MG4 TROPHY 70 MPH MOTORWAY RANGE TEST vs SE STANDARD RANGE

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июл 2023
  • Hey and thanks for tuning in to this video.
    This week, I test drive the MG4 Trophy on the South West 70, 70 mph Motorway range test.
    From 100% to 4% we run this 61kWh battery down and then compare it to my MG4 SE Standard range 70mph motorway range test.
    Every 10% documented including milestones which may be useful.
    If you're considering both the MG4 Trophy or Standard range as your next EV this might be of help to you.
    If you enjoy this video a LIKE and a SUB to the channel would be super!
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    #MG4 #MG4SESR #MG4charging #V2L #mg4mods #fullyelectric
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Комментарии • 200

  • @HooverLux
    @HooverLux Год назад +2

    My Trophy is coming in September, I loved watching all your vids on these cars. Your test on the Trophy is what I guessed it would do.

  • @ashb8572
    @ashb8572 Год назад +30

    I have a SE Long Range, and today, I did a 210-mile trip at similar speeds (70-75mph), but it was 27 degrees celsius. I started with 100% and had 17% remaining at the end (air con used constantly). The display shows 3.9 miles per kw for that run, so the total possible if i continued along the motorway would have been around 250 miles range to 0% lol. I did discover on a previous journery that the reduced power kicks in at 3% SoC, and it's no longer able to run safely at single or duel carriage way speeds 😅. Luckily, i was near home on that deliberate test and on a 40mph road 😂

    • @maximilianholland
      @maximilianholland Год назад +2

      I think the Trophy definitely has a bit lower efficiency than the regular LR.

    • @gingernutpreacher
      @gingernutpreacher Год назад

      70-75 is that you're way of saying 80ish

  • @corindikevcorindikev
    @corindikevcorindikev 9 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks for a good range test review. I have a MG 4 Essence 64 (Australian version of the Trophy) with generation 2 software so has 1 pedal driving and a few updated different settings to yours. Only owned for 3 weeks and I travel about 100km daily at 110kmh plus a bit of about town stuff. Temperatures range from about 18 deg early morning up to 32 deg at 3pm. I charge to 80% every 3 days on my 7kW wall charger. Average battery usage with the aircon going is about 17.6 kWH/100kM.
    I am going on a 550kM trip at the end of October almost all on 110kMH road. The only problem is the charger network is not well developed yet due to the previous governments poor policies but is improving now. EVs now account for nearly 8% of sales compared to only 1.8% in 2022 so the revolution is starting. Love the MG4.

  • @michaelketley1252
    @michaelketley1252 Год назад +13

    These results closely match my experience of my Trophy; Budleigh Salterton to Wokingham, M5 M4 last Thursday evening. Driving at 67 mph extends to range quite nicely but, being the creature I am, when I have a good reserve of energy, I can’t resist travelling at a trifle over 70 mph for the later part of the journey…… Typically 25% charge left after 180 miles.

  • @fastfreddy19641
    @fastfreddy19641 Год назад +17

    Had my MG4 about two weeks now and after having a Nissan leaf 30kw I'm very happy with the range so far. Did a trip from Hartlepool to Newcastle and Tynemouth and back and had plenty left. No range issues at all for me. Great video though.

    • @oliverskinner8962
      @oliverskinner8962 Год назад

      The 30kwh Nissan Leaf is a terrible car, we had one for 5 nearly 6 years and summer range went from 110 miles to 70 miles even with the BMS updates and 11 of 12 battery bars (it went up to 12 bars after the update for about 4 months but the range got worse after that). I'm glad you got rid of the Leaf like we did.

    • @fastfreddy19641
      @fastfreddy19641 Год назад +1

      @@oliverskinner8962 I had mine for six years and at the end had all battery bars. The car was great no problem with reliability and could do 120easy when I traded her in.

    • @decimal1815
      @decimal1815 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@fastfreddy19641EV driving style can make a big difference in user experience. I'm still a newbie but I'm learning to regulate my "gas" and get much improved efficiency.

  • @chrispenn715
    @chrispenn715 Год назад +8

    Interesting comparison thanks. I have a Trophy which I've owned for 6 months and 6,500 miles. Outside temperature makes a noticeable difference with mine. In the winter I was averaging around 3.2 miles per KW. This month it' s more like 4.2 mpkw I drive a mix of local and motorway, but I generally keep it to about 65 on the motorway if the road is quiet enough. I would still choose the Trophy personally - the little bit of extra range is always useful for longer trips (I do a cross country 260 mile trip to East Anglia three or four times a year). I also prefer to have the extra kit - like a better speakers and the cameras. LKA is a bit of a pain - it sometimes misreads road repairs as white lines for example. I've found that if you turn it to the lowest setting, it stays there when you switch off. Overall, still happy with my car. 🙂

  • @neilshayler3119
    @neilshayler3119 11 месяцев назад +1

    Ordered a Trophy spec yesterday, Drives really well comfortable given the price its a cracking car.

  • @ianbrooker2072
    @ianbrooker2072 Год назад +6

    Best bit of Slough.....turnaround and leave 😂

  • @stephendavies3356
    @stephendavies3356 Год назад +7

    Trophy rear spoiler air drag which nocks at least 10miles off the range I've got long range MG4 I'm really please with ,Stuart keep your videos coming brilliant work cheers😊 23:02

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Thanks Stephen much appreciated. Congrats on ya Long Range!

  • @Rufus2005f1
    @Rufus2005f1 Год назад +1

    Great video, thanks for that, just what I wanted to know

  • @tommytinkler1708
    @tommytinkler1708 11 месяцев назад +1

    Very good informative video. Not ready to take the plunge myself yet for an EV, but these MG motors seem great value if you want a new one. Look better inside and out than a Tesla y I test drove.

