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I just bought a 2021 model and its charging is way too slow takes more than 9 hours for full charge at home and 6 hours on charging stations. As compared to fully electric cars its battery is only 13kw and still takes same time as them which is really annoying, i tried 22kw charging stations aswell but still more than 6 hours time with 33% i already had . Is it like that or mine have some battery issues please advise
They aren’t capable of fast charging, they won’t take more than 3.7kw per hour no matter how much power you give it. It’s not an electric car so doesn’t need to charge so quickly, the idea is that you charge it overnight from home to cover your commute.
Thank you, I don't really have any experience of the e-Nero, I know they're probably using the same running gear but the Kona is definitely a prettier car.
It should be self charging to between 6 and 12% and always have hybrid function. It should also be able to charge up to 100% in its battery save mode, does it charge when plugged in? And both the saloon and estate share the same running gear.
Hi Derek, it wouldn't be too bad but, I'm not sure it would pass out as the boot size is smaller than the ICE versions. There is a list online that tells you weather they'll qualify and there are stricter provisions attached for chauffeur cars so, I would recommend finding that out before you do too much research. Regards, Colin
I want exactly the same car colour and interior but how do you remove the factory tinted windows? Saw one with these seats and clear windows absolutely stunning, do I need to change the whole glass, rear passenger and rear windscreen?
On that particular one it was a factory option so it can’t be removed however I’m not too sure if you can get them without it in the Irish or UK markets. I’ve only had a few 7’s through but hundreds of g30 5’s and on those it’s definitely optional.
Interesting. I just watched a video of a UK Tesla Model S owner with 430k on the odometer and running on the original battery. A car can and will last long if you take care of it. If you treat it like a throwaway car then it will not last.
It all depends on which rumours you believe to be facts.. I don't think Elon is getting billions in cash - just share options. If Tesla was on the skids, as you imply, that would not be worth very much. And Cybertrucks seem to be rolling off the line - at about 80,000 trucks a year rate now, and going out to eager buyers who've been waiting months or years.. Anyway, time will tell if the rumour mill is correct or way off. Customer satisfaction, or lack of it is the final verdict.,
If you do not hold Tesla shares you have no say, and its nothing to do with the amount its the principle, and the vote is not in yet. I hate football BTW.
“ I hate football “ me too! I agree with you on that but as a pro EV person, I just think it’s another stick for the tabloid media to hit EV with. It looks terrible in tandem with all of the cyber truck controversies
@@kingmotorsdublin The cyberTruck controversies are largely media generated. It gets views. Even the 'pro Tesla' channels are using negative connotation click bait titles.
at 3:40 you said tesla doesn't have "the r&d of the big manufacturers". what do you mean? quality control...because of the frunk "guillotine" problem? what about gigacastings, 48V, ethernet, octovalve, steer by wire, software in general, and whatever they do to make the absolute safest cars on the road. i'm asking sincerely if you think tesla is behind the other oems in r&d capability. thanks.
No I don't, quite the contrary actually. I think their tech is fantastic and truely ground breaking but where I do believe they fall massively behind is in the application and future maintenance of it. The cyber truck was nowhere near ready for market delivery and yet they pushed it out because of the timelines and bombastic claims made by Musk. The R&d I'm referring to is in their ability to control quality generally and their apparent complete lack of after-sales care or availability to repair their older cars in a reasonably priced way, which gives the red-top rags some great headlines. I've honestly recieved hundreds of clips of cyber-truck with panells falling off on the highway etc and it isn't good enough frankly.
