Hi David,

Yes, it is a nice looking car... modern but not so whacky that its design would 
put people off.  I have had a close look at one in a dealer and even got them 
to work out an HP deal but the battery lease thing is a real deal breaker for 
me.  I am not (and never have been) one to buy a new car, keep it for a few 
years and then trade it in for a new one.  I guess this paradigm must suit lots 
of other people though as it appears it is this has made the world's motor 
industry the colossus that it is.

I think they did it this way to be able to get some insurance on their 
batteries in case they don't last as long as their engineers are saying they 
will.  Understandable, I suppose.

The Zoe has a fabulously practical boot area (particularly so with the back 
seats down) - very capacious and lots of electric do-dads to keep the geek in 
us all happy.  It felt a bit more solid than my Ion (i-Miev) does but not so 
compared with the Leaf (typically for a Renault Vs a modern Nissan).

One thing the article at the start of this thread brought to my attention that 
I had not realised before is that you can't charge the Zoe from a standard 
household socket - even our 230/240V ones.  This is a pretty serious flaw, IMO. 
 Whilst there are lots of public chargers out there (in the cities, at least) 
the prospect that if you want to drive to a friend/relative for a visit, 
particularly overnight, that they'll have to have a proper EVSE installed for 
you to get any charge whilst you are there is a very short-sighted view point.

And it looks like car buyers agree as their sales have not been spectacular.  
Renault have already brought in a new lower battery rental rate for very low 
mileage users - £50/month for annual mileage of about 4k, IIRC (nothing about 
this on their official site yet).  The question of what you do if you wan to 
sell privately is a difficult one.  Looking at thei s thread... 
http://myrenaultzoe.com/index.php/topic/battery-lease-end-of-lease-term/ ... it 
seems to me that it would be nigh-on impossible to sell a used ZE vehicle 
privately so you are a bit stuck with Renault once you take the plunge... for 
life!

Renault either need to offer a battery lease-free option or cap the battery 
lease to 4 years or so if they are to make a success of it.  They'll have to do 
*something* though because their future is riding on the ZE range.  With the 
Fluence already gone, they really need to pull something game-changing out of 
the bag... and soon.

MW


On 8 Feb 2014, at 06:19, EVDL Administrator wrote:

> The Zoe looks like a really nice EV.  Pity they've burdened her with a 
> "battering battery." Forget to pay your battery lease bill and Renault will 
> remotely make it impossible to charge the battery.  
> 
> I've long been a proponent of battery leasing for EVs.  I've seen enough "EV 
> for sale, needs batteries" ads to realize that anything that insulates an EV 
> owner from battery replacement sticker shock is probably a good thing.  
> 
> However, I don't think this is the right way to go about it.
> 
> I suppose I'm just a crank : I no longer use certain famous computer 
> operating systems because they make me agree to let the OS's authors change 
> whatever they want, whenever they want, wherever I am.  I prefer an OS I'm 
> in full control of.   Same with my EV.
> 
> If the Renault battery leasing scheme works for you, great.  But if I were 
> living in Europe, this "we don't trust you, so we're building coercion into 
> the car" approach would be an excellent reason for me to buy a Mitsu or 
> Nissan EV instead.
> 
> David Roden - Akron, Ohio, USA
> EVDL Administrator

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