  • @maximilianholland
    @maximilianholland Год назад +1

    Good tests, thank you.

  • @barrymurton8988
    @barrymurton8988 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great report nice to hear positive review on the mg4. I’ve got a 2008, 1970, but do have to be aware of its range limitations- So what in a couple of years time?

  • @esa4aus
    @esa4aus 11 месяцев назад +1

    Good solid testing..

  • @pipingmad11
    @pipingmad11 10 месяцев назад +2

    Love the footage at 14.30, the subaru looks like the wheels aren't turning.

  • @_davide_
    @_davide_ 10 месяцев назад

    This car looks gorgeous in black 😮

  • @EXSKIN
    @EXSKIN Год назад +3

    Love your vids, taking my Trophy Sunderland to Boppard on the Rhine Germany, done it many times in an ICE mainly M135i M4 and a A35 AMG.
    About to find out find out how better or not the European charging network is, No 162mph Autobahn runs anymore but with the MG4 I won't be gassing fluffy bunny's behind me.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      That’s fantastic! I’m also heading to Europe in a few months looking forward to it. I wonder what it’s top speed is? I’m not convinced about MG and their marketing lol

    • @whatthe6532
      @whatthe6532 10 месяцев назад +1

      Given that Germany using a lot of coal for electricity, bunnies still getting gassed.

  • @RB-lt8kt
    @RB-lt8kt 11 месяцев назад

    Interesting real range test.

  • @alexrose1ukv2
    @alexrose1ukv2 Год назад +8

    I have the MG4 Trophy also. I like it, but I will say I feel the heating system is VERY inefficient compared to the Hyundai Ioniqs I used to have. Those things were beasts, especially in summer. With the 38KW Ioniq I regularly saw 4-6m/KwH, and over 200 miles, was a real efficiency king. The MG also has some really iffy software quirks and bugs.
    Honestly, if I could have had the software/finesse of the Ioniq, and the hardware/battery size of the MG4, I'd have been super happy, I am hoping MG improve things along the way through software and firmware upgrades. If an Ioniq 3 comes out to replace the old OG Ioniq however, I may consider switching.

    • @ianjames3078
      @ianjames3078 Год назад +1

      No chance of a replacement for Ioniq 38……..gutted. Love my 38, had an mg4 lr se for 3 weeks but wasn’t a patch on the Hyundai with the leaks, undertray not fitting, software bugs, inefficiency etc. shame, the ride was great and fast charging excellent in the 1200 miles I did.

    • @alexrose1ukv2
      @alexrose1ukv2 Год назад

      @@ianjames3078 yeah, there were a lot of rumours about an Ioniq 3 that got delayed by the pandemic, the 3 being the true replacement for the OG Ioniq.
      Honestly the MG is a nice car, but the Ioniqs were kings of efficiency, had great specs, and were well laid out in terms of kit. My only real caveats with the car were the lack of rear wiper (present on the MG4 also), gloss plastics everywhere, and Hyundai's sometimes poor customer service. The fact you can now do the software/maps updates yourself, except for the deeper firmware on the engine components reduces your need to even visit Hyundai.
      Honestly if the Ioniq 3 ever materialises, I will be very interested. 210-220 miles on a 38.3KwH just highlights how inefficient many EVs are by comarison, the MG Trophy does have longer range 200-270, but its taking a 61.8KwH battery to do it.
      25% more range for 50% more battery.
      The MG is a decent drive, but it has a ton of software bugs, the LKA/TJA is borderline dangerous on english roads, so I tend to turn the TJA off, and its just plain inefficient by contrast. The bluetooth also has a real bad habit of refusing to connect, and it seems to be because the MG randomly completely changes MAC address on the Bluetooth, which is just stupid.
      More frustratingly, the OTA updates which could be used to resolve many of these bugs overnight, are not being used, and you have to get booked in with MG to get any updates they will give you.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад

      Ioniq is a great car, I think it still has a place but it’s not an SUV which is what the market craves. I have been living with a Kona electric and an Ioniq 5 for a few weeks and they are fantastic. Kona would suit anyone jumping into an EV, I have fallen in love with the Ioniq 5. Styling, comfort and charging is on the money

  • @nickieredshaw7835
    @nickieredshaw7835 10 месяцев назад +1

    Good video

  • @Ray.842
    @Ray.842 10 месяцев назад +2

    I have a Kia e-Niro today I drove London to Northampton and back. Started with 100% battery and a range of 285, drove a total of 207 miles got a fantastic 4.9 miles per kw hour still have a range of 103 miles in the battery. Temp was 26c best car I’ve ever owned! Bought it in 2020 done almost 48k miles 😎

    • @markburton8303
      @markburton8303 6 месяцев назад

      What speed was that at? It must have been 50-60mph max - Considering this MG (fairly similar), pretty much perfect conditions did 3.4m/kwh

    • @Ray.842
      @Ray.842 6 месяцев назад

      @@markburton8303 no 75 until I hit the 50mph zones norm 5mph over the limit unless traffic doesn’t allow. I’ve been very impressed with my Niro.

    • @markburton8303
      @markburton8303 6 месяцев назад

      @@Ray.842 sounds great tbh. I've got a chance of an Enyaq (which is a bit of a beast), the 80kwh big battery version and theoretical range of 320miles. But, it's on the VW architecture that seems to do about 3.4miles/kwh at best. That's not to be sniffed at, but you are monstering that. What average m/kwh are you getting?

    • @Ray.842
      @Ray.842 6 месяцев назад

      @@markburton8303 atm I’m getting 4.3 m/kwh the best I’ve ever got and it’s only ever been twice, I’ve had my car 31/2 years is 6.0 but it was very warm 25 ish degrees in the summer I normally get 5-5.4 ( summer time) thats all local driving not motorway.

