Anyway, why can't we be positive about Electric cars? I say that as someone that does have one. Not for everyone, I accept that, but certainly suited to far more than actually have one at the moment.
I am positive enough to have wanted one from long before most ever realised they were a possibility. But I'm denied that pleasure as are nearly a third of the country, so the refusal to believe that by some is frustrating.
For the remaining two thirds who can have home charging, I agree owning an e-car is sometimes a possibility, and one that will increase as ranges increase.
I'd like to see more honesty on the subject though:
Range for example. That is realistically only two thirds of the makers claim in average circumstances and half the makers claim in adverse circumstances. That sort of misinformation is fine for i.c cars where a handy filling station caters for it, but not for e-cars.
Charge times too. A fast charge station is still often claimed to charge to 80% in 30 minutes, making a motorway trip viable with a coffee break it's said. But that's based from several years ago on the 24 kW Nissan Leaf of that time. The new Leaf for example has a 40 kW battery taking nearer an hour to fast charge at one of those few points, and 2019 sees an even larger battery version. Other makes have also seen their batteries greatly increase in capacity and charge times, sometimes much more than the new Leaf battery.
And that hits home charging too. The typical points are still being claimed as charging in either 4 or 8 hours, depending on rating installed, but again on the new Leaf example a buyer will discover those are 6Hrs 40 minutes or 13 Hrs 20 minutes The 13 Amp charging facility these have that took 12 hours originally now takes an impractical 20 hours.
Basically both the onboard and remote infrastructure is not only seriously lacking in availability but increasingly in practicality as well, and nothing is being done about that.
And makers lack of realism goes further. To attempt giving their range claims a degree of believability, Nissan suggest a typical motorway cruising speed is 56 mph. Really? When were they last on a motorway, and who would want a motorway trip sandwiched between a pair of 40 tonne artics the whole way?
All of which might suggest I'm anti e-cars, but nothing could be further from the truth. My above criticisms are just highlighting why there are hundreds of almost new e-cars with only a couple of thousand miles on the clock being sold at ten thousand or more pounds below cost. It's because the snags are very real and too often discovered by buyers the hard way.
The e-cars are getting much better.
The false claims about them are not.
The infrastructure is going backwards.
.