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Re: Electric Car Charger
A delivery bay close to Accrington Town Hall, in Broadway, will be converted into a free ‘fast charging’ point for economical motorists.
From here - Electric car charging points coming to Accrington (From Lancashire Telegraph) |
Re: Electric Car Charger
Using Gordon's figures and the ones from the Telegraph, then Hyndburn will have to come up with c.£38,000. What is the expected return on this, or is it just another white elephant like the click and collect for the Market?
Is this a sensible way of spending our Council Tax? I think I saw credit card slots on the machine, so presumably the user does pay for getting their car charged. |
Re: Electric Car Charger
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either way regardless of the excuse that it was a government grant its still money sourced from the public in one way or another and a waste of money at that. if the council put as much effort into improving the the town rather than looking for exotic ways to waste money and get their faces in the paper the town may improve i dont know it may be a good thing especially if i can catch a drunk or smackhead asking it for spare change then at least it would get liked on youtube or facebook cops moving next door to greggs and a car charger .Is it coincidence theres an election near? |
Re: Electric Car Charger
Will it end up similar to the super loo saga? No-one uses it so, to save money the Council have it removed only to find they have a contract saying they will have to pay three years rent?
I'm 95% sure the cost of that particular saving was in the region of £20,000, is this history repeating itself? E.G. let's not learn from our mistakes let's just make them in a more expensive manner. One thing for certain, I ain't buying a 'green' car just so I can plug it in, in a deserted town centre. |
Re: Electric Car Charger
if there was enough cars to justify this thing or the prospect of there been enough in the near future the margram garage would have one as would most petrol stations including ASDA
there was a family car on top gear that ran on hydrogen which is genuinely clean fuel and if they take off this thing is going to be even more pointless |
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By splitting water into oxygen and hydrogen. How do you do that? By using the same electricity used for electric cars-produced by coal, gas, oil, nuclear( and on a windy day, not too windy, a little bit from the super expensive turbines). The final result may seem like clean energy but it's not clean or efficient. We've a long way to go before we find a true source of clean energy. |
Re: Electric Car Charger
well at least 2 folk in hyndburn will be happy.Im sure theres more but im guessing they have the sense to charge their vehicles before use and wont rely on having to use the one in town center
but theres no such thing as bad publicity even a stupid stunt with no relativity to the towns problems can get your pic in the paper and all that matters near election time is a big smile plastered where plenty can see it |
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Electric cars are that useless Nissan have stopped making them,the batteries cost approx. £6000 to replace and some manufacturers have started leasing the batteries to you to try to sell their cars.At the moment until the technology is vastly improved don't even think of buying electric,they will suffer the same fate as 3 wheelers, extinction.
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I noticed a charging point outside a business premises ( former terrace property) at the end of Atlas street on Dill Hall Lane.
I wonder if one of the stipulations of having a grant for installing them and running electric cars is that anybody else can plug in for a quick charge. |
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Re: Electric Car Charger
people who have them swear by them until the battery starts to diminish and then they sell them to a sucker on ebay lol
one day they will get it right but they havnt yet |
Re: Electric Car Charger
The thing with electric vehicles is that people complain that there isn't an infrastructure in place to charge them otherwise they might consider one.
If you have an electric car you might consider shopping in Accrington, free parking and somewhere to top your car back up, I doubt it will be free usually a company like Ecotricity charges you through a card system but it generally equates to 2p a mile. I was quite sceptical of electric cars but I now drive a Nissan Leaf as a company car and for me personally it saves me quite a bit of money because I only use it to work and back and I can charge it free there. The problem with the cars as far as I can see is residual values because people are sceptical and also the expensive batteries which someone has mentioned so the second hand market is still difficult for these cars. As far as New cars go the Nissan Dealer where I work was selling a New Leaf for under £200 a month on a 2 year PCP contract in March which when you take your fuel bill out of the equation isn't bad for a 25k car. I know you don't own it etc but it takes away the worry of any residual and several people from Accrington did purchase one. Like I said previously I was quite sceptical myself but I think it's one way city/town cars might go in the future. |
Re: Electric Car Charger
Sorry another obvious problem is the range of these cars currently around 100 miles this should improve with newer models to around 200 miles this is why charging points are important and the infrastructure needs building up.
If anyone is interested in an electric car you really need off street parking to charge it at night but if anyone wants to try one we have a demo car you can have for up to 4 days to see what you think. |
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