  • @Yesterzine
    @Yesterzine Год назад +1

    You've solidified I want the touring, the longest thing I'll ever do is 200 miles but outside good weather the Trophy will struggle slightly for that. I'd love an XPower but 100 miles of range just to be a dick sometimes just isn't worth it.

  • @garethwalker3446
    @garethwalker3446 11 месяцев назад +1

    I would have been happy with an SE long range if I could have added a rear camera. With no rear wiper and restricted visibility this stopped me buying one. Instead I went for an 18 month old Kona 64kwh, and am delighted with it. Plenty of power and decent efficiency averaging 4.6kw/mile since I bought it in April. I leave mine on Eco mode, and use maximum re-gen. So easy to drive and control, and with cheap overnight charging very inexpensive to run. One thing to note, the 4 year 40,000 mile service is very expensive. I understand that the cooling system is replenished ( the cost of the fluid is quoted at approx £250 and the service done under contract is over £500!!! That I did not expect. However still pleased with the car.

    • @stephenhunt5011
      @stephenhunt5011 11 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the heads up on the 40k servicing cost.
      That's the first I have heard of that. If there were no other servicing costs. £500 spread over 40,000 miles is a negligible amount, but still a shock when they hand you the bill, if your not expecting it.
      £250 for the coolant seems expensive. What are they using, vodka?

  • @tonyhewitt6767
    @tonyhewitt6767 9 месяцев назад

    A very interesting video. I like this car but have heard bad things about the after sales backup. Is this a problem or is it a myth? It's difficult to work this out from comments about the driving experience. I think this vehicle would suit me very well. I am concerned about charging though, as with most of these cars. Most of the time I would charge at home but on a longer journey it seems quite difficult. I might take my current car out and use an app' for an electric vehicle and see what the reality is like, ie are the chargers there, working, available etc.

  • @barrymurton8988
    @barrymurton8988 11 месяцев назад

    Interesting comparison but still wouldn’t want to try Manchester from Epsom without stopping!

  • @michaelcocheci3696
    @michaelcocheci3696 Год назад +2

    Swap thouse skiny 215/65 r18 tyres with 245/45 r18 and you will get 150 miles of range if you go north not south ! Speaking from experience , owning a mg5 !😀

  • @zahid1909
    @zahid1909 7 месяцев назад +1

    Very informative; thanks a lot

  • @chargeheadsuk
    @chargeheadsuk 11 месяцев назад

    For the last few months ive been getting 4.2 miles per KW out of my Tesla Model 3 LR 2019 done 81k driving to work by myself. Always 70 on the motorway

  • @Aarav_Vispute
    @Aarav_Vispute Год назад +4

    I love these videos. I want to see you tesla going the same range test

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the wonderful comments. I have range tested the long range M3 in winter which you can find on the channel

  • @markbray3038
    @markbray3038 Год назад +2

    I do have a Trophy which is a Great car, I only wishing would be a little better at motorway speed. I love the looks and the extra Kit so its the price I paid. Still a Great car.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +2

      Hi mark I assume you’re referring to efficiency? Having said that with the exception of Tesla M3, even the efficient Korean cars are very similar

    • @markbray3038
      @markbray3038 Год назад +2

      @@stuart_thomas thats the word I could not think of thanks. Efficiency around town and slower A roads its fine for us.

    • @alexrose1ukv2
      @alexrose1ukv2 Год назад

      @@stuart_thomas this car does ~3-4 average KwH, during summer my Ioniq Premium SE 38.3 could achieve 4.5-5.5 quite regularly, averaging 5 or so, and sometimes even in region of 6 or so, and it was a noticeable jump, even at motorway speeds. Best I ever saw was about 220 miles roughly in that thing on one 38.3kwh usable battery charge, which makes this 61.8 battery car seem pretty dissapointing, given its averaging slightly less miles for many driving loads, with a battery thats over 50% larger.
      Dont get me wrong, the average range on the MG4 61.8 usable is higher, but not proportionally so, although I am aware I was a bit spoilt by the Ioniq gen 1 and 2 as they are amongst the most efficient electrics full stop. If Hyundai had released a refactored Ioniq with no changes over the G2 but with a 60kwH battery, I'd have been all over it, as would many IoniqEV owners I'd guess.
      I'd have considered moving to the Telsa M3 as one of the other efficiency leaders, but I just couldn't justify the much higher price tag.

  • @anniecameron6794
    @anniecameron6794 2 месяца назад

    Yes agree how much did it cost to fully charge the ev

  • @corkeymonster
    @corkeymonster Год назад +2

    From 0:03 to 0:05 it looks like the plastic headlight lens is starting to melt exactly where the bulbs are focussed..

  • @decimal1815
    @decimal1815 11 месяцев назад

    I wonder how accurate the car's energy consumption calculations are compared to the real amount of energy the battery was able to accept from the charger?

  • @ronthomas380
    @ronthomas380 11 месяцев назад

    Hi Stuart All the figgers you kept quoting I assume read on the touch-screen, and all well explained, I am assuming No problems with loadings on scree of which other MG have, the only down side to me is No Sunroof, what a shame, Please confirm, if you can get as an extra Sunroof. Regards welshman2081

  • @mloceloot5083
    @mloceloot5083 Год назад +2

    Looks great. I’m collecting my trophy next week and it has a rear wiper ?

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад

      I hear it has the rear wiper although I thing you’ll rarely use it - perhaps in winter if you’re reversing???? Congrats on your trophy

  • @richardhowlett9424
    @richardhowlett9424 Год назад +1

    Again ! A challenge in your MG4 , all four extremities of Britain , The Lizard , Lowestoft Ness , Ardnamurchan lighthouse , Dunnet Head , in 2 days . One car , as many drivers as you like .

