorussell 2 месяца назад

      @@Cyrribrae What about "Hundreds of miles to the next charging station`?
      As regards what they drive in the US, I wouldn`t know.....what I do know is what I drive in the cold, damp UK....a 2020 Vauxhall Corsa Diesel.....2 mins to fill up, 650 mile range @ 70mpg, cost me 12 grand at 2 years old. If we are talking `efficient`, you cannot look further than diesel power....which is the reason ALL products, no matter what they are, get from A to B under diesel power!

    • @MrArcticPOWER
      @MrArcticPOWER 2 месяца назад +3

      @@enrobsorussell What about "most people don't ever need to drive hundreds of miles to the next charging station"?
      I live in Canada which according to people like you should be one of the worst place on earth to buy an EV and it's 10 times more practical than any gas car I've ever owned. Keep wasting money on fuel driving a slow ancient boat if you want, but no one cares.

    • @enrobsorussell
      @enrobsorussell 2 месяца назад

      @@MrArcticPOWER You need to get up to speed...it was him above saying a hundred miles to a gas station, so I said `what about a hundred....."
      I also said, "Evs have their place"
      You are just another one wetting his nappy because someone is not interested in your pride and joy.....you never hear af anyone driving an ICE car wetting their pants because someone criticises (Constructively or otherwise) the car they drive.
      Can we quit with the "Don`t criticise my little baby" sh*t?
      Either that....or off to the naughty step with you, after a swift swig of Calpol of course.

  • @samuxan
    @samuxan 2 месяца назад +12

    The thing I miss the most in these tests is how much regen affects the range. i live in a region full of montains and steep slopes so a good regenerative breaking makes all the difference. Some cars with great range on paper(like the VW) have awful regen and can be bested by others like the renault on this

    • @jamesbutler606
      @jamesbutler606 2 месяца назад +1

      driven the new id7? i have the 5 and the regen is too strong for most driving i don't tend to use it unless i am somewhere hilly.

    • @samuxan
      @samuxan 2 месяца назад

      @jamesbutler606 the id7 is too big for my street, it wouldn't turn easily. From vw I have driven the id3 and the old eup and egolf and found they had a weaker regen than my e208 or other I've considered

    • @jamesbutler606
      @jamesbutler606 2 месяца назад

      @@samuxan ok. I too had the ID3, I found the regen quite harsh so rarely used it aside from if I was coming into a 30 from a 60 and needed the slowing power and wasn’t just using cruise control (very rare not to be really as it is phenomenal)
      Not driven a Peugeot since the 207 - they were taking it to the Germans back then so I can imagine they are still doing well, tiny steering wheels were difficult to use though, was an instant oooh moment when I test drove a golf to replace the 207.

    • @abraxastulammo9940
      @abraxastulammo9940 2 месяца назад +1

      According to tests by Ecodriver in the Innsbruck area the MEB cars have excellent recuperation/regenerative braking.

    • @jamesbutler606
      @jamesbutler606 2 месяца назад

      @@abraxastulammo9940 the new gen 2 motors that are in the 2024 onwards vehicles should be better at the energy recuperation due to being a higher power therefore more back - whether that is true I have no idea, I don’t find myself wanting more power than the 200hp I have in my id5, but if it works more efficiently at regular driving speeds then an extra 43% would be fine.

  • @CableGuyJoeCCTV
    @CableGuyJoeCCTV Месяц назад +1

    One of the things I would like to see in your chart is the runtime how many hours and minutes did it actually get on that charge? Kinda how long did it take for you all to run the test and how long did each one last. Enjoyed watching it thank you very much though.

  • @peteristvan9200
    @peteristvan9200 20 часов назад

    The reason for lower ranges here is not the low temperature, but rain and wet route. It causes much more resistance for tyres… I can clearly see this on my Tesla, where I was doing some comparisons myself.
    Also whitching from summer tyres to winter tyres in the same day resulted into 15-20% efficiency decrease.

  • @BionicRusty
    @BionicRusty 2 месяца назад +60

    If a car becomes restricted to 9mph, surely it should be discontinued at that point.
    You wouldn’t drive for an extra few miles on a road at that speed.

    • @SquintyGears
      @SquintyGears 2 месяца назад +14

      I think it's a better emergency handling setup than just stopping. Because if you where looking at the range estimates you probably made a plan... So you're probably close to a solution to charge.
      Because at those slow speeds electric cars are at their most efficient. You can realistically boost your range by consciously deciding to go at the minimum highway speed limit instead of the maximum. People don't do this because they don't know and electric cars aren't mass adopted yet... But it is technically true in ICE cras too.
      So I would rather the car start limping and i can turn on 🔺blinkers rather than having to call a tow truck if i missjudged by 5 or 10 miles. In the same veine, there's no excuse for not having a spare tire... Tesla is stupid for removing it, thank god they don't have the apple effect on the industry and nobody is removing it to follow their trend.

    • @voldar70
      @voldar70 2 месяца назад +11

      If you have to chose paying for a tow or to charge at a DCFC 1 mile away, I see very well the reason to continuing to drive even if it is @ 9mph.

    • @Cyrribrae
      @Cyrribrae 2 месяца назад +6

      You always have the option of stopping if it's unsafe. But I'd rather have the option than not haha.

    • @abraxastulammo9940
      @abraxastulammo9940 2 месяца назад

      Afaik WLTP range is until the car cannot go 62 mph anymore.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 2 месяца назад +1

      Of course you would if you were just a few miles from home.

