Wheels Australia – August 2019

(Axel Boer) #1
ReaderToddHoldsworthdroppedusa line:“We
hada goodrun.TheELFalconhasn’tbroken
downin the 15 yearsI’vehadit,andI’vegivenit an
absolutehiding.I’mgladthekeyringwentfirst.”
Atleasthe’snotsuingusfora lostkey.

@wheelsaustralia 25


Lordof the


(broken) ring


TILL
DEATH
DOWE
PART

SHIFTING CO 2


PROBLEMS
I’VE BEEN ENJOYING the latest edition of
Wheels and reading with interest your articles
on electric cars. One aspect of EVs which
doesn’t seem to get talked about is the CO 2
emissions generated during mains charging.
I did some maths around the Nissan Leaf
and according to Nissan, the 40kWh battery
gives a combined cycle range of 270km.
This equates to 6.75km of range per kWh of
battery charge. In Victoria, generating 1kWh of
electricity emits 1080g of CO 2 , equal to 160g
CO 2 /km. This compares with an equivalent
small car (Hyundai i30) which ranges from
120 to 150g per km.
By these calculations, charging an EV
from the grid in Victoria emits more CO 2
than driving an ICE car. I haven’t done the
maths for other states, but broadly speaking,
it seems driving an EV will not lower CO 2
emissions – unless they are charged using
renewables. No-one seems to look at this as
an issue, so I’d be interested in your view.


Jon Starks, email
Nice work on the Casio, Jon. Surely
the answer lies in the accelerated
adoption of renewables, which
in turn are being driven by their
increasing cost-competitiveness
versus new coal and gas – Ed

THINK OF THE


CHILDREN!
IN REGARDS TO the letter by Paul Ainsworth
(‘Keeping His Options Open’, Wheels, May
2019). Paul, no doubt you’re an excellent
steerer and your new Macan S will provide
superb enjoyment.
However, in a world where AEB, adaptive
cruise and other driver aids are becoming
standard for a generation of drivers – who are
generally less ‘mechanical’ and perhaps less
attentive drivers than we ‘boomers’ – I hope
you don’t lend the car to a youngster who gets
momentarily distracted and has a rear-ender
because dad didn’t spec AEB.
In my view, speccing a car without AEB is
short-sighted. No-one likes these interfering
driver aids – until the day they save a life!


Larry O’Toole, Murarrie, Qld
Hmm, not sure we want to buy into
this one, Larry. We may let you two
take it out to the carpark – Ed

ONE STAR DOES


NOT ALIGN
I MAY NOT be the head of a multi-billion
dollar automotive company, but I do feel
that Jeep’s response to the JL Wrangler being
slapped with a one-star ANCAP safety rating
was pretty poor.
No doubt the Wrangler can out drive
almost anything on a Saharan plain or up a
rocky incline in the Americas, but only a tiny
proportion will ever see anything so harsh.
For Jeep to say, “Testing protocols that
apply exclusively to urban scenarios may not
align with such a vehicle”, is like saying that a
toaster broke because you put bread in it.
A. Greenwood, Forestville, NSW
We’re inclined to agree. Automotive
safety is advancing rapidly and
ANCAP’s rating system is an
important tool in helping consumers
make informed buying choices – Ed

DRIVERS; THEY’RE


SO ‘LAST YEAR’
AS A FELLOW subscriber to the view that
there are a great many inconvenient truths
about electric cars, I read with interest Jim
Thorn’s views (Inbox, June).
Jim makes some great points, but surely
the most significant relates to the future of
motoring, especially in urban areas and the
way we will utilise cars and transport.

UBER and Lyft have made it clear with their
huge investment in driverless technology that
this is the future of taxis. Once they remove
the most expensive part of running a fleet of
cabs (the driver), surely the cost of personal
transport within cities will plummet, making
car ownership redundant.
Fleets of driverless taxis will roam the
streets, needing only to stop for recharging
and scheduled maintenance, making moot
the point about fast-charge capabilities and
lack of off-street parking for recharging.
People who live in apartments will never
have to own an electric vehicle. Reducing
personal car ownership will also reduce the
amount of waste at the end of a vehicle’s life.
Who can predict what the future is for
those in smaller towns and rural areas?
There may still be a need for individual car
ownership in the medium- to long-term,
but with further improvements to battery
technology negating range anxiety, and
Tesla’s desire to make its cars available on
ride-share platforms, the cost of deploying a
fleet of driverless taxis nationwide could be
shared amongst consumers.
Bill Dunk, Uki, NSW
You raise some interesting points, Bill,
but two issues: many experts in the
autonomy field, including Nissan’s
Maarten Sierhuis, suggest that
driverless cars are much further away
than some predict. You also write
about people not “needing” to own
a car, but as a society of conspicuous
consumers, the absence of need has
rarely stopped us ‘wanting’ – Ed

A BIG MAC WITH


ZERO CHANGE?
ANDY ENRIGHT GIVES us some great
insights into living with a supercar, via his
McLaren 570GT reports in Garage, but I look
forward to some intel on its service costs.
A former McLaren owner told me that the
first major service costs around $15,000,
and that a replacement battery and resetting
the electrics run to $5000? I wonder how
these figures compare with Andy’s previous
Porsche 911 GTS long-termer?
Nigel Watson, email
Perhaps an extra zero made it onto
that service figure, Nigel. McLaren’s
Australian representative tells us a first
annual service is around $1500 – Ed

JEEP’S RESPONSE TO


WRANGLER’S SAFETY


RATING WAS POOR


JUST OUT OF WARANTY, TOO


Free download pdf