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Must admit my fledgling attempts at producing a petrol powered iPhone have met with some technical success but less so market ones



Yes but, shrapnelStumbled across this on another forum. Hadn't seen it before. Made me smile...
Must admit my fledgling attempts at producing a petrol powered iPhone have met with some technical success but less so market ones



I love them too, but they aren't the future.I'm sticking with ICE. I just love them.
At my age 'for now' is long enough for meI love them too, but they aren't the future.
They are still the best choice for some, for now though.

Some manufacturers offer a petrol and BEV version of the same car for the same price.....Electric cars are completely unattractive for several reasons, primarily their cost
Nope. Even a cheap and cheerful MG ZS EV taxi managed to do 238K as a taxi and is still going strong under new ownership. The traction battery is still in a good state of health. Sure, some parts need replacing, as you'd expect at that mileage, but nothing major and nothing eye-wateringly expensive.relatively short lives,
Not really. Our car, at the lower end of EV ranges gets a minimum of 200 real life miles and takes a maximum of 50 minutes to get from 10% to 97%. Other cars have a much bigger range.lack of range,
It depends where you charge. Some charging companies give a discount if you use their app. Some Tesla chargers are open to all and are much cheaper than the usual 79/ 89p.expensive to run unless you have your own charger, and...
Check out the statistics.they do tend to explode and burst into flames!
Just out of curiosity, if searching for a used hybrid which factor reduces the service life of the traction battery .. age of the car or mileage covered?Nope. Even a cheap and cheerful MG ZS EV taxi managed to do 238K as a taxi and is still going strong under new ownership. The traction battery is still in a good state of health. Sure, some parts need replacing, as you'd expect at that mileage, but nothing major and nothing eye-wateringly expensive.
Not really. Our car, at the lower end of EV ranges gets a minimum of 200 real life miles and takes a maximum of 50 minutes to get from 10% to 97%. Other cars have a much bigger range.

Is it just my age, or do others have a mental image of very large lead-acid cells when they see "traction battery" ? Yeah I know it's the right term, but mentally I can't help associating it with "stuff from the distant past"Just out of curiosity, if searching for a used hybrid which factor reduces the service life of the traction battery .. age of the car or mileage covered?