  • @UloPe
    @UloPe 2 месяца назад +57

    That intercut “dialogue” between the two presenters was really slickly done

    • @user-zr9hu3tf1y
      @user-zr9hu3tf1y 11 дней назад

      Probably a big influence from Top Gear there

  • @jamesspacer7994
    @jamesspacer7994 2 месяца назад +1

    That's a very good test and a lovely video. Thank you ✌️

  • @petebetz5358
    @petebetz5358 Месяц назад +1

    The big takeaway here these cars are going to average 30% less mileage than advertised on a rainy day.

  • @thunderbolt4741
    @thunderbolt4741 2 месяца назад +11

    You didn’t tell if the BYD Seal was the rwd or awd version. I would assume it was the awd, meaning it had less range than the rwd would have had. Would have been interesting to see if the rwd verions would have beat the model 3 long range.

    • @screechmr2
      @screechmr2 2 месяца назад +3

      It was the rwd seal in this video

    • @ymcpa73
      @ymcpa73 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah, but the Model 3 is AWD.

    • @screechmr2
      @screechmr2 2 месяца назад +2

      Which makes the model 3 even more impressive. The awd seal has lower efficiency than the rwd. If the awd seal was used the model 3 would've beaten it by more.
      The Model 3 was at a disadvantage efficiency wise.

    • @jwstolk
      @jwstolk 2 месяца назад +1

      For ICE cars, the 4WD versions are typically less efficient but for EV's this is not always the case. For example the Tesla AWD has two different types of motors, each optimized for different driving situations, and will most of the time only use the most efficient motor. Only when more power is needed, both motors are used. For the Tesla Model 3 the AWD option is linked to the larger battery, so quite a bit more weight, but most of that has nothing to do with the extra front motor.

    • @MrArcticPOWER
      @MrArcticPOWER 2 месяца назад +1

      @@jwstolk The Model 3 RWD has always been more efficient than the AWD regardless. Back when they had the long range RWD, it was more efficient than AWD. You could had 3 passenger in the SR+ to compensate for the weight and you would still get better efficiency.

  • @tubelessrim
    @tubelessrim 2 месяца назад +16

    A very interesting and useful test, thanks from a viewer in Ireland that will have these cars available here also.
    One factor that isn't mentioned and I think should be factored in for all car test, not just EVs, is the car's weight.
    Weight is such an important factor on so many levels:
    1. Running efficiency - the heavier the car, the less efficient it is
    2. Charging time - heavier cars tend to need larger batteries
    3. Pedestrian safety on impact
    4. General environmental impact - due to amount of materials used to build the car
    5. Local environmental impact - heavier cars will have higher amounts of tyre and break pollution and we are all discovering just how dangerous these types of pollution really are

  • @anakinskywalker4113
    @anakinskywalker4113 2 месяца назад +4

    Haha I’m Australian & down here we have the indicators on the correct side just like the seal. None of this indicators on the left hand stalk rubbish. Why do you in the UK have them the opposite to us? We are both RHD so should be the same.

  • @patricelarochelle7295
    @patricelarochelle7295 Месяц назад +1

    At the end, they should measure the energy taken at a 7kw charger. It does a great job calculating the energy taken without too much to thermal influence.
    Any comparison should be calculated.

  • @DominikDebef
    @DominikDebef 2 месяца назад +18

    A test of the Model S against the EQE and ID.7 would be really interesting. After all, they're the same size and weight.

  • @checkmate9111
    @checkmate9111 Месяц назад +5

    What about ionic 5&6 !!??

  • @keegan773
    @keegan773 3 дня назад +1

    “It’s raining and it’s harming their efficiency”.
    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
    Look at the miles driven compared to the advertised mileage.
    It’s criminal lies by the manufacturers.

  • @Madonsteamrailways
    @Madonsteamrailways 2 месяца назад

    I know!! I’ve had it!! I’ve had my Renault Zoe for about four years and had two breakdowns, one of which was self inflicted by forgetting to turn the lights off having needed full beam on country roads.

  • @alancobbin
    @alancobbin 2 месяца назад +139

    Model 3 is still the efficiency king ,cheers guys 👍😉💪

    • @simonm9923
      @simonm9923 2 месяца назад +10

      What I don’t understand is if the model 3 achieved 3.9 miles / kWh and that is its claimed efficiency, why did it not achieve its claimed range? Something is amiss……

    • @kenwise2677
      @kenwise2677 2 месяца назад +19

      ​@@simonm9923You are confusing three different numbers. The claimed WLTP range infers an efficiency of about 4.9 but they fell short of that at 3.9. However their measurement of actual efficiency was the same as the car was telling them on the day.
      Similar to a claimed MPG of 30 but the trip meter says 25 and your own measurement of distance and fuel in also says 25.

    • @trevorwilson2966
      @trevorwilson2966 2 месяца назад +6

      And its dropping in price quicker than out of date milk because no one wants them?

    • @pindot787
      @pindot787 2 месяца назад +11

      ​@@trevorwilson2966compared to what EV? most EV have their price falling harder than tesla.

    • @jamesbutler606
      @jamesbutler606 2 месяца назад

      but even tesla say the rangeometre in car is based solely off wltp and battery percentage not live adjusted for conditions and driving style.
      @@kenwise2677

  • @agharesaa
    @agharesaa Месяц назад +4

    You did not consider the most critical differentiating factor: battery type! Which cars have LFP batteries and which ones use nickel based NMC?

    • @toyotaprius79
      @toyotaprius79 5 дней назад

      We would be so lucky to have the choice of Sodium ion battery powered cars only available in China

    • @21142317
      @21142317 4 дня назад

      Why would that be lucky? Heavy and low energy density.

