Everything posted by classic
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UK Included tools and emergency equipment
Towing eye Tyre inflator (12v compressor thing) Bottle of tyre sealant Locking wheel nut adapter little plastic pliers and metal tool for pulling the wheel nut plastic caps off All contained in a black zip up bag.
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What are these symbols?
I believe the symbol to the left of the time is “wireless phone charging”. Greyed out means not active, mine shows that all the time and doesn’t have wireless charging. My guess for the number 1 at the right of the time is that it is using “device 1” for for Bluetooth functions, but it is just a guess !
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Fuse box access
Have a look at it, it’s not as complicated as the manual makes out. The fuse box cover can be removed easily without doing anything to the glovebox.
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Reverse parking
Hi, you need to turn off the Auto-hold and it will drive like a “normal” automatic car and can be manoeuvred slowly using the brake pedal. I have set the auto-hold as a favourite button on the screen to be able to do this easily. Remember to turn the auto-hold back on once you have parked. Have a look at the infotainment display video of this : https://www.skoda-auto.com/services/enyaq-videos
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1 in 5 EV buyers change back to ICE because of hassle.
So 80% of Californian ev owners didn’t go back to ICE, and people who bought a Fiat were more likely to go back to ICE. I don’t think that particular survey will mean very much. Buying a Fiat could put a person off travel full stop. The temperatures in the UK are better for ev use as we don’t get very extreme cold or hot weather. It’s typical fake news, why not have the title “4 in 5 EV buyers never change back to ICE, due to the benefits” ? Anyway, to answer your question, If 20% of ev buyers in California give up on electric cars I don’t think it will be higher in the uk.
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Charging upgrade
Interesting, as I got a car from stock that had 50kW charging. I probably would have specified 100kW charging as an option if I’d ordered one to be built, but 6,000 miles of use later and I haven’t had to rapid charge it at all yet. I’m not sure that, for me, the cost would be worth it.
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Charging upgrade
If it is just updating the software then I think it’s expensive. I assumed there must be some hardware to it to justify the price as an option when new.
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Home charger reviews/resources
Should be fine then. My WiFi network actually only just shows one bar of signal strength on my phone where the Podpoint is, but it works ok. Where I actually wanted to put it was a bit hit and miss with the signal, so the installer recommended moving it. If the WiFi signal is lost or drops out, the pod point reverts to being on and available to charge so your car still charges just straight away rather than at the scheduled time.
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Home charger reviews/resources
You are welcome. I have the pod point schedule set to charge between 0030 and 1200, every day. I just plug the car in at night and the next day it’s charged. You can set the level of charge in the car or by using the Skoda app at any point before or after it has started charging. I have the pod point set to keep charging up to 1200 so if I need to put more charge in after I get up, or want to use the Aircon to pre cool or heat the car, it keeps the battery topped up to the percentage you set. Whichever one you get, make sure you’ve got a good WiFi signal where it’s going to be sited.
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Home charger reviews/resources
I wouldn’t claim to know much, if anything, about them. The only thing I’ve really learned is they aren’t actually chargers but E.V.S.E (electric vehicle supply equipment) and the charger is actually onboard the car. I went with pod point, mainly as that was the one pushed by Skoda. So far, so good. Installation went well and the charge scheduling with the pod point app works well ( the car scheduling is rubbish). From what I’ve read, I think the Zappi is a better set up for using with solar, but I’ve also read that even with solar, it makes more sense to charge an ev overnight on economy 7, and use solar to run washing machines or charge a home battery during the day etc. Theres a minefield of information out there, the more I read the less I seem to know !
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Close to ordering
You can customise the internal led lighting to your own choice or use some preset ones. I don’t know if this is on all models, but it is on the light and view pack.
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Close to ordering
I have the Light and View pack on my UK car. I didn’t want it, and wouldn’t have specified it, but it was on a car that was already built and I could get within a couple of weeks. I have to say they are the best headlights on any vehicle I’ve ever driven. The rear lights also light up more than the standard rear lights. The auto main beam system works well, you need to read the manual about the limitations of its use. The only thing that it struggles with is when it picks out the rear of a parked car with no lights on, facing the same way as your car, but on the opposite side of a very dark road (eg no streetlights). It will light up the reflectors of that parked car so brightly that it then thinks they are red lights and blacks out the beam around that car, which stops the reflection and so the Enyaq restores that part of the full beam and lights the reflectors up again. You get a situation where it flashes that part of the high beam on and off until you pass that parked car. For all I know it could be supposed to do this ? I haven’t driven an Enyaq with the standard led headlights, they could be just as good as the matrix ones just without the auto-dimming system.
