Purchasing a new car

question on the battery
example my laptop has a certain shaped battery, the connections are in certain places ,your laptop battery different shape different connection points
are ev batteries the same, different shapes/connection points ,incompatible with each other or is there a universal shape/connection point?
 
EV batteries are not standardised in terms of capacity, connections, form factor etc.
 
Exactly my point. How is deemed slow?
Nearly 16 second to get from 0-60 nowadays is glacial, as I said it will take a very long time to get anywhere near that theoretical top speed, assume it would need a fair wind and a slight decline as well.

 
As long as there are no trips to the sticks for weddings, funerals, holidays etc, where there may not be changing points for a full-fat EV
I've managed for over 5 years doing circa 15,000 km a year and it has never been an issue, so again my point stands.
 
Most EVs will be CCS connection
That's the charging connector. I interpreted @johnwilliams's question to be about the location, form factor etc. of the internal battery connections. But the query is a bit ambiguous/unclear.
are ev batteries the same, different shapes/connection points ,incompatible with each other or is there a universal shape/connection point?
 
Any thoughts on resale values of the three options if buying new now and selling on in say three years' time? Will petrol/diesel cars or hybrid become less popular over time if the switch to electric gains momentum?
 
Do you have a driveway where you could charge an electric? If so you could look at something like a 2-3 year old Kia eNiro (or sister car Hyundai Kona) - decent bit of space for carrying the kids around, 400km+ range and you’d have the remainder of the 7 year warranty. Super reliable car and being electric it’s got a fair bit of get-up-and-go so is fun to drive.

Looked into the Kia eNiro 2022. Saw a nice car. Was chatting with dealer. He said something about Energia setting up the kit.
Can I not just stay with my current energy provider?
Don't really want to be tying myself to Energia or any energy provider just because I have an EV.
 
Energia are not the only company that can install a home EV charger!

Didn't you ask the dealer questions about the Energia issue?
 
Don't really want to be tying myself to Energia or any energy provider just because I have an EV.
You are free to remain with your current supplier and choose any installer of your choice, but you will have to pay for the charger and the installation.

The Kia/ Energia deal just gets you a free charger and installation for purchasers who switch to or are already Energia customers. The T&Cs are here, and I don't see anything about having to stay with them beyond the 1 year, but I'd advise confirming that.
 
Considering buying a Toyota Corolla Petrol/Hybrid.
Dealer said it's self charging, so don't need the kit.
Is this less cost-efficient as the petrol engine will be charging the battery?
 
Is this less cost-efficient as the petrol engine will be charging the battery?
If you do a lot of city \ stop start driving \ breaking, that charges the battery and reduces fuel consumption.
If you mostly do motorway driving, not much benefit there from regenerative breaking.

I haven't seen info on whether the regular hybrids are better than plug in hybrids at recharging from regenerative breaking.

For mostly motorway \ national road driving, then a plug in would seem better for sure.
Less clear with mostly city driving.
 
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Yes, you don’t get any of the ‘cheaper’ power from home charging. Or the favorable tax treatment on the purchase price of a fully electric or plug in hybrid which on paper have much much better ‘fuel’ consumption. Generally the plug in hybrid versions of any new car in sale in Ireland is the best option price wise due to our tax regime, however only some models are available with it. E.g fom Toyota , Prius, rav4.
 
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