  • @wipopsuppipat4442
    @wipopsuppipat4442 2 месяца назад

    This was such a great test. Subbed

  • @postulatingspin4470
    @postulatingspin4470 Месяц назад +2

    I live in a coastal community, and don’t drive EV’s in my family. The tire wear is 20% higher than our existing cars it contributes to microplastics in our ocean community. It is literally equivalent to grinding up thousands of plastic bottles and dumping them into our estuaries. Tire wear on all vehicles is the leading contributor to microplastics in the food chain. When you choose an EV, you increase that by at least 20% as soon as you drive it off the showroom floor. This is due to the excessive weight of the vehicle. Think about tossing water bottles out the window anytime you drive across a waterway….this is essentially what you are doing. The one advantage EV’s have over the water bottle is that the EV’s microplastics are MRE’s for marine life….already broken down into tiny tidbits.

  • @MoosesValley
    @MoosesValley 2 месяца назад +27

    Great video and interesting results. One minor error / typo:
    17:48 - you show the Tesla 3 price as 49,990 quid, and at 17:50 you show the Mercedes EQE price as the same 49,990 quid, but the audio says it is almost 20K more to buy.

    • @ricarmig
      @ricarmig 2 месяца назад +4

      Exactly! At least here in Portugal the EQE is MUCH more expensive than the M3. Here the M3 SR costs 39.900€ and the LR 10.000€ more. The EQE 350 basic costs 73.000€ ! (which has as many bhp as the M3 SR from 39.900€). PLEASE UPDATE IT.

    • @ipostaze2
      @ipostaze2 2 месяца назад +2

      Actually that a major typo, as it would have cost me 20K if I took the on-screen graphic for real. Bummer, I don't have 20K to spare.

    • @yv989c
      @yv989c 2 месяца назад

      Ditto! 💶👀

  • @Vxvx22
    @Vxvx22 2 месяца назад +20

    Great test! Although, I recommend that when the EV cannot maintain 50 mph speed, that should be the end of the test and mark the distance as the result. That will bring the test results between different EV much more consistent and comparable. Because the EV software algorithm varies greatly between manufacturers. Some would let the EV drop to let's say 30 mph immediately after the battery is low, and let EV run a much longer distance (because lower speed require less energy consumption). While other EV may try to maintain 50 mph speed as long as possible until the battery is completely dead. So basically the shape of the drop off cliff is very different between EV. Thus, adding variations to the test results.

  • @michaeltutty1540
    @michaeltutty1540 2 месяца назад

    Very interesting. The weather conditions you had for the test are quite normal for our spring and fall. Moderate, in other words. It would really be something to see with them on dedicated winter tyres, with temperatures at -20, and with 4 or 5 inches of snow on the ground.

  • @kwisin1337
    @kwisin1337 7 дней назад +1

    Um, guys. You didn't mention the cameraman and equipment that was with one or more of the cars. 90 ish kg added. And why did you have the flashers on..

  • @TheRocky3211
    @TheRocky3211 2 месяца назад +5

    19:38 good to see the £ figures for cheap overnight home charging included in this video , 7p compared to 29p goes to show what a diffrence the right tarrif and smarter usage patterns and can make.

    • @Derecq
      @Derecq 2 месяца назад +1

      Which is ok for people who can park on their own driveway next to their charger

    • @markgc65
      @markgc65 2 месяца назад +1

      agreed but those people do exist and do charge like that. a lot depends where you live almost all housing on North Wales has off road parking and garages etc. Southern England probably doesn't, they think they are well off with a 700k flat and a parking space lol. We have 4 bedroom bungalows double garages and parking for 5 cars. and it costs 300k. all depends where we choose to live I have lived London chester and northwales and I know why I stayed here.

    • @gavinbissell8847
      @gavinbissell8847 Месяц назад +1

      I'm glad they included all the tarrifs for once. There's too many ev plungers that assume 7p

    • @kevinc9597
      @kevinc9597 5 дней назад

      And how much scam it is to ask ppl to buy thus only to provide abusively expensive way to use it outside home charge

  • @ingrudgrir
    @ingrudgrir 2 месяца назад +32

    An important point of efficiency is also during long journeys with rapid charging stops. A high efficiency car will get a higher number of miles per kWh charged, which shortens your charging time. For example a Tesla model 3 gets around 700km/h at 150 kW while the XC40 gets around 400 km/h at the same charging speed.

    • @gunnyhighway4422
      @gunnyhighway4422 Месяц назад +7

      Or stick with ice and spend 5mins filling up for 500 miles + at least

    • @bp495599
      @bp495599 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@gunnyhighway4422to spend more time overall at a gas station than at a charging station, no thank you.

    • @gunnyhighway4422
      @gunnyhighway4422 Месяц назад +4

      @@bp495599 what planet are you living on 🤣

    • @bp495599
      @bp495599 Месяц назад +5

      @@gunnyhighway4422 Do the math, I charge at home and don't have to go to a gas station every week or so.

    • @markbrown351
      @markbrown351 Месяц назад

      ​@@bp495599Doing 500+ miles 🤔

  • @loveclose
    @loveclose Месяц назад

    Great video. Took my MG4 Long Range out recently on a round trip of 220 miles, overnight stop half way, with convenient Ionity chargers around the 50 mile mark.
    I reckon I might juuuuust have made the 220 mile without charging, but this would have been close! So i chickened out, and did a top-up charge on 160miles.....11⁰ outside and intermittent light rain. My decision not to go with the extended range model for an extra 4k i think was justified.

  • @the-dronepilot
    @the-dronepilot 2 месяца назад +1

    Briliant test! Very good work! 🎉

  • @e-redj
    @e-redj 2 месяца назад +5

    Talking about running costs without taking into account charging losses is quite misleading. You’re not paying for the electrons that the car uses, but for the electrons that go into the battery. That is dependent on the charger AC/DC but also on the car.
    BTW, that Seal was way better than the ID.7 on your last comparison Seal/TM3/ID.7 What happened there?