  • @kjh789az
    @kjh789az Год назад +1

    Interesting to note Trophy consumption is almost exactly the same as revealed in your Zoe 50 kwh test. The larger MG4 battery gives a useful greater range.
    Appropro nothing, my MG5 new model long range estate f*****d me after only 7 months and 3302 miles by failing to charge the 12v battery. So, in the middle of a busy A road everything shut off. Luckily, I was able to coast into a side track and count my blessings. RAC were great!

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  11 месяцев назад

      Thanks for tuning in and commenting. Oh gosh sounds like you managed it like a pro, so well done! 👍

  • @danielpalfi
    @danielpalfi Год назад +6

    I don’t know how I feel about this. I drive with my trophy on the motorway 3-4 days every week and my average is 4.5 or even 4.7kwh. Obviously I drive around 60-65 on M1 between 27 to 37. So my experience are much different/better.

  • @gohumberto
    @gohumberto Год назад +6

    Great test.
    All Manufacturer range claims should be based on a test like this. Maybe 70mph at 15 degC and the results published in miles/Km per KWhr. That would be truly meaningful.
    So now I know an MG4 can do approx 3.5 miles/kwhr.
    The (soon to be launched I hope) MG4 "Touring" will have a 77KWhr battery. That gives a real world Motorway range (based on your test) of 270 miles and an easy 300 mile range on A-roads and urban mix. That's quite a sweet-spot for me. 250 real-world miles with 20 miles in reserve or a couple of weeks pootling around town.
    I can't wait to see the same test if you get your hands on a "Touring" model.

  • @jaker3151
    @jaker3151 3 месяца назад +1

    There's a lot of external unpainted plastic trim on these cars. Hence I'm wondering how they're holding up over time, have they discoloured/lightened? I like gloss black cars but if the external plastics discolours/lightens over time I think it would look worse on a gloss black car versus a white or any other colour car. Also is the type of plastic on the front different from the plastic on the doors/sides which looks a bit lighter(?) Another thing I'm wondering is if rear passengers are able to slide their feet under the front seats? Thanks for these tests, they are really useful for potential buyers.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  2 месяца назад

      No issue with exterior facials even at 18 months

  • @danalec4742
    @danalec4742 Год назад +1

    I already ordered black Trophy.

  • @MrKST78
    @MrKST78 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great video. Can I ask how long it it take to recharge at the station and what was the cost?

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  11 месяцев назад

      Thanks for tuning in. I have a separate charging video 👍

  • @chrislecouteur2360
    @chrislecouteur2360 Год назад

    And how long did it take, to charge it up to get you home ?

  • @hawkeye880
    @hawkeye880 Год назад +1

    Nice video, can I just confirm in the comparison between the comparison at the end you said the se (cheaper car) has the better lfp battery is that correct?

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +3

      Thanks for the feedback and great question. Of course its my opinion, the LFP battery works at a lower voltage so less heat generation and therefore is more robust (longevity wise). It can be charged to 100% as often as you like. It also has a x3-4 cycle longer life than in the NCM (long range & trophy) battery pack. Having looked at the results of both range tests an 80% daily charged NCM and a 100% LFP battery results in similar range. However, there are some trade offs worth mentioning. The Trophy/long range battery can charger faster than LFP and it can be more efficient in cold weather (below 5•c) but MG4 comes with battery heating to help with this. I hope that helps.

    • @hawkeye880
      @hawkeye880 4 месяца назад

      Brilliant thanks

  • @collowood
    @collowood 11 месяцев назад

    What is the Trophy version in Australia please

  • @InBodWeTrust
    @InBodWeTrust Год назад +2

    Temp difference was 9deg not 6? (21 - 12 = 9)
    Over a total of more than 3260 miles my SE SR has averaged 3 mpkWh, since the end of November '22; at this time of year I'm getting about 3.4 mpkWh for a distance 70 mph run.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад

      That’s great specs. Any EV struggles at 70mph, I’ve now completed testing of most EVs and they all fall well below expectation at 70mph.
      Quite right about the figures, I was taking the lowest temp of the trophy test which was 19•c 👍

  • @darren100880
    @darren100880 8 месяцев назад +1

    Not bad for motorway speeds, The range in my peugeot E2008 plummets when i drive at 70mph :( but i suppose its not as aero dynamic as the MG4.

  • @barrymurton8988
    @barrymurton8988 11 месяцев назад +1

    Would love some more miles!

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  11 месяцев назад

      Extended range version available now 😊

  • @stevenbarrett7648
    @stevenbarrett7648 Год назад +1

    Excellent test but again i would like to see the same range test but at 50mph to see how much more range you get

    • @allanshort8264
      @allanshort8264 Год назад +1

      As a regular M5 driver I would prefer a minimum speed limit of 60mph

    • @PeterMossUkulele
      @PeterMossUkulele Год назад +2

      I somehow don't think you would be very popular with the truckers causing them more than necessary lane changes.

    • @Jimages_uk
      @Jimages_uk Год назад

      @@PeterMossUkulele to be fair, as a retired truck driver, I never had any problems with cars doing 50 mph, the ones that did 56 mph because the fuel figures were based on that, making them think that had to be the most economical speed were the bain of my life. Just slightly slower than me as speedos are never really accurate, meaning I either had to sit behind them changing my speed all the time, or spend an age overtaking them.
      Invariably it would depend on how tight my schedule was, but these cars seemed to be more prolific when I was pushed for time ;-)

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +2

      Hi Steve, there isn’t great opportunity to perform this safely, however I have done a 60mph if this is of use which is on my channel

  • @decimal1815
    @decimal1815 11 месяцев назад +1

    200 mile real world range. Not bad for a £26k EV. Doesn't seem particularly efficient, but then 70mph is the top speed in the UK so it's likely to do better in mixed every day driving.

