Claymore
Well-known member
35 miles round trip yesterday, car charged but only 23 miles predicted.
116 mpg overall for the trip.
Mustn't grumble.
JimB
116 mpg overall for the trip.
Mustn't grumble.
JimB
RDClark66 said:When talking economy of a PHEV shouldn't we be comparing costs in pence per mile as how can you compare miles driven in EV mode to those using petrol ?
Charging at home still costs money so it needs to be part of the equation.
RDClark66 said:Charging at home still costs money so it needs to be part of the equation.
Would you not have received this subsidy if it wasn't for the PHEV? And could you not have used the power from the panels for other purposes, for which you must now buy power? To be honest, I don't think there is such thing as free power.SolarBoy said:RDClark66 said:Charging at home still costs money so it needs to be part of the equation.
Not in all cases does it cost to charge at home, I get paid by the government via the UK's solar panel subsidy to recharge my Outlander
anko said:Would you not have received this subsidy if it wasn't for the PHEV? And could you not have used the power from the panels for other purposes, for which you must now buy power? To be honest, I don't think there is such thing as free power.SolarBoy said:RDClark66 said:Charging at home still costs money so it needs to be part of the equation.
Not in all cases does it cost to charge at home, I get paid by the government via the UK's solar panel subsidy to recharge my Outlander
anko said:Would you not have received this subsidy if it wasn't for the PHEV? And could you not have used the power from the panels for other purposes, for which you must now buy power? To be honest, I don't think there is such thing as free power.SolarBoy said:RDClark66 said:Charging at home still costs money so it needs to be part of the equation.
Not in all cases does it cost to charge at home, I get paid by the government via the UK's solar panel subsidy to recharge my Outlander
Cool, no problem . Your remark triggered a memory of a lengthy discussion I had with a Dutch guy who on one side claimed that charging his car was virtually free and on the other site calculated ROI on his panels using commercial electricity rates. This discussion made me a bit allergic to statements about cheap charging via panelsSolarBoy said:Yes I would have received the subsidy even if I hadn't have used the power locally sorry it was a poor attempt at being funny.
greendwarf said:I assume that SolarBoy also gets paid for each unit he produces and doesn't use himself, so charging the car "costs" him this, as well.
Only if you have overcapacity for which you don't get any compensation, then it is sort of 'free' to use that overcapacity for charging the car. But in that case, you are effectively using the car to fix a very poor decision you have made in the past ...jaapv said:If you have a large enough solar system, it works the same way over here, Anko. Or enough shares in Meewind.
anko said:You mean these reading come straight from your solar panel installation and not from your normal meter? And you get payed for power that you generate and use yourself? That is cray, indeed.
But yet, any kW (self generated or not) that goes into your car cannot go into your washing machine and needs to be replaced by another one.
anko said:Only if you have overcapacity for which you don't get any compensation, then it is sort of 'free' to use that overcapacity for charging the car. But in that case, you are effectively using the car to fix a very poor decision you have made in the past ...jaapv said:If you have a large enough solar system, it works the same way over here, Anko. Or enough shares in Meewind.
So, the less you charge, the more you save on your natural gas bill .... Or, the more you charge, the less you save on your natural gas bill?SolarBoy said:Any excess that isn't being used for charging or on appliances heats our hot water tank and this saves money on our natural gas bill.
SolarBoy said:greendwarf said:I assume that SolarBoy also gets paid for each unit he produces and doesn't use himself, so charging the car "costs" him this, as well.
Hi greendwarf, I assumed this as well prior to getting panels, but it's incorrect.
Here are the ins and outs:
- When generating electricity I don't need to buy electricity from the grid, so I save money.
- I get paid for every kW/h generated, this called the Generation Tariff
- I also get paid an additional fee for every kW/h called deemed export assumed to be 50% of the energy I generated.
I don't have an 'export meter', therefore is I get paid the same amount whether or not I export 0% of what I generate or whether I export 100% of the energy I generate. Crazy eh?
Why shouldn't you get any compensation?anko said:Only if you have overcapacity for which you don't get any compensation, then it is sort of 'free' to use that overcapacity for charging the car. But in that case, you are effectively using the car to fix a very poor decision you have made in the past ...jaapv said:If you have a large enough solar system, it works the same way over here, Anko. Or enough shares in Meewind.
For sure. But now you got me all confused. Please explain, what did you mean when you wrote:jaapv said:Why shouldn't you get any compensation?anko said:Only if you have overcapacity for which you don't get any compensation, then it is sort of 'free' to use that overcapacity for charging the car. But in that case, you are effectively using the car to fix a very poor decision you have made in the past ...jaapv said:If you have a large enough solar system, it works the same way over here, Anko. Or enough shares in Meewind.
http://www.wijwillenzon.nl/faq/4/financia%C2%ABle-vragen/73/teruglevering-en-saldering-uitleg-regelgeving.html
jaapv said:If you have a large enough solar system, it works the same way over here, Anko. Or enough shares in Meewind.
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