Let me dissassemble this: "what about gigacastings" Gigacasting is dead, it has been canceled, wont happen. (Tsla Press Release, May 1st 2024, can be found on CNBC, TheVerge, InsideEVs etc) Wont.happen. "48V" Audi, Porsche (and well the rest of VAG), Mercedes all use 48V systems in their upper class cars since 2018, particularly the mild hybrid ranges. The tech is even older in HGVs. 48V is the natural progression of board electronics in the car world, same as at some stage we moved on from 6V. All manufacturers do it. This is primarily down to supply change slowly transitioning from 12V systems to 48V systems. Frankly, Tesla is a bit behind here especially in their higher end models. "ethernet" Not sure what you mean here. Ethernet is a communication standard originally defined in IEEE 802.9 originally defined in 1973, Not really a Tesla invention. Tesla would implement Ethernet in accordance with the latest IEEE updates do the directive, like hundreds of thousands of other companies world wide. "octovalve" Well yes that seems to be a reliable valve design for a heat pump. Is it more reliable and more efficient than other manufacturer heat pump valves? Maybe, time will tell. If the distribution valve in the heat pump is a unique selling point for you for an electric vehicle, Teslas are for you. Doesn't really contribute to being a good EV though. "steer by wire" If you want a car with steer by wire you can buy a Chevrolet Silverado or GMC HUmmer EV if it has to be electric. Alternatively you could buy a Rolls Royce Spectre (BMW) or a Lotus Eletre (Tata) if you want a car with steer by wire. Tesla hopes to release their first car with the technology in 2025, a bit later than some of their competitors "software in general" Chrysler had the better "Autopilot" (assistance system suite) since about 2016, their strongest competition being VAG by means of their A8 Traffice Jam Pilot. The First car ever to achieve Autonomous level 3 is Mercedes and so far they are the only ones. The hardware currently offered in Tesla vehicles is not capable of achieving A3. The infotainment suite in japanese and korean cars in general is miles ahead of Tesla in terms of connectivity, features and usability as well as user friendliness. Same goes for most of the Stelantis and PSA stuff. The Germans lack behind here, about on par with Tesla. "and whatever they do to make the absolute safest cars on the road." That depends on which Tesla you talk about ? The Model Y has a reasonably well crash test series. The Model 3 is a lot worse, Model S is appropriate for the time but dated and doesnt fair well in the updated NCAP. The Model X has always been bad. And the Cybertruck is veritable nightmare in a crash. And thats only in the crashes, it gets worse across the board once the "Autopilot" systems get involved with false positives etc. If you want safety, you should look for a car with an appropriate sensor suit, Radar, Lidar etc. Like a Kia, Hyundai, Mercedes... well any other EV than a Tesla really. Overall their range is between "pretty good" and "outdated by todays standards", not "safest in the world". "i'm asking sincerely if you think tesla is behind the other oems in r&d capability." They are. Most other manufacturers have budgets for R&D that exceed Teslas annual revenue, larger teams with more experience, more rigoros testing regiments. For example the drive units of Pre 2022 Teslas are relatively outdated, basically tech from 2010/2012 that is still being sold. The refresh in 2022 made them more reliable (something that was badly needed, as the old units are not very durable), however they are essentially still the old tech with very little updates / efficiency improvements since 2012. I hope that clarifies a few things for you. Yes Tesla has a very die-hard fan base that does their marketing for them and yes in 2012 they were the first-to-market EVs (which isn't entirely truie, Nissan Leaf exists) and there was very little other choice. If you are looking for a Tesla, the Model Y is probably the only sensible pick in 2024. You have to like the design inside and out of the car though. Consider before opting for FSD though, as no Tesla on the road today will ever be "Full Self Driving" before they are off the road for old age. In 2024 there are better cars out there than Teslas. Personally I would recommend to look at Japanese and Korean cars, as they are the most efficient and best equipped EVs out there, if you need something that holds the value reasonably well go for a VW, Audi or Porsche. And if you want my personal "secret tip" look at the Mercedes EQ range. Cracking cars, absolutely Mercedes and I think the EQS is hands down the best EV money can buy on the market today. Just dont buy the AMG version, it does nothing but reduce your range. Wish I could afford one.
@@kingmotorsdublinI think you're fundamentally misunderstanding their manufacturing process. They have a digital twin of every vehicle, not for bookkeeping reasons, but because they innovate *every day* *several times per day*. They can change their lines almost at the drop of a hat. The upshot is within say 6 months, they will have produced 50 different varieties of each model, because they are improving what's under the hood. All of the new, different parts are cataloged on the digital twin and so downstream they are tasked with fitting updated technology onto "old" models. They have no "standardized part" bins to pull from. They are converging to best practice designs, but they are never finished. This is fundamentally different from the OEMs who take 5 years to make a budget and finalize a design and....and....and....etc....
@@thomasidzikowski1520 Which is partially true. Most of the improvement Tesla makes is to the cost efficiency of their components, not to their quality or energy efficiency. They still live mostly of the development done by Eberhard and Tarpenning in the 2000s. Which is mostly outdated by todays standards, which became clear in 2014 when Mercedes sold their stake in Tesla and Tesla technology became stale. That is 10 years ago, for orientation. The primary reason why Tesla changes components this often is, that they can play their OEM manufacturers this why, keep them as cheap as possible. This was one of the strategic initiatives to make Tesla profitable. A downside of this is by the way obvious to any Tesla owner. Because a certain component can exist in a number of different versions from different OEMs that are not necessarily compatible with each other, spare part availability and sourcing is a nightmare. Even for Tesla Servicecenters. That is a major contributing factor for the extremely bad service quality at Tesla. That and their overall stance on customer service. But thats a different topic.