  • @clonSanG
    @clonSanG Год назад

    It’s all right saying this in the summer try do the same test in the middle of October Or January it will be halfed

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад

      I have in the SE standard range - check it out 👍

  • @Peoplestariff
    @Peoplestariff Год назад +1

    Thanks for this the efficiency is quite poor certainly worse than I’d expect - I get over 5 miles/kWh in my yorkshire eUP! but I’ve learnt that you have to keep below 60mph and never use hvac to achieve that

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the comment. I have just range tested an e-up in my used EV series and it didn’t get above 4 mi p/kWh at 70mph, but like you said below that it does incredibly well

  • @PeterMossUkulele
    @PeterMossUkulele Год назад +1

    Please can I ask how long did it take to get the battery recharged to 100% and much did it cost to do that. If you divide that cost by the number of miles is the cost per mile more or less than an equivalent petrol or diesel car of the same size and weight? Thanks, Peter.

    • @Jimages_uk
      @Jimages_uk Год назад +2

      The cost would always depend on someone's circumstances, if charging at home using solar, it could be free, if using the chargers on the motorways, you could pay nearly double that of an equivalent charger in a nearby town. I think it is fair to say that using the most expensive chargers would see a cost close to running an ICE car.

    • @PeterMossUkulele
      @PeterMossUkulele Год назад

      @@Jimages_uk Thanks for responding. Just taking the Solar power charge at home out of the equation, I'm trying to gauge with the extra cost of purchasing the EV car against a similar sized ICE car and the cost of charging at home overnight from the household supply, would I save against putting fuel in. I also like to change my car after 3-4 years and cover on average 12k miles per year. Is the EV economically worth it or would it be a case of just going green? - I believe the compromise is to have a self charging hybrid.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +2

      Hi Peter 95% of my charging (including for this test) was done at home on my Octopus Go tariff at 9p p/kWh which is around £5.

    • @Jimages_uk
      @Jimages_uk Год назад +2

      @@PeterMossUkulele If you can charge at home, then the running costs go down considerably, doing 12K per year, you would probably be charging around twice a week, you can get as low as 15 pence per KWH on a night time rate, but you would pay slightly more for the day rate, so it takes a bit of working out. Servicing is almost nonexistent in an EV, so that can save you money. I think that currently, it is close to a break even cost, once you factor in the cost of the car, resale and replacement prices, but so many factors change things, where you live affects the cost of charging, but as you can charge at home, you are almost certainly on the winning side (just) with an EV today, taking everything into account, had your mileage been much less, then I'm not so sure.

    • @PeterMossUkulele
      @PeterMossUkulele Год назад +1

      @@Jimages_uk Thank you for your comprehensive response. Peter.

  • @marekkompus6109
    @marekkompus6109 11 месяцев назад +1

    Your car is long range mg4 281miles ???

  • @logant6490
    @logant6490 Год назад +9

    If you have a home charger, with a cheap associated overnight tariff, AND a range of 220 plus meets your lifestyle, then a small loss in efficiency is pretty insignificant given the cost of EVs.
    4.6 versus 3.6 miles /kwh on a full charge gives a £1.33p saving on a 64 kw battery (intelligent octopus).
    I do about 7 charges a month at home.
    Just over £100 a year.
    Now look at the cost of an mg4 versus a kia e-niro or tesla.

  • @broderwow
    @broderwow 6 месяцев назад +1

    One hint, with next wideos please add kWh per 100km or kW per 1km instead km per kWh ;)

  • @starshipupdates5217
    @starshipupdates5217 4 месяца назад +2

    201 miles on a full battery :(
    I dont think its time to buy just yet. I can generally get 600 miles out of my car on a single tank so its gonna be a long time before electric power is any better, especially when you consider that this car will have to stop and charge 3x times compared to my 1x fill up with fuel. Super charging has come so far in the last few years but I believe its still a 20-30 minute charge from 0 to 100, this means I would be spending 1hr 30m charging. I would also expect to see much less range during the winter when its very cold outside, when the heated seats, steering wheel and HVAC are turned on and when im towing my trailer. In this scenario I would expect to see maybe 150 or 125 miles of range on a single charge.
    I can see these types of cars being fantastic for people who live in a city and for those who don't explore too far outside of their town. If your day to day just consists of going to work or the shops, then this should be a great car for you. Especially when you consider the benefits of these cars in London for example, where pollution levels are currently very high.

  • @gibroon4418
    @gibroon4418 Год назад +3

    One thing I've not seen much use of in mg4 videos is the adaptive breaking. Is it any good or too random to get used to?

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Don’t really use it as the car always starts in most aggressive regen

    • @gibroon4418
      @gibroon4418 Год назад +2

      @@stuart_thomas
      I thought it would be better to coast at some points but that's probably me thinking how ICE cars drive.
      I've only test driven an ev car once and I became quickly aware how much the accelerator was where all the control was due to the regen braking.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      I mean you can do this if you tweak the regen to adaptive, it should freewheel on motorways but like you said your throttle is key. On these tests, I try to keep it consumer focused rather than too scientific as no one drives or reads car data in a scientific way but everyone should know the limitations with thinks like range and safety. I have a road trip to today and my 70mph test means I know the minimum it will achieve

    • @maximilianholland
      @maximilianholland Год назад +1

      @@gibroon4418 No, you are right, it is better to coast where possible. Round trip efficiency of [regen + more acceleration] is lower than just coasting.

