The Telegraph’s motoring correspondent Andrew English has been writing about driving Ford’s Mustang Mach-E. The Telegraph isn’t noted for its general support of the present and last governments’ energy policies, but even so his experience was a memorably expensive and salutary one.
The first thing I learnt during 11,000 miles in the Mach-E was that it isn’t a ‘proper’ Mustang. Secondly, if you regularly cover high mileage in an EV, you need to travel when everyone else isn’t to avoid queuing at chargers.
English set out during autumn half-term to see his elderly mother, his petrol Civic being in for servicing.
It looked as though Gridserve hadn’t done much planning, either. Of its 24 high-current chargers at Exeter services, eight were out of service. It was chaos
“I’m glad my boss will be doing this next week so he can see what it’s like,” said Gridserve’s Matt Sidwell, who was doing sterling work trying to instil order to the rambunctious queuing system. With no space to stack cars, no signposting and people constantly trying to push in, he was fighting a losing battle.
“The thing that drives me crazy is the people who stay on the charger to get a 100% charge,” he said. “It’s virtually impossible to achieve and takes so long because the charger is only trickling current in at that point.”
I looked enviously at the rows of Tesla-only chargers, most of them unoccupied.
It took 45 minutes for a charger to become vacant. I plugged in the Ford, unwrapped a bacon sandwich and wondered why Colmans no longer sells mustard in tubes.
There was a sharp tap at the window. “The chargers are rated at 175kWh,” said an elderly motorist who’d emerged from a Nissan Leaf and was peering at the charger display. “You’re only getting 80.”
I didn’t tell him I’ve rarely seen more than 80 and even then not for long, although the Ford’s DC fast charging is rated at 150kWh.
I just wish Ed Miliband, the energy security minister, was there so I could stuff my bacon sandwich where the sun doesn’t shine, but he was packing his swimmers for the COP conference in Baku.
With the Mustang averaging 2.8 miles per kWh on motorways, it has an effective range of 250 to 270 miles (from the 91kWh lithium-ion battery) against a claim of 372 miles (although, to be fair, Ford advertises the Mach-E with a “motorway range” of 306 miles).
To eke out the range I travel everywhere with the heater off, which currently demands a substantial coat, hat and gloves. I’m writing to Santa for thick socks this Christmas.
Fighting off the drastic effect aerodynamic drag has on an EV’s range, English reached his mother, who quizzed him about the Ford.
My poorly mother proved to be in rather better health than the U.K. charging system on that day. She was interested in the Ford parked outside.
“So, how much does it cost to run?” she asked, ever the mathematician.
I grabbed some paper.
While I once had to pay a whopping £1.12 per kWh at a Shell Recharge station, in general fast charging averages at between 85 and 90p per kWh. On a long motorway journey, the Ford averages between 2.6 and 2.8 miles per kWh, which is by no means unexceptional in large battery SUVs I’ve tested. Using the more generous figures in both cases, the Ford is costing at least 30p per mile for the electricity alone.
“And what about your Honda?” she continued. My scrap of paper was getting crowded, but at similar speeds my Civic Type R will return about 34 miles per gallon, which means that the fuel cost per mile is about 16p. She gave me a hard stare.
“Is it worth it?”
English’s conclusion is hardly surprising.
Frankly, if you travel quickly in any EV, the range plummets. In the days of combustion that merely meant a little more on your fuel bill, but these days it means hours at a charging point, time that no one pays me for.
As so often with electricity or electric cars, what’s promised isn’t always what you get – and that affects your wallet and the environment…
Every cloud has a silver lining though. Your correspondent predicts an impending boomtime for old style garages and the market in spare parts for petrol cars for years to come.
Worth reading in full.
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