Everything posted by matchar
-
No charging option in condo - Need advice
What about when she needs to balance the battery? I believe this only works on slow chargers and you have to spend a long time charging to 100% and then allow extra time for the balancing.
-
PEA advises on cost-effective air conditioners amid Thai heat
I'm by no means an expert but I think while this is true, the startup spike is very brief so it's not as bad as it sounds and it won't contribute a significant amount of the overall energy usage. The interesting question is when is it worth upgrading a perfectly working older fixed speed air conditioner to a newer inverter model? I think in most cases it's worth keeping the old one until it dies.
-
Diesel price to rise by one baht per litre this Saturday
Unfortunately the government has done their best to discourage the use of NGV by incessantly raising the price...encouraging many to switch back to subsidised dirty diesel or LPG.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
Sounds like your typical Thai employee who is absolutely clueless about the product they are trying to sell. I expect it's supposed to be 800,000 THB.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
MG 4 updates ...now available in orange too. Official price (Thai assembly) Comes with campaign promotions as follows: Guaranteed vehicle quality for 4 years or 120,000 km. Battery warranty for 8 years or 180,000 km. Free first class insurance for 1 year Free 1 set of MG HOME CHARGER Free installation fee for MG HOME CHARGER Free 1 set of V2L cable
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
I think EVs catching fire under normal usage is indeed very rare but when they are involved in a severe collision then the risk is much higher especially with NMC batteries. LFP batteries are generally safer. I believe the Venice bus crash below used LFP batteries but the bus may have landed on high voltage train tracks which caused the batteries to explode. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-67001518
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
Looks like the prices of all cars in Thailand are dropping like a stone... https://autolifethailand.tv/discount-official-suzuki-ciaz-thailand/ 150k discount on a brand new Suzuki Ciaz. How long before you break even with the lower fuel costs on the MG 4 for the extra 300k?
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
Are you trying to tell me a wallbox is worth 70k baht? Let's say a rather generous 20k then it's still a 50k saving.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
https://www.car250.com/mg4-th-2024-1.html Another price cut by MG as I expected. All of the early adopters rushing to buy at the end of last year are looking rather foolish now...
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
They know they will have massive depreciation when a newer model comes out in a year or so that is cheaper, has a bigger battery and charges twice as fast.
-
Thai electric buses would have been introduced without carbon offsets
How stupid can Western governments get? Forcing Western companies to buy imaginary carbon credits from foreign companies... Energy Absolute must be laughing all the way to the bank.
-
No more free rides on BTS Green Line extensions
Let's hope they use some of that money to stop the monorail wheels and conductor rails falling off again!
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
You said most of the chargers in Thailand are DC chargers but from the website you quoted there are: 2,827 Type 2 AC chargers 1,471 CCS DC chargers Obviously there is only one small child here who doesn't know the definition of the word "most".
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
You early adopters are in the golden age of EV charging. It's only a matter of time until there are long queues for fast highway chargers like the UK is experiencing now (with the public charging cost higher than petrol).
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
So how many fast DC chargers are available in Thailand? I think Thailand has the exact same problem as most of the public chargers I see in shopping malls etc are the slow AC type. Even if there are plenty of fast DC chargers available now, at the current rate of EV sales I highly doubt the charging infrastructure will be able to keep up and it will be absolute carnage for longer weekend trips.
-
Do I need a proof of residence certificate.
Has anyone tried using a car registration (blue) book as proof of address?
-
Scb Ez Account Paying Interest Every Month?
Surely it should be 15%? SCB told me the tax deduction was 100% last month because they were collecting taxes on the 20K of interest I already received in June and October. Hopefully at the end of this month the tax deduction will be a lot lower.
-
Thai man punches neighbour to death after conflict over dog waste
He'll be out in a couple of years...TIT.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
I follow this thread because I'm interested in EVs and I occasionally "chime in" to set the record straight when people like you try to compare apples with oranges and refuse to even consider the disadvantages of an EV. You seem unwilling to enter into a balanced discussion weighing the pros and cons and you always try to cherry pick your figures like solar charging, top spec ICE price compared to lowest spec EV price etc. to support your arguments.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
Top Speed: Maximum speed 121 km/h (Sport mode) Can run up to 320 km. per charge (WLTP standard) Direct current DC Fast Charging supports up to 45 kW from 30-80%, takes approximately 30 minutes. I'm all for EVs but those figures are too pitiful for a primary car. When they start selling MG 4 specs for the Neta V price then I'll bite if I can solve the charging problem from living in a Bangkok condo. It seems like convenient public chargers in malls overcharge and I don't fancy sitting at a gas station for 30 minutes once a week.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
฿549k is for the CVT transmission and I think most buyers will not be going for the top end or they would be looking at other cars. Buying petrol is still a lot more convenient than charging for most people.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
I'll admit the Neta V does look quite nice, if a bit narrow, but it's definitely a city car. It would be quite a pain on longer trips with the small battery and slow charging speed so unless I had 2 cars I'd prefer the ATIV regardless of build quality.
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
I see your point but you are comparing a 6 year old Mazda with a brand new BYD. And the 300k price difference is quite significant. I estimate you would need to drive around 200-300k km before you start saving money on fuel as the Yaris ATIV has really good fuel economy. (Advertised 23.3km/L, tested around 19 km/L on average.)
-
Electric Vehicles in Thailand
It's still hard to beat the value for money of a Toyota Yaris ATIV for 549,000 which is the top selling car in Thailand for a reason. The only Chinese EV that can compete on price is the Neta V but that doesn't seem like a proper car to me and it might start falling apart in 5 to 10 years.