  • @pmR32red
    @pmR32red Год назад +1

    👍

  • @XXXJAB
    @XXXJAB 11 месяцев назад +1

    I wished you could of run the test at 60 mph. I never exceed this speed on the motorway if my goal is to travel far. I have a Nissan Leaf 40. In my experience It makes such a difference driving at 60 moh.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  10 месяцев назад

      I’ve done this at 60 in the standard range version of the MG4

  • @deadlockvlogs
    @deadlockvlogs Год назад +1

    Hi Stuart. Really enjoying your videos and this one is even more relevant to me, as I take delivery of my Trophy next week. Woohoo! Could I ask a quick (and slightly strange) favour please? Is there any chance you could measure and let me know the size of the rear window please? Thanks in advance and keep up the great work!

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Many thanks for the great comments and congrats on your Trophy order. Unfortunately I don’t have access to the vehicle at the moment, I think your trophy is much more likely to arrive first sorry

    • @deadlockvlogs
      @deadlockvlogs Год назад

      @@stuart_thomas Oh no, what's happened to it?!

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      @@deadlockvlogs I actually own a SE SR which is currently in storage while I’m testing other EVs, I don’t have space at home unfortunately. But it will be coming back out in the next couple of weeks for a short while

    • @deadlockvlogs
      @deadlockvlogs Год назад

      @@stuart_thomas That's good news then. I thought something bad had happened to the car!

  • @peterengland6153
    @peterengland6153 11 месяцев назад

    As with ICE cars it is all about a light foot. one youtuber drove Chang Mai to Bangkok at 80km (50mph) and got 5.4m/kwh or 11.6kwh/100km. That a 60% increase in range.

  • @user-kb6kl7he1i
    @user-kb6kl7he1i 11 месяцев назад +1

    Anyone heard anything concerning effects of new 18 inch wheels on the trophy? Local dealer says mg hasn’t released revised figures. Larger wheels should mean reduced range and acceleration.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  10 месяцев назад +1

      That’s correct, there will be some penalty for this.

  • @helipeek2736
    @helipeek2736 7 месяцев назад +1

    That efficiency seems to be shockingly bad. I drive an eUP and it’s returned 5.5 miles/kWh over the last 1555 miles. The last journey was 164 motorway miles and it returned 5 miles/kWh.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  7 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the comments - I have range tested the e-up and it’s not very efficient on motorways at 70mph however, at sub 60mph and especially around town it’s fantastically efficient. Great little car. It is hard to compare the two as they’re very different cars.

  • @gibroon4418
    @gibroon4418 Год назад +6

    Not the greatest efficiency from either model but it's still enough range for most people. I would certainly want a break after 2 or 3 hours driving.
    I would go for the trophy version if I could.
    The camera, heated seats and steering wheel and extra speakers in the back would be too much to miss imo. Not essential though.

    • @manthe3711
      @manthe3711 Год назад +1

      Trophy also gets auto folding side mirrors. If I'm buying an expensive car, this is a must have honestly.

  • @MrSimplesimon007
    @MrSimplesimon007 11 месяцев назад

    Be interesting doing it in say 0 to 5c with the lights wipers and heating on, and 4 people in, these tests with 1 person in in the warmth are fine, it needs to have a family in to do a proper test.

  • @washingtonluis1770
    @washingtonluis1770 11 месяцев назад +1

    How much does it cost to fully charge the trophy to a fully charge ???

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  10 месяцев назад

      Depends on charger cost.
      Battery capacity x £/p-kWh = overall cost

  • @thrilled2bits
    @thrilled2bits Год назад +1

    I have the Trophy, your test is about right... did you use adaptive cruise control? Mine didn't do so well when I had this on...

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад

      No, when energy saving mode is enabled you can only use full regen

  • @daveg4644
    @daveg4644 11 месяцев назад +1

    Disappointing that the MG4 is less efficient than the MG5. I have a 5 LR which has averaged 3.6 m/kW over the last 10 months and on its last road trip averaged 4.2m/kW with the cruise set at 70mph on the return trip, 3 adults + luggage (Left with 100% and guessometer said we could get the 256 miles home in one hit, but did stop for coffee and cake so topped up whilst stopped). I did test drive the 4 and thought that the efficiency seemed worse on the same roads. Surprising since the 4 is a ground up design and the 5 a converted ICE model. The 5 is quicker too (X-power not included!).

  • @evgenykyselgov9533
    @evgenykyselgov9533 2 месяца назад +1

    what type of battery is installed in this car?

  • @mikldude9376
    @mikldude9376 Год назад +1

    Are you running daytime running lights ? I assume not ? Maybe I’m over cautious, I always run with daytime running lights on , the old saying , be seen be safe .
    Edit , just thinking about it , it would be interesting to see the same test done at night time with full lighting being used, as this test if no lights are being used is only really valid in the day time.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад

      Daytime running lights were on, they come on automatically. Most EVs and modern petrol/diesels use LED lights and don’t use much energy.

    • @mikldude9376
      @mikldude9376 Год назад +1

      @@stuart_thomas Good to know thanks mate .

  • @benellis7427
    @benellis7427 8 месяцев назад +1

    I expected more. I do want to upgrade to this car but my ioniq 38kwh is probably only 30 miles behind this. I thought the short range would be a suitable upgrade but it appears not.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  8 месяцев назад

      Thanks and that’s a great POV and I agree.

    • @benellis7427
      @benellis7427 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@stuart_thomas The charging speed and acceleration however is much better.

  • @sargfowler9603
    @sargfowler9603 9 месяцев назад +1

    So what's the estimate range in winter at 70mph? EVs do a lot better in the summer, but winter is coming...

  • @ricco123tube
    @ricco123tube 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hmmm..... that's worst case efficiency for my Kona 64kwh in the winter.
    I thought it would be better tbh.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  10 месяцев назад

      Real world 70mph test on Kona coming up soon in my buy used series

  • @rickmoz
    @rickmoz Год назад

    Interesting, but out of interest what made you change from the standard to the trophy?