    • @kevinc9597
      @kevinc9597 5 дней назад

      I remember seeing an article about the ridiculously high amount of kWh consumed during night standstull in a garage to keep the car on for SW updates and wake up program and whatnot.

  • @petrospetrosghali
    @petrospetrosghali 2 месяца назад +12

    For all the talk of EV prices crashing, these (new) cars are really pricey

    • @wisconsinfarmer4742
      @wisconsinfarmer4742 Месяц назад

      I just acquired '22 T3LR 8500mi for 3/5 cost. Very comparable to conventional vehicle prices. I wanted a Toyota Tacoma but they were running 5k higher than Tesla.
      Some fair deals used.

    • @MartinParnham
      @MartinParnham Месяц назад +2

      Certainly in the UK that's the case. I know it's the primary reason I would not (or could not) buy an EV. I just don't have that sort of money, even with PCP/HP etc and with the insurance/tax/charging and other running costs the saving is pretty much nil.

    • @SpareSomeChange8080
      @SpareSomeChange8080 Месяц назад +3

      Wait until you see the insurance prices. Insurance companies don't want anything to do with these since they can't really be repaired.

    • @MartinParnham
      @MartinParnham Месяц назад +1

      @@SpareSomeChange8080 Indeed. That's also part of the calculation. Repair/replacement of the parts are expensive to the point that they are prohibitive and you might as well just get another vehicle!

  • @TomskiZima
    @TomskiZima 2 месяца назад

    You have used the actual numbers for distance but not for energy used I gather from the video. Did you charge them up after they went flat and recorded the actual energy usage or just what the car said?

  • @oldsquashmonkey
    @oldsquashmonkey Месяц назад +13

    I'm just wondering which roads/ motorways in the UK you can drive consistently at 50 or 70 mph! You're often stop/ starting/ crawling or at a complete standstill! One more thing for second-hand buyers can you list the current price for replacing the batteries for each vehicle (parts and labour)

    • @rdspam
      @rdspam Месяц назад +1

      I visited the UK last Summer, rented a car at LHR, and drove highway speed for the vast majority of our trip. Salisbury, Birmingham, Wrexham, Edinburgh, York, Cambridge and back. All fine once a few miles outside London, with only the occasional slowdown.

    • @TheDavestats
      @TheDavestats Месяц назад +1

      And then show the cost of a new engine for similar petrol cars. And do a similar test for petrol cars, efficiency, mileage and what happens when you run the car completely dry. Maybe add an oil leak?

    • @emceedoctorb3022
      @emceedoctorb3022 Месяц назад

      @@TheDavestatsA new engine for a petrol/diesel car plus fitting is way, way less than the cost of a battery pack, mate. Plus they can and very often do go for 200k+ miles without any problem at all. An EV simply won’t. Nice try at whataboutism, next time try actually thinking about what you are saying though.

    • @Tread1775
      @Tread1775 Месяц назад +1

      Saw a video from Canada. Kia charges $56K for a replacement battery, not including installation. Get outta here with these EV’s.

    • @stuartcraigon2003
      @stuartcraigon2003 29 дней назад

      Any of them in Scotland! I used to to do 2k miles a month on motorway, 100 miles 4 times a day and never stopped.

  • @keyserxx
    @keyserxx 2 месяца назад +4

    Epic data thanks, great job. Winter vs summer testing would also be good. Maybe if all the cars start at 20% charge you can save some time ;)
    Also tyres might play a big part in this.

  • @timothybloomer4246
    @timothybloomer4246 2 месяца назад +3

    I drove my kia e-niro from west cumbria to Leeds and back on Friday (290 miles rpund trip). Temperature was 0-5, it was dark all the way back and raining and snowing. Most of the journey was on the A66, remainder on A1(m) and then traffic into Leeds. The car efficiency shown on the journey was 3.6m/kwh. Range on departure from Leeds was 190 miles. When we got home after 145 miles the remaining claimed range was 25, so 14%shortfall. Recharging in Leeds cost £17, recharging back to 100% at home cost £8.

    • @nickthegriffin
      @nickthegriffin 2 месяца назад +2

      Wow you must be fully embedded in the cult

    • @scoopermg8226
      @scoopermg8226 2 месяца назад

      Binary BS @@nickthegriffin

    • @peanuts2105
      @peanuts2105 Месяц назад +4

      @nickthegriffin he won't be when comes to selling it. Second hand dealers don't want EVs which is one of the reasons why EV prices have tanked so much

    • @tug1345
      @tug1345 Месяц назад +1

      290 miles for £25, approx equivalent to 4 gallons of fuel @ £6.25 a gallon, so 72 mpg, an E Niro is about Golf or Focus in normal car size, most diesels will do the same or better and not have to sit around in Leeds waiting for the car to charge, and costs a lot less at initial cost, not really that eco friendly really, especially when we have to rape the world of it's resources more so to build an electric car, also the electricity made in Leeds is in question, presumably Drax power station, doesn't look all that good

    • @mitsujase
      @mitsujase Месяц назад +1

      @@tug1345 After doing some math - His round trip was ~£23 (as he did not use the full £8 full home charge to get there). That would equate to 8p per mile (23/290). Given Petrol averages £1.436 ppl in Leeds. Please help me find an equivalent sized vehicle which would be capable of 80mpg real world to match the 8p per mile. I looked around on Fuelly and was unable to find anything. Focus best is 50mpg avg (£37.71 trip cost) and Golf 45mpg (£41.89 trip cost).

