I was thinking of buying an early i3 (year 2024/15) prices are around £7-£8k. I don’t drive daily nowadays and probably won’t do more than 20miles weekly at most dropping kids to school.
I’m fully keen on the doors but the driver seat are a good position off the ground making entry and exit easy on the knees.
Other option is to spend a bit more for 2.0 or 3.0 X3.
.
Not joined yet? Register for free and enjoy features such as alerts, private messaging and viewing latest posts and topics.
Anyone with an old i3 here?
-
- Snr Member
- Posts: 1756
- Joined: Mon Apr 18, 2011 8:30 am
- Location: Kent, garden of England
Anyone with an old i3 here?
If i was going electric/hybrid thats where my focus would be, purely based on its quirky looks. What its range is and stuff i have no idea. Been a passenger in one once, courtesy car drive home and i liked it.
For twenty miles a week wouldn't a taxi be viable?
For twenty miles a week wouldn't a taxi be viable?
Anyone with an old i3 here?
One of my colleagues has an early i3 and loves it. Not had any issues and the battery should be fine. If it’s at a main dealer, it would be worth asking for a Cardata report as that will tell you what state the battery health is. You can get the report for yourself, but you need to (a) own it, and (b) have a valid ConnectedDrive account subscription.
Can you plug it in on your drive/property? If possible you can plug them into a standard 13A socket (which will take a while to complete) and will cost you just £0.07p/kWh(electricity unit) to charge it (with Octopus and you need a smart meter). If you’re only doing 20 miles a week, keeping it charged would be simple and only take a couple of hours or so. Public charging is a lot more expensive! Anywhere from £0.30p to £0.94p/kWh. I have a proper home charger (32A) and that will fully recharge my i4 for just £5.76 (over two nights as the 6 hour slot isn’t long enough for the 84kWh battery it has fitted).
Servicing is just brake fluid, cabin filter and a safety check every two years.
Can you plug it in on your drive/property? If possible you can plug them into a standard 13A socket (which will take a while to complete) and will cost you just £0.07p/kWh(electricity unit) to charge it (with Octopus and you need a smart meter). If you’re only doing 20 miles a week, keeping it charged would be simple and only take a couple of hours or so. Public charging is a lot more expensive! Anywhere from £0.30p to £0.94p/kWh. I have a proper home charger (32A) and that will fully recharge my i4 for just £5.76 (over two nights as the 6 hour slot isn’t long enough for the 84kWh battery it has fitted).
Servicing is just brake fluid, cabin filter and a safety check every two years.
Never anthropomorphise computers. They hate that.
Anyone with an old i3 here?
I dont have an electric charger nor will i be installing one in our current property. We intend to move in the next 2yrs so will have to make do with flinging a 13amp plug out of the landing window unless I get an electrician to install a plug outside.
I have about £18k cash to put into another car. The X5 F15 would be ideal car but with the strong used prices it probably wont get more that a 2014/2015 which is still an old car and I thinking at that age, originally parts starts to fail even on a well looked after car and those bills could be expensive.
If I want to stay with a bmw (gosh i hate being a brand snob) £7-£8k spend is not so bad, meaning I could just keep adding to the rest for a future purchase . If I was doing a lot of miles then I would have gone down the pcp route
I have about £18k cash to put into another car. The X5 F15 would be ideal car but with the strong used prices it probably wont get more that a 2014/2015 which is still an old car and I thinking at that age, originally parts starts to fail even on a well looked after car and those bills could be expensive.
If I want to stay with a bmw (gosh i hate being a brand snob) £7-£8k spend is not so bad, meaning I could just keep adding to the rest for a future purchase . If I was doing a lot of miles then I would have gone down the pcp route
Anyone with an old i3 here?
There’s very little in an i3 to fail. If you can get a slightly newer one, they have better range and faster charging. There is a version with a Range Extender (petrol powered generator in the boot), but with your usage I doubt you’ll ever need it so a non-REx would do.
The biggest cost is the main battery, but they are expected to last well beyond the service life of the car itself (200,000 miles +). They come with an 8-year 100,000 mile main battery warranty anyway. Production ceased in 2022. The next ‘i3’ will be a 3-series ‘Neue Klasse’ due sometime late next year.
The biggest cost is the main battery, but they are expected to last well beyond the service life of the car itself (200,000 miles +). They come with an 8-year 100,000 mile main battery warranty anyway. Production ceased in 2022. The next ‘i3’ will be a 3-series ‘Neue Klasse’ due sometime late next year.
Never anthropomorphise computers. They hate that.