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Hi Rick, I’ve had the trophy on test and have been living with it for 10 days. Not ready part with my se standard just yet 😉

    • @rickmoz
      @rickmoz Год назад

      @@stuart_thomas maybe the X-power that’s less than 4 seconds to 60. I’d trade my SR for that

  • @ajtame
    @ajtame 11 месяцев назад +1

    Proper 'dad' video and i love it

  • @mbak7801
    @mbak7801 Месяц назад

    Why the high temperature? At 22 I would be soaked in sweat. To each his own of course. For me the standard wins hands down with an LFP battery.

  • @justice4g
    @justice4g 11 месяцев назад +1

    is the seat as low as a regular sedan?

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  11 месяцев назад

      Seats are average height and can be adjusted. In terms of rear seats, they’re quite high for an EV as the battery modules are quite flat in this car

    • @justice4g
      @justice4g 11 месяцев назад

      @@stuart_thomas thanks

  • @xchopp
    @xchopp 8 месяцев назад +1

    4:37 -- mind the pinch point!

  • @alanjeffriesjeffries2741
    @alanjeffriesjeffries2741 Год назад +6

    My new trophy comes with 18inch wheels bigger central screen reawiper.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Wheels look fab - although I have no issue with rear wiper you may as well have it for the same price point

    • @daijohn2968
      @daijohn2968 11 месяцев назад

      Bigger central screen?

  • @clayton4115
    @clayton4115 Месяц назад

    18:58 oh all along I thought you were driving the 77 battery version.

  • @sp1es
    @sp1es 11 месяцев назад +1

    Why is the efficiency getting worse on newer cars and not better? We should easily be seeing 4mi/kwh in weather like this!

    • @theairstig9164
      @theairstig9164 8 месяцев назад

      If you want more efficient it will look like a cockroach and cost a fortune. See Hyundai Ioniq 6 and Merc EQXX or similar. 8kwH per 100km or 13kwH per hundred miles. They are low sleek and have woeful rear vision. Pick your poison

  • @CoojertM
    @CoojertM 5 месяцев назад

    I’m off to Uni to take a degree in Maths!

  • @ST-jq
    @ST-jq Год назад +1

    So £5K more for the trophy and only an additional 35-40 miles, doesn't seem worth the extra money. Am I right in thinking that you cannot or should not charge the Trophy to 100% every time, whereas the SE you can.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Correct 👍 although depending on ownership model on the trophy, if it’s a lease then I don’t think charging to 100% merits that thinking but I’d imagine for most it would be the likely consideration.
      It’s also worth nothing LFP Chem has 3-4 times more life cycles like for like considering degradation.

    • @chrispenn715
      @chrispenn715 Год назад +1

      Yes - it's about £5k, but you also get more kit - which may or may not be important to you. (It was for me...) 🙂

  • @pauldenney7908
    @pauldenney7908 Год назад +1

    Not as good as a Tesla model 3, which is a bigger more powerful car. My lifetime average on that was 3.6 miles per Kilowatt. That said its perfectly adaquate range and it will be intresting to see how well the LFP chemistry of the standard range model holds out over time.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +1

      Completely agree. Tesla have nailed the efficiency game and they will only get better as they make that car lighter and better motor/battery performance. LFP is definitely the way forward and Tesla have proved it can work.

    • @logant6490
      @logant6490 Год назад

      A fair slab of tesla efficiency is drag coefficient.
      Many people don't want a unpractical pseudo sports car

  • @TheRecraftMan
    @TheRecraftMan 11 месяцев назад

    I've just been thinking, using the adaptive cruise control wouldn't it be possible to slipstream a lorry the entire way? That means you take advantage of the air pocket behind one and increase your range that way. I think it might be viable in really desperate situations. Also, Lorries go slower speed, i think about 50-60 mph, which is a more efficient speed as well.
    I get my MG4 Trophy in a month or so, I might try it out and report back.

    • @chrisminigp2109
      @chrisminigp2109 10 месяцев назад +1

      You will die of boredom and put yourself at risk, not having a clear view of the road ahead.
      Here, speaks an Hgv1 driver of 33 years experience 😂

    • @TheRecraftMan
      @TheRecraftMan 10 месяцев назад

      yea you're probably right haha@@chrisminigp2109

  • @anniecameron6794
    @anniecameron6794 2 месяца назад +1

    No one is answering how much it cost to fully charge

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  2 месяца назад

      Depends where you charge it. Worst case scenario 0-100% battery recharge - MG4 Long Range 64kWh battery…
      At home on an EV tariff, 7p pkWh (64 x £0.07) £4.48
      Public general 79p pkWh (64 x £0.79)
      £50.56
      Tesla charger 39p pkWh (64 x £0.39)
      £24.96

  • @stephenparker5272
    @stephenparker5272 Год назад +1

    You can charge the standard range to 100%, the trophy/ long range to 80%. Do the math.

  • @mikebreen2890
    @mikebreen2890 Год назад +3

    I would love to see this at 60mph.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +2

      Hi Mike - I have done a 60mpg test with the set standard range - I’m sure the difference I’ve guestimated in range difference between the two will be the same for 60mph

    • @mikebreen2890
      @mikebreen2890 Год назад +2

      @@stuart_thomas OK, I'll check it out. Cheers.

  • @TassieEV
    @TassieEV 11 месяцев назад +2

    You now need to do the same test again with the big battery model, 77kWh and see what range you get on the same route.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  10 месяцев назад

      If I can get my hands on one I will.