  • @kennethprocak5176
    @kennethprocak5176 Месяц назад

    I’m picking up a BYD dolphin like this, it will be the main car used during the week. 6 dollars on electricity compared to 90 a week on fuel, is a difference. I’m in Australia, and l also keep a 4x4 in the drive, for out of town and trips.

  • @chrisr9199
    @chrisr9199 Месяц назад

    good test, id like to see these EVs do some uphill driving so see the effect on the battery, and will you planning the same test for the more budget options, 20-30k maybe

  • @TwitchVanishlol
    @TwitchVanishlol 2 месяца назад +49

    you should have tested ioniq 5 and ioniq 6

    • @ideaestiawan
      @ideaestiawan Месяц назад +10

      exactly. and from KIA as well.

    • @bafattvahetere
      @bafattvahetere Месяц назад +1

      But sadly they can't live up to their figures. 1,45 kWh /10km (at speed 110-120 km/h) is good though.

    • @peanuts2105
      @peanuts2105 Месяц назад +1

      The Moronic 5 and 6. Oh dear

  • @marcinyamrock7724
    @marcinyamrock7724 2 месяца назад +21

    I’d like to add that „6-10 degrees” are NOT winter conditins …. !

    • @wisconsinfarmer4742
      @wisconsinfarmer4742 Месяц назад +2

      Not by a long shot.

    • @farmerned6
      @farmerned6 Месяц назад +1

      Normal UK conditions 7/8 months of the year

    • @johntheoldmod
      @johntheoldmod Месяц назад +3

      They made that VERY clear in the video MANY times so what's your problem?

    • @OneSock999
      @OneSock999 14 дней назад

      Actually the tested conditions are probably a worst case for an EV due to the humidity in the air. The car has to dehumidify and heat which often means running AC and a resistive heater. Colder air with low humidity actually needs less energy to heat.

  • @Snerdles
    @Snerdles 2 месяца назад +1

    The next couple of things to keep in mind is that this was a combined city/highway test. You can probably drip another 10% off of these numbers for an actual road trip.
    The next is that these are 100-0 tests but you can only fast charge 10-80, and even then some of the charge curves get bad above 50 or 60 percent, but that means you have to take another 30% off of the tested range if you were on a raod trip. Which means with most of these you are going to be stopping for 40 to 60 minutes every 2 hours or less of driving in these test conditions.
    EVs have a long way to go for mass adoption.

  • @sgassocsg
    @sgassocsg 23 часа назад +1

    Wife loves Lexus. We’ve had 3 of them all new. We were gonna get new hybrid. Glad we didn’t. We have Y performance and will never go back. I have an AMG 8turbo and get 12 mpg….can you say Plaid?

  • @marvinsamuels1237
    @marvinsamuels1237 2 месяца назад +30

    A very informative and useful test.
    I feel there is so much focus on the maximum range of an EV that the efficiency is often overlooked.
    With ICE cars, the focus is usually on mpg or l/100km and there is no mention of the range, yet that still impacts when you need to stop to fill up.

    • @sender5804
      @sender5804 2 месяца назад +5

      ICE cars get real world range of 500 - 650 miles + fuelling takes minutes so its not an issue and is not mentioned, quite the opposite for EVs

    • @SyntheticSpy
      @SyntheticSpy 2 месяца назад +1

      @@sender5804 Your average ICE car does not get 500-650 miles per tank.

    • @sender5804
      @sender5804 2 месяца назад

      @@SyntheticSpy how much they do?

    • @SyntheticSpy
      @SyntheticSpy 2 месяца назад +3

      @@sender5804 300-400 is average based on what I can find, but my personal car usually doesn’t even hit the 300 number. It’s really much closer to the typical EV than people realize

    • @jamesbutler606
      @jamesbutler606 2 месяца назад +1

      my golf had less 'range' than my ID5 does¬

  • @TunekoLtd
    @TunekoLtd 2 месяца назад +8

    If you have a huge round course is there any reason why you are drafting each other?
    It ruins and alters the results as the bad aero cars get better results than in normal use and how can you verify the gaps have been same all the time as each cars adaptive cruise keeps different distances.
    Do you have a data to share how many kilometeres each car lead the pack?

    • @vesatiainen9701
      @vesatiainen9701 2 месяца назад +1

      valid questions. Any comments What car team?

    • @LastOnSunday
      @LastOnSunday 2 месяца назад +1

      They rotated the order each lap, they did mention it at the beginning.

  • @davidpowley7209
    @davidpowley7209 2 месяца назад +13

    Majority having a range less than 100miles of the advertised range is just diabolical... criminal even there are advertising laws

    • @jason8966
      @jason8966 2 месяца назад

      It's not their fault, that is governed by the EPA/WLTP cycles that car manufacturers do not have a say about. Blame the unrealistic test cycles introduced by these organisations

    • @stulop
      @stulop Месяц назад

      The only use these numbers have is comparing one car against another. There is not enough information to tell people that.

    • @benw4079
      @benw4079 Месяц назад

      No. You have to drive at the most economical way to get the maximum range. Probably about 45mph and no heating, etc. Efficiency in EVs is usually must better at 50mph than 70mph. This is also true for petrol cars ofc.

    • @TheTomporter
      @TheTomporter 20 дней назад

      @@benw4079 wrong. My ID.3 gets the advertised range during summer without any compromises on driving style or heating/AC. If you don't drive like a lead footed, screech-to-a-halt-at-every-junction moron, and don't do much motorway driving, then the WLTP is actually quite accurate.
      Of course the majority of drivers have no idea about sensible or economical driving (again, no loss of journey time, just not braking at the last minute) so most people are incapable of getting good mileage from a conventional car or an EV.