BYD and other Chinese car companies are coming which is the real issue. Tesla positioning itself to compete with them not the likes of Toyota/Honda or the Big Three.
I don’t quite understand your reasoning here, poor quality control, underdevelopment and not delivering on promises made doesn’t position them to compete with anyone!
But BYD licenses tech from Tesla. So either way Tesla wins. BYD barely makes a profit on their cars. Once Tesla came to China BYD is struggling to survive in China as well. See what happened to NIO. BYD makes great cars but follows ancient manufacturing techniques like Big Auto. Where are the robots? Tesla is innovating. As Elon says - Tesla does not focus on cars, but on factories and automation. Where is BYD's Dojo platform? Tesla entered chipset design and beat even NVIDIA. Ask Huang (CEO of NVIDIA) he claims NVIDIA is next only to Tesla in AI hardware. Where is BYD or Ford when it come AI platform? FSD? Why is BYD going to license FSD from Tesla? BYD competing with Tesla is akin to saying Samsung is competing with Google. They complement each other.
Skoda superb mk4. 12 differences no one told you before New Skoda Superb 2024 facts no one told you before. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-sctdSz5wk_U.html
I love my 182 530e, best car I've had...even though it has the smaller battery. Really reliable in the 3+ years I've had it. I've had Alfa's, Renaults etc but the worst car I've had was a 2015 E220....endless nox sensor failures, coolant leaks....nox failures were covered by Mercedes luckily...nevertheless....time wasted and frustration...aaagghh....couldn't wait to get shut.
Yeah, diesel Merc’s really lost their way around that time, I believe they’ve improved a lot since about 2016 on but I’ve had none through the business so I can’t really say.
Totally agree, the G30e 12kw battery is a fantastic car, much lower running costs to the 520D and no issue taking it on a long run without a battery charge as you will get mid 30's to 40mpg's if you take it handy (Speed limit) I had a 2020 530e before and loved it, great car.
That’s been my experience too, just a fantastic all-rounder and around 38 to 42 mpg on the motorway. I’ve had a couple of 740e’s and they were better but they are considerably more expensive so, the 12kw G30 530e is still the pound for pound (or euro for euro) champ in my opinion.
Diesel still a great option, my wife's (Family wagon)recently changed from a 2020 Tarraco 2.0Tdi to a new 2.0Tdi Tarraco as for us with needing a 7 seater with small kids etc an electric or even a PHEV wasn't a runner. (XC90 or Sante Fe\ Sorrento only other options, with a small 2.0L petrol pulling around a big 7 seater with a battery....no thanks) On the other hand, regarding a PHEV with a 30,000km commute, I myself do close on 30,000Kms's which is made up of a 50km each way commute to work and I drive the X5 45e (24kw) which has a range from 60km's to 80km's (Summer\Winter). I can charge at work and at home and I get 3 months from a tank of petrol, about 7000Km's. So for me it works really well, don't think I'd run an x5 30D for anything near that economy or even a 520D for that matter. I'd say for the 30,000Km drivers out there, if you can charge at home & at work then a 330e\530e (12kw) PHEVS 2019 Models upwards are defo worth considering and even if you can only charge at home, there going to return about 30-35mpg's on an empty battery too which isn't too bad either until you get home, charge up again and get your 45 to 60kms out of their 12kw batteries. I have had both those cars so know exactly the real world range. Also fantastic cars by the way. Love the video's , keep it up
What about a main dealer warranty versus an after market warranty and say for example buying a BMW from a non BMW Dealership and getting their non BMW warranty? Is the level of cover less? Apologies, about 3 questions here 😂
Not at all, no I don’t think it is. In general when you get a “BMW” warranty with a second hand car that’s out of it’s manufactures warranty, it’s an aftermarket insurance product and most likely white labelling of an AA warranty or Mapfre. Ultimately you are getting the same product and levels of cover in my experience.
You know the 2 year premium used warranty BMW Dealership will give when you buy a 3 or 4 year old car with them. I have had those warranties and they cover absolutely everything, not just engine and gearbox but even the idrive screen or the ambient lighting, the after market warranties are shocking from my past experience, only cover parts of the engine and there's always exceptions to what's actually covered. Also you'll be without a car unless the garage you bought from has an old focus knocking about 😂, these are just my experiences, it's why I'm hesitant in buying used from anywhere other than a main dealer, especially a BMW.
I bought 2 cars from you over the years, 2 toyota's , avensis and auris. Had both for about 5 years each, never had a use. Highly recommended Kings Motors.