  • @Localbikeryamaha
    @Localbikeryamaha Год назад

    Getting 4.6 on a new RWD Tesla from new

  • @shaneleslie8968
    @shaneleslie8968 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for also using Kms for the non Americans

  • @danieldarcy7862
    @danieldarcy7862 Год назад +2

    Very poor. I get around 5 ml/kWh with similar driving on my eNiro

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +3

      I’ve 70mph range tested the eNiro and it doesn’t do that great. The video’s on my channel. Mixed driving it’s great

  • @salex1066
    @salex1066 11 месяцев назад

    Its really funny reading metric combined with Imperial. Time for UK to drop the miles for kms, otherwise we just look like Americans

  • @dantebg100
    @dantebg100 11 месяцев назад

    The slowest autobahn drive in the history 😅😁
    I usually drive 150 km/h(95mph) on the autobahn
    And going to 180km/h(115mph) for short term just for fun

  • @patrickflanagan8008
    @patrickflanagan8008 11 месяцев назад

    Seems like a decent car.....albeit made in China

  • @typxxilps
    @typxxilps Год назад +1

    I guess trophy is the luxury line here and has Li Ion battery. 70 mph is 112 km/h and the consumption figure for us is 18 kWh / 100 km
    Not so bad, but not really good compared to a tesla model 3 or model Y - even though conditions looked best, you can not get better ones except tail wind maybe.
    It feels like the usual cars: too far behind tesla regarding consumption, range and efficiency .
    Sad but true that even the chinese were not capable of reverse engineering tesla nor to copy it.
    Pieces here and pieces there can be better as a tesla but at the end here it is called piece work , simply too unconsistent.
    And meanwhile here far, far too expensive compare to model 3 during quarter sales .

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +2

      Although it doesn’t have the efficiency of a Tesla 3/Y (they will always be the benchmark) this car isn’t designed to compete with Tesla at this price point. On the other hand It also offers V2L, it’s compact but spacious and it holds 140kw charge up to 50%. Not bad for this price.

    • @davidspencer7254
      @davidspencer7254 Год назад

      Tesla borg. You will assimilate and buy elons tat.

    • @rugbymadjohn
      @rugbymadjohn Год назад +2

      Why even compare 2 cars with a massive price difference

  • @sammygirlie345
    @sammygirlie345 Год назад

    Kona way better

  • @stevebeever2442
    @stevebeever2442 Год назад

    Should also add the % of what it's actually advertised to do.
    Many of these EV's fall way short of the advertised range which isn't great given the advertised range is still way smaller compared to normal cars.

  • @fredob43
    @fredob43 Год назад +9

    Very interesting. I run a big diesel car with one five Min: fill up I can do well over 600 miles at speeds of over 70MPH. Would I Ever consider buying an EV? Not on your life. In the real world, it would have been good to know how much it cost to recharge also how long it took. I bet it wouldn't be much less than to fill my Diesel. Then you can add the agro-finding charger and waste your life away whilst it charges. Let's be honest they are not worth buying until the infrastructure is in place, and they sort out the battery range.

    • @stuart_thomas
      @stuart_thomas  Год назад +15

      I appreciate your point of view which is of many. I’d only ask what your daily use case is. For example I drive 300 miles per week, plus quite a few long trips. All my charging is done over night and costs £5 to charge my car to full. My costs are £7 a week. My annual maintenance is £150. I also had a big diesel car as well having the best of both worlds. The real answer is, I never drove the big diesel because I save a fortune and the electric car is much more fun to drive. Of course this is my opinion and use case but I’d definitely suggest test driving one if it fits into your daily use. This car will drive do at least 4 hours of driving in one charge and it takes 27 mins to recharge most of the battery (if you need that much) which is a toilet and coffee stop.

    • @fredob43
      @fredob43 Год назад

      @@stuart_thomas Thank you for your reply but you haven't taken into account if there is a fast charger that's empty when you get to the charging point so you would have to make allowances for that. Also, I see you didn't mention how much it cost to charge away from your home. My servicing for the 12km per year I do costs around 100UK and it's only that because I service the car every 5000 km and not the 10,000 KM they recommend. It could be as low as 50 UK if I serviced it when it was recommended. That on its own makes up for the fuel and inconvenience + planning you have to do whilst traveling long distances costs. Sorry, you haven't convinced me so I'll stick to my Diesel Lump.

    • @jestronixhanderson9898
      @jestronixhanderson9898 8 месяцев назад +4

      I daily a cheap second hand leaf, on night rates i use about half a litre of diesel per 60 miles equivalent! In 4 years its paid it`self off in fuel difference. Evs rock for city use. I kept my old dino juicer for occasional long trips , evs second hand and for city use rock !

    • @geoffersvoiceofreason2534
      @geoffersvoiceofreason2534 8 месяцев назад +13

      So what you are telling us is that you can drive for, at least, eight and a half hours with just a 5 minute break from the wheel. That is just completely dangerous and I’d say, impossible, bladder wise and nutritionally wise!
      I don’t know where you live but doing “well over 70 mph” in the U.K. is illegal.
      I feel there is a little bovine excrement in your post.
      Regarding costs, the first 300 miles (half your journey) would be done on a charge from home at (in my case) £0.094 per kWh far, far cheaper per mile than diesel. The return would cost me about £27 (Gridserve) cheaper if you can use a Tesla charger.
      As Stuart_thomas points out, the return journey can be done with a half hour charge. That’s lunch and a loo break. (Oh, I forgot, you don’t eat or urinate )
      There is no “Agro” finding a charger. The car or a number of apps will point you in the direction of a free and working one.
      The vast majority of my ‘refuelling’ is done whilst I’m asleep. How many “5 minute fills” do you have to give your diesel every year? I bet you waste far more of your life refuelling your vehicle than I do. Tell us, do you always pull right up to a pump every time or sometimes, do you have to queue?

    • @Popdog76
      @Popdog76 4 месяца назад

      @@fredob4315-20£ to do 200-350 miles On public chargers…cheaper than diesel by far. If it fits your use case.