    • @benw4079
      @benw4079 20 дней назад

      @@TheTomporter I'm not wrong, but thanks for sharing. I have an iDé.

  • @chrisjohnson9645
    @chrisjohnson9645 Месяц назад +1

    An equally important question is how far will they go if you drive them at seventy miles per hour into a brick wall? We would then be truly enlightened.

  • @rhiantaylor3446
    @rhiantaylor3446 2 месяца назад +14

    A point that your analysis highlights very well is that, if running cost is an important part of the purchasing decision, you need to get "there and back again" within your available range so that public charging is a rarity. For the Tesla, your commute needs to be comfortably less than 145 miles each way or for the Lexus RZ 450e less than 75 miles each way. Many of us will only rarely test a car's range on a single journey but you need to plan for both directions to stay on cheap-rate charging.

    • @myhandlewastakenandIgaveup
      @myhandlewastakenandIgaveup 2 месяца назад +1

      Provided you can charge at home. If you can't charge at home then losing half of your range due to it being cold becomes much less tenable.

    • @davefitzpatrick4841
      @davefitzpatrick4841 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@@myhandlewastakenandIgaveupwhere did you get half your range from , yea it can be argued that you'll loose around 1/3 of your range but 50% frankly is b/s !

    • @myhandlewastakenandIgaveup
      @myhandlewastakenandIgaveup 2 месяца назад

      @@davefitzpatrick4841 i owned mine a couple of years ago but turn the car on you would lose between 5 and 20 miles of range. Turn the heat on and every 1 mile of range was twice as expensive.
      They may have improved since then. I made it one winter after I moved away from being able to charge at home to not (super old house. Exorbitant cost to rewire it) before I switched back to ice.

    • @MyRealName
      @MyRealName 2 месяца назад +1

      @@davefitzpatrick4841 Because losing 1/3 is SO much better? omg

    • @davefitzpatrick4841
      @davefitzpatrick4841 2 месяца назад +2

      @@MyRealName that's worse case , Tesla model 3 is still capable of 293 miles in winter, probably longer than your bladder needs to be emptied !

  • @michael88mh
    @michael88mh 13 дней назад +3

    Nice test 👌🏼👍🏼

  • @catherinegrimes2308
    @catherinegrimes2308 Месяц назад

    Very good test. All of the cars have a measured range that is significantly lower that the claimed range. Have you considered repeating the test in the summer to gauge the affect of temperature on range?

  • @mrcomment6035
    @mrcomment6035 2 месяца назад

    Great video! I would love to see something similar tested with Rimac Nivera and McMurty Spierling (Pure?). Everyone are trying them out on acceleration, but the single-charge distance would also be interesting (out of pure curiosity).

  • @CG-yh6js
    @CG-yh6js 2 месяца назад +11

    Even the best of the bunch is only 75% as good as claimed.

    • @scot_irsh
      @scot_irsh Месяц назад +4

      And then add all the repair cost. Hahaha if anyonr drive one of these cars, they are the fool.

  • @Dislagmintation
    @Dislagmintation Месяц назад +4

    You guys are so good at dragging the video. The cars introduction could've been done in a matrix with 10 seconds on the screen. Mt attention span was done after the heat pump thingy talk

  • @octapc
    @octapc 3 дня назад

    Tesla 3 in Australia starts at £32,000, some £8,000 cheaper in Australia than UK. Petrol is £1.05 litre, and electricity is 16p peak. With our weather, solar panels, it's cheap as chips to run an electric car. But, before you sell up and move, get your house built first 😅

  • @wbh971
    @wbh971 Месяц назад +2

    Did you consider the drafting effect? Cars travelling in line always disadvantage the front car

    • @eric8372
      @eric8372 Месяц назад

      They didn't drive that near to each other, I guess there wasn't much of a wake (supposing that's what you meant with drafting effect).

    • @kevinc9597
      @kevinc9597 5 дней назад

      They were changing drivers so I would think they changed order of cars as well...

  • @ogaiht1985
    @ogaiht1985 2 месяца назад +4

    nice video, but I would be more interested to see a comparison between used electric cars instead of brand new ones to see battery depreciation

    • @Brian-om2hh
      @Brian-om2hh 2 месяца назад

      Typical battery degradation runs at 2% per year, then begins to slow a little after 4 or 5 years. I'd expect a reasonably well looked after 5 year old EV to still show a battery SOH (state of health) over 90%, unless it was a Nissan Leaf.

  • @DS-pk4eh
    @DS-pk4eh Месяц назад +4

    Great video. Thank you.
    What would be really great , is if you included some numbers for their ICE counterparts, especially efficiency numbers as the range is surely much better for ICE car and not helpful. Being that range is simply result of petrol/diesel having much better energy density then modern batteries.
    Like should Tesla Model 3 LR be matched to a BMW M3 (similar specs) or BMW 320d?
    iD.7 can be compared to VW Passat 2.0.
    So, is there saving money in doing 100km (miles) in EV compared to similar specced ICE car?

  • @arenjay3278
    @arenjay3278 Месяц назад

    -58C in Alberta a Month and a half ago. (-83F) without windchill. My Bolt EV drove well range was way down and everything was cold clunky.

  • @RS-ji2ui
    @RS-ji2ui Месяц назад +1

    Do test middle of winter using heater, lights etc and with families inside 2 kids & parents and everything they need for a trip.

