EV consumption, running costs (Volvo EX30)

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

OomD

Grey Hound
WD Supporter
Joined
Apr 11, 2013
Messages
8,365
Reaction score
6,374
Location
Centurion
Bike
KTM 690 Adventure
As per @2StrokeDan's suggestion I'll use this thread to document the running cost of my Volvo EX30. I'll update here weekly.

Electricity cost R3.20/kWh, I charge up to 70% every time.

DateOdometer (km)Distance (km)Eskom kWhEskom CostSolar kWhSolar Cost*Charged kWh/100kmShown kWh/100kmCost/km
3 Sept246610124.3R77.76024.1R0.77
8 Sept261414837.6R120.32025.4R0.81
13 Sept27069124.23R77.54026.6R0.85
16 Sept27656017.05R54.56028.4R0.90
21 Sept290614136.02R115.26025.5R0.81
28 Sept302912329.23R93.54023.8R0.76
01 Oct30875812.18R38.98021R0.67
06 Oct320812125.85R87.727.27R23.2627.4R0.72
11 Oct338317539.32125.82022.5R0.72
19 Oct359521250.94163.01024R0.77
27 Oct379219733.5R115.5711R37.9522.619.1R0.58
*Solar Cost excludes cost of Solar infrastructure and indicates what would have been spent for the Solar kWh at current Eskom rates.

Notes
The solar charge column indicates that I charged the car from solar as soon as my house batteries were full, but to prevent depleting the house batteries I revert to Eskom once the solar panels no longer sustain the load. This way I keep the house batteries exclusively for house use.

As can be seen my car uses quite a bit more power than that of @Vintage_Mania and @dirtWarp. I must add I am measuring the energy with a separate energy meter, i.e. I am measuring the total energy used by the car to recharge - not just the energy that is put into the battery itself. I expect the efficiency to be >80% but this figure I'll be able to calculate once I start monitoring the car's own consumption figure (which I'll do henceforth). This means that up to roughly 20% of the charging costs are lost to heat, etc.

An interesting tidbit, ICE cars are roughly 35% efficient (this varies greatly but is basically never above 40%), which means that only about a third of the money spent on petrol actually propels the car. The rest is lost to heat, etc.
 
Last edited:
Top