Three months in with an EV
Posted: Sat Jul 29, 2023 9:51 pm
I’ve had my M50 (i4 version of the M4 ~well nearly) for three months now and so far I’m very impressed.
The running costs are the biggest thing. In a normal 3 month period, my diesel costs were around £850. I’m still using about 1/2 tank/month but that is because of the mileage limits on my BMW PCP (15,000/yr).
Charging costs for the car over the same period has been £262 (2,760 miles), so even with adding the purchase of diesel (£140) that still more than halves my fuel bills. I don’t need to use public charging as I have my own connection. BMW do provide subsidised public power for the first year which would help if I’d needed it.
About 90% of my annual mileage is commuting and in these cost conscious times that saving is significant.
Driving wise, electric cars are really simple. Power delivery in normal use (Eco Pro) is incredible smooth and completely silent. The car has external noise generators front and rear to warn of its approach, a kind of low hum that stops above 20mph, but you don’t hear that in the cabin. Select Sport mode and 475 horses are available instantly. Select Sport Boost and that increases to 544bhp for 10 seconds - enough to cover 1/4 mile in less than 12 seconds.
But that’s not what EVs are about really. Sure, everyone likes to bandy figures about for bragging rights, but it’s not what I bought the car for. I wanted the 300-mile range (which it will get to, just), comfort and lower running costs. I’m not an eco-warrior, but even I can see there’s trouble brewing. The recent scenes from around the Med, Canada and parts of the Far East are showing that something has to be done and soon.
If you had asked me a couple of years back about going to an EV, I would have said that the tech isn’t there. Actually I was wrong, the tech is absolutely there - though hydrogen may be the longer term future - EVs are very easy to live with and drive. The i4 being based upon the G26 4-series platform looks like any standard 4-series. Same body, same interior, same looks, just no exhaust pipes or IL6 engine. It drives just like the BMWs we’re all used to, and to me that’s important. I’ve owned BMWs for 20-years now and even though I’ve tried other marques, I keep gravitating back to BMW.
If you get the chance, go and try an EV, you might be very surprised. I’m keeping the X6, but that is for very long journeys. Not because of the range limit of the i4, but because of the charging infrastructure where I go in Wales. That’s a specific use case. For the rest of the time the i4 is a fantastic car.
The running costs are the biggest thing. In a normal 3 month period, my diesel costs were around £850. I’m still using about 1/2 tank/month but that is because of the mileage limits on my BMW PCP (15,000/yr).
Charging costs for the car over the same period has been £262 (2,760 miles), so even with adding the purchase of diesel (£140) that still more than halves my fuel bills. I don’t need to use public charging as I have my own connection. BMW do provide subsidised public power for the first year which would help if I’d needed it.
About 90% of my annual mileage is commuting and in these cost conscious times that saving is significant.
Driving wise, electric cars are really simple. Power delivery in normal use (Eco Pro) is incredible smooth and completely silent. The car has external noise generators front and rear to warn of its approach, a kind of low hum that stops above 20mph, but you don’t hear that in the cabin. Select Sport mode and 475 horses are available instantly. Select Sport Boost and that increases to 544bhp for 10 seconds - enough to cover 1/4 mile in less than 12 seconds.
But that’s not what EVs are about really. Sure, everyone likes to bandy figures about for bragging rights, but it’s not what I bought the car for. I wanted the 300-mile range (which it will get to, just), comfort and lower running costs. I’m not an eco-warrior, but even I can see there’s trouble brewing. The recent scenes from around the Med, Canada and parts of the Far East are showing that something has to be done and soon.
If you had asked me a couple of years back about going to an EV, I would have said that the tech isn’t there. Actually I was wrong, the tech is absolutely there - though hydrogen may be the longer term future - EVs are very easy to live with and drive. The i4 being based upon the G26 4-series platform looks like any standard 4-series. Same body, same interior, same looks, just no exhaust pipes or IL6 engine. It drives just like the BMWs we’re all used to, and to me that’s important. I’ve owned BMWs for 20-years now and even though I’ve tried other marques, I keep gravitating back to BMW.
If you get the chance, go and try an EV, you might be very surprised. I’m keeping the X6, but that is for very long journeys. Not because of the range limit of the i4, but because of the charging infrastructure where I go in Wales. That’s a specific use case. For the rest of the time the i4 is a fantastic car.