  • @ggj666
    @ggj666 Месяц назад +41

    Looks like i'm sticking with my 2006 Peugeot Expert Diesel, just done Cornwall and back almost 900 miles and only one refill on the way back which took about 4 minutes. :o)

    • @daylightdies7194
      @daylightdies7194 Месяц назад +4

      Yup my good old Volvo diesel is staying with me for the foreseeable future

    • @weekendwet1
      @weekendwet1 Месяц назад

      Me too. My XC 60 does 660 miles on a tank of diesel, whatever the weather. @@daylightdies7194

    • @justdoit7292
      @justdoit7292 Месяц назад

      Did you have a rest in the trip? if you did not have ,that's very terrible,perhaps the EV will correct your bad driving habits!son

    • @steve51158
      @steve51158 Месяц назад +2

      900 miles in my e-Niro cost me £15.

    • @ggj666
      @ggj666 Месяц назад

      @@steve51158 how do you work that out, figures please. and how many hours of waiting about would you have to add to your journey time.

  • @starald
    @starald 2 месяца назад +8

    7:00 Yes, going to a place with actual winter would be even more interesting. Testing in 6 degrees below what would be considered a nice summer day should not really produce any significant deviations, but clearly it does. Ranges of 25 - 30+ percent below the stated figures show an unreasonable difference between factory numbers and real life imo.

  • @markarnold8160
    @markarnold8160 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for reinforcing my belief that EVs are still too expensive to run.

  • @chrisbarrett2512
    @chrisbarrett2512 Месяц назад

    Not very cold,6-10 degrees C is too warm for a real test. Try this test at 5/10 below C. Snow also creates much more resistance on the wheels.

  • @SpeedRacerXM5
    @SpeedRacerXM5 Месяц назад +3

    30%!!!!lmao!
    If my gas car got 30% less than stated id be pissed! No?

    • @delusion2987
      @delusion2987 17 дней назад

      it's possible to achieve quoted range in the city when car regen at every stoplight or if driving slow on the motorway at 90kmh.. otherwise guaranteed to underperform on range. the testing cycles need to be revised so that they show consumption at real motorway speed, 120kmh.

  • @Mr_Sprint
    @Mr_Sprint Месяц назад +8

    THANK YOU for finally recognising that most EV owners don’t pay the 29p rate, and for including the 7p rate, and also showing the rapid charger rate. Paints a proper picture.

    • @themonsterunderyourbed9408
      @themonsterunderyourbed9408 Месяц назад +2

      99% of my charging is at home. I only use superchargers on road trips.

    • @rnichol22
      @rnichol22 Месяц назад +2

      Paints a proper picture if what that they are overpriced under ranged junk. That you have to leave plugged in all night just to get 150 miles at cheap rate lol.

  • @richardthompson7779
    @richardthompson7779 26 дней назад

    Any ideas what these cars are getting in a tropical setting ? Any tests done ? Many electrical cars appearing in Malaysia with BYD very popular

  • @69jonhill
    @69jonhill Месяц назад +1

    He literally just said 'driving on a wet day halves the efficiency.' OMG.

  • @mikadavies660
    @mikadavies660 2 месяца назад +5

    Brilliant test... showing real world information.... Thanks guys

    • @_nosikeuzoma1456
      @_nosikeuzoma1456 2 месяца назад

      Are you Tesla owner?

    • @mikadavies660
      @mikadavies660 2 месяца назад

      @_beccaszn Certainly not.... They may be efficient but I think they are ugly.

    • @_nosikeuzoma1456
      @_nosikeuzoma1456 2 месяца назад

      @@mikadavies660I get it everyone has their opinions and their choice

    • @_nosikeuzoma1456
      @_nosikeuzoma1456 2 месяца назад

      @@mikadavies660have you driven one before?

    • @mikadavies660
      @mikadavies660 2 месяца назад

      @_beccaszn Not sure what congratulating the guys on a Good Test has got to with me buying or driving a Tesla??? Obviously, their technology is good but £49,950 for a melted bar of soap! Why would I buy something that cost £1,000/mth and makes me sick, looking at it..? The Model Y is more practical for a family than the 3... but group 50 insurance!! No dam way!!! I have driven the old Model 3. Dreadful hard suspension. I believe the new 3 is far improved. I actually like the BMW i4. Very nice drive but... inefficient and too expensive.

  • @samcoolply
    @samcoolply 2 месяца назад +16

    Please doublecheck cabin temperatures next time during the test, chinese cars are known to keep the actual cabin temperature a few degrees lower than configured in cold conditions.

    • @darekmistrz4364
      @darekmistrz4364 2 месяца назад

      I don't belive that not even 1 driver changed the temperature in their car. Also in a test like this, it matters if someone quickly entered a warm car or left a door open for 5 minutes on driver swap. Also a test to be somewhat reliable, it would be nice to do it 3 times to help with accuracy of what they are actually measuring

  • @GHOOGLEMALE
    @GHOOGLEMALE 2 месяца назад +1

    I've had an iD3 for 15 months - Tremendous car, I'm a petrol head, but I wouldnt give it up. However, I could not afford one on public charge network, total rip off at 79p more than 10 times the cost of charging at home - Octopus Plus at 7.5pkwh for me. Your home with a drive or garage or off road parking will rocket in value once EV's have been fully integrated - it will end up being taken into account of ownership eventually. Indeed, so should the fact that you can only get these electricity deals if you have the right car and the right charger - but when you do - all electricity use from 11.30 to 5.30am is cheap rate so you save on household bills too (there is a small premium for daytime use which has to be factored in)

  • @user-tj6ov8gd7x
    @user-tj6ov8gd7x Месяц назад +1

    but, but, but take a look at the price of these EVs sold in China
    Tesla Model 3 RWD ~ 27K
    Tesla Model 3 LR ~31K
    BYD Seal ~ 20K
    BYD Dolphin ~ 7-9K
    Price wise, Tesla's counterpart is Nio ET5, Xpeng P7

  • @rundmc5554
    @rundmc5554 2 месяца назад +7

    very professional and scientific test with good explNtions eg with rain

  • @GT86crazy
    @GT86crazy 2 месяца назад +3

    Nice test. Tesla continues to impress with it's efficiency. Somehow they manage to go further with a smaller battery. The lower weight and better aerodynamics are very impressive.
    Does the Model 3 LR have LFP or lithium ion batteries? I know some teslas use BYD batteries, I wonder how a BYD with BYD batteries will fare against a Tesla with BYD batteries?

