cjochumson
New member
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2013
- Messages
- 2
I looked at my electric bill last night and found out that I pay 33 cents on the highest tier for my power. And since all the charging is now at this highest tier charging my battery is at the 33 cent per KW rate. I'm currently using the 110 volt charger. So to charge a 6.7 KW battery it's costing me $2.21 which gets me 15 miles down the road. So 45 miles which is close to what I get when my battery is depleted (I get 52 actually) is going to cost $6.63. Gas here in California costs around $3.90 right now. So basically the electricity is costing me almost twice what the gas would cost.
So my question is. Why should I plug-in?
Now of course I could pay to install a 220 volt charger, have my electric company come out and install a special use electric meter which will allow me to charge at midnight and possibly then I'm told my rate would be somewhere between 12 and 15 cents a KW. This works out to about $3.00 for 45 miles on electric charge. So I would save 90 cents after every 3 full battery charges. Even if I charged and drove every day of the year and saved .33 a day it would take way too long to pay off the cost of installing a charger, etc. (.33 * 365 = $120) Even if I only paid $1000 to set up the 220 volt charger it would take over 8 years to get my money back.
So I'm really wondering why owning a plug-in makes any sense. My friend has a 2013 Honda Accord which gets 28/35. I suppose paying for the cost of the hybrid might make economic sense and payback within x number of years assuming you drive a lot! But what's the argument for the plugin since gas isn't $6.00 a gallon.
So my question is. Why should I plug-in?
Now of course I could pay to install a 220 volt charger, have my electric company come out and install a special use electric meter which will allow me to charge at midnight and possibly then I'm told my rate would be somewhere between 12 and 15 cents a KW. This works out to about $3.00 for 45 miles on electric charge. So I would save 90 cents after every 3 full battery charges. Even if I charged and drove every day of the year and saved .33 a day it would take way too long to pay off the cost of installing a charger, etc. (.33 * 365 = $120) Even if I only paid $1000 to set up the 220 volt charger it would take over 8 years to get my money back.
So I'm really wondering why owning a plug-in makes any sense. My friend has a 2013 Honda Accord which gets 28/35. I suppose paying for the cost of the hybrid might make economic sense and payback within x number of years assuming you drive a lot! But what's the argument for the plugin since gas isn't $6.00 a gallon.