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Enyaq Heat Pump Option
This is its first winter
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Enyaq Heat Pump Option
I’m not convinced that in the UK there’s any need for a heat pump. To quote the manufacturer “Efficiency: The power requirement for heating the interior at exterior temperatures of less than 0°C is up to 40% less than in a vehicle without an energy-efficient heat pump. Range: The reduced power requirement also reduces power consumption and thus increases battery capacity, which has a positive effect on the vehicle range. The exact nature of the effect on the vehicle range is also determined by your individual driving behaviour. As a general rule: if the average speed is lower, the influence of the heating system will be higher and thus the positive influence of the energy-efficient heat pump on the total vehicle range will also be higher.” I read that as it will use up to 40% less power than a vehicle without a heat pump. That’s up to 40% less of whatever power use is for heating and cooling, not an up to 40% reduction in total battery power used. And if you go slower the range will be higher……😮, ok !
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Spare wheel?
Mine is a UK car, it has Bridgestone tyres with B-Seal and came with a repair kit (pump and sealant). There is also a space saver spare tyre size and pressure displayed on the tyre pressures sticker, so presumably a spare must be available in some markets ?
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Enyaq 60 v Ioniq 5 Project 45, head to head road trip test
I’ve got the same anxiety, but haven’t yet done Cornwall or Isle of Skye in it 😬 I went to Switzerland, South of France and Italy in a 1.4 Octavia without a second thought but the same thing in an Enyaq, whilst clearly possible, will take a lot more planning. Having said that, there’s 50kW rapid charging in Fort William, and also on the Isle of Skye…
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Enyaq 60 v Ioniq 5 Project 45, head to head road trip test
That’s the key to this whole ev thing. I do 300 to 500 miles a week depending what I’m doing. I would fill my Octavia up to the brim and know I could drive around all week and not need to refuel again. Really I only filled up so I didn’t have to stop off and refuel anywhere. This mindset held me back from getting an ev but the reality is, that if you have the ability to charge at home, it’s just not an issue. I charged my Enyaq 60 to 80% last night, I’ve done 130 miles today and got home with 20% left (which it says is 54 more miles). I’ve plugged it in and it will charge overnight back to 80% ready for another approx 150 miles tomorrow. Most days I do 60 to 70 miles so the range is a total non issue. If I did have a particularly long trip tomorrow I’d charge it to 100%.
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What type of tyres are fitted as standard on Enyaq
Mine has Bridgestone Turanza Eco tyres, apparently developed for EVs. https://www.electrichybridvehicletechnology.com/news/manufacturing/bridgestone-creates-special-ev-eco-tires-for-solar-powered-electric-car-with-725km-range.html 20” wheels
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Enyaq 60 v Ioniq 5 Project 45, head to head road trip test
Good video👍 How did you get the battery percentage to come up over the map in the bottom corner of the screen ?
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Enyaq suspension
I can smell the same rat as you. However I’ve just looked at the brochure and the basic drive package is £285 which gives you the drive mode selection. That doesn’t seem a lot more for, (presumably) more complicated dampers, extra wiring, different ecu, mode button etc. Maybe it is all already there and you pay extra for a button and enabling the software ? edit - I misread it and it’s £1070 more to get DCC edit 2 - Just looked at my car (no dcc) and there are no adjusting valves on the front struts or any wiring going to them.
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Enyaq suspension
Glad you got it sorted. Interesting if the cars with standard suspension actually have the adjustable suspension hardware, that is obviously all wired up if the dealer altered it, but no mode setting available to the driver. If that is the case the customer buying a lower spec car has in fact bought the hardware but can’t use it.
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Wheels & Tyres: Skoda Octavia mk3 5E alloy wheels and winter tyres 205/55R16 91H 6.5J x 16 et46 – PCD: 5x112
Sold.
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Real World Range
Not yet, but if my 60 Enyaq goes 200 miles in summer with Aircon working, motorway speeds etc then even a 50% reduction for cold weather will still be 100 miles. From what I have read EVs in real cold countries (not the UK) lose 30 to 40% range in winter. I’m not even remotely concerned and I’m sure Jaytip will have no problems with their intended taxi use..
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Real World Range
We’ll see. I predict no problem even in cold weather. 30 minutes on a 50kW rapid will put around 80 miles into it.
- Real World Range