    • @_nosikeuzoma1456
      @_nosikeuzoma1456 2 месяца назад +1

      It comes with lithium ion batteries @GT86crazy

    • @jpataca5598
      @jpataca5598 2 месяца назад +1

      Byd designed the seal for the best of both worlds. Tesla feels like an eletric bumper kart with its intense regeneration one pedal driving. Thats one of the major factors that makes it more efficient.
      Curious to see the new performance m3's efficiency compared to the seal excellence once its released.

    • @GT86crazy
      @GT86crazy 2 месяца назад

      @@jpataca5598 my friend raves about the one pedal driving in his model Y. I've not experienced it myself but I can see how more aggressive regen would give better efficiency in city driving. However for the highway it can be more efficient to allow free wheeling.

  • @MrChrisWhitten
    @MrChrisWhitten 2 месяца назад +1

    Most people are mostly driving short journeys, and mostly charging at home.
    So if my EV has less efficiency on my daily commute or to the supermarket in winter, it doesn't really effect me. I charge overnight from just after midnight to just before 6am anyway. I don't think anyone would drive their car to empty so in my opinion speed of charge is one of the most important factors on long journeys. So on my trips to Southern France I have typically stopped four times to recharge (over two days), but each time was for only 30 to 40 minutes, enough time to toilet, grab a coffee or eat a sandwich.

  • @Tman76
    @Tman76 29 дней назад

    I think it is funny what you consider a typical winter’s day. Come do this in the prairies in Alberta Canada during the winter,

  • @garrycroft4215
    @garrycroft4215 2 месяца назад +3

    I haven’t watched this yet but let me leave my opening thoughts..
    I expect the average range to be around 75% of what you would expect to get in summer. As a caveat I returned a new petrol RAV4 hybrid that they claimed would do 56 mpg because the best I could get was 36 mpg.

    • @dzonikg
      @dzonikg 2 месяца назад +2

      That is why diesel is king ,my insignia sport tourer 2016 has same range when it was new ,same range in winter or summer and can run 1100 km (680 miles) at 130 km/h highway speed on one tank

    • @garrycroft4215
      @garrycroft4215 2 месяца назад

      @@dzonikg I’m sure it’s very good but the laws of physics says it’s impossible to do the same economy in cold wet rain than in warm dry conditions. Sorry but it’s not possible.

    • @dzonikg
      @dzonikg 2 месяца назад

      ​@@garrycroft4215 I went in January to Italy so it was winter ,3000 km round trip ,temperature were from -10 Celsius to +10 ,it was 99% highway drive ,i drive around 140 km/h only slowing becase off trafic so lets say awerage was 130,my awerage consumption for whole trip was 6.1l/100 km and tank is 71 liter so that gives you 1150 km range at highway speed

  • @SDygP
    @SDygP 2 месяца назад +17

    Having just ordered a Nissan Ariya, I’d have loved to see it included here. But I love the effort put into this test! Great work, definitely subbing to your channel now!

    • @jonitan76
      @jonitan76 2 месяца назад +6

      yeah. they should include nissan ariya, leaf and hyundai ioniq 5, kona and kia ev6

    • @matty7834
      @matty7834 2 месяца назад +1

      out of curiosity, what made you choose the Ariya?

    • @benjib83
      @benjib83 2 месяца назад +5

      I’ve had an 87kwh Ariya for a year and a half now and absolutely love it. It’s a bit pricey, but for that you get a very practical cross-over, beautiful interior, nice design and I’m getting about 275 miles in winter and 330 miles in summer. Can’t praise it enough, although it’s my first and only EV so far!

    • @SDygP
      @SDygP 2 месяца назад +2

      @@matty7834 Good question. A mixture of us liking the design, the ride and the comfort. It's so comfortable and spacious, and I just enjoy the ride.
      We don't drive that much (5-6k miles per year), so battery size and charging speeds were not our main concerns during the selection process, otherwise I would probably have gone for something like the Ioniq 5, but the general comfort is much better (for me) in the Ariya.
      And the price in Denmark recently dropped to a decent level.

    • @SDygP
      @SDygP 2 месяца назад

      @@jonitan76 Totally agree, Ioniq 5/6 and Kia EV6 should be in there as well!
      We almost chose the EV6, but it is a bit more expensive, and my partner was not fond of the interior of it.

  • @wallbawden5511
    @wallbawden5511 Месяц назад

    i think this was a very fair test given the weather and such as not all country's are the same take Australia north of 38 degrees c in the shade south in somer simulator temps winter very different only coolin winter up north average 10 degrees c south any thing from 3 to - 20 at best i really don't care whether you use metric or the imperial but please tell the people so we don't have to guess as conversion is easy as cheers for a real world test vairing the speed and such what you need to do in the polishion figures of power compared to fuel and ease of refueling compared to charging thanks for the test bring on the one i just mentioned Cheers from Australia

  • @KurtQuad
    @KurtQuad Месяц назад +1

    When it’s -30C and colder here the range of EV’s drop by 50%