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What is it like to live with an electric car?

BBC Published Jun 3, 2010 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
The Mini-E trial phase David Beesley is participating in ends on 11 June.
11 · trial end date
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Citation-ready fact
David Beesley took delivery of his Mini-E in December 2009 as part of BMW Group's electric motoring trial.
more than 300 GBP · monthly trial fee
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Citation-ready fact
BMW states it takes about three hours to charge the Mini-E battery with a 30-amp fast-charger.
about 3 hours · charging time with 30-amp fast-chargerabout 8 hours · charging time with 13-amp socket
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Citation-ready fact
During sub-zero temperatures, the Mini-E's battery range dropped to 40 miles, compared with nearly 100 miles in summer.
40 miles · battery range in sub-zero temperaturesmore than 100 miles · battery range in summer
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Citation-ready fact
David Beesley has been driving a Mini-E electric car for six months as part of a BMW Group trial.
6 months · driving period
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Citation-ready fact
David Beesley states that if you drive more than 90 miles per day, the Mini-E is probably not suitable.
more than 90 miles · daily distance threshold for suitability
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Citation-ready fact
David Beesley says his average journey is five to 10 miles.
at least 5 miles · minimum average journey lengthat most 10 miles · maximum average journey length
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David Beesley says plugging in the car takes about two or three seconds.
about 2 seconds · time to plug in carabout 3 seconds · time to plug in car
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Citation-ready fact
David Beesley estimates a full charge costs about £3, though he never achieves a full charge because the battery is never empty.
about 3 GBP · cost per full charge
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Ever more mainstream carmakers are planning to make electric cars for sale to ordinary drivers, though none of them has done so yet. But there are trial cars out there, and Oxford-based businessman David Beesley has been driving one for six months.

And Mr Beesley is not a happy man. Another week or so and that is it. He has to hand the car back.

"I am livid," the 60-something head of business supplies company B-line says.

For Mr Beesley, the journey began about a year ago, when he first learnt that Mini was building an electric car in its Cowley factory on the edge of Oxford.

At the time, he was in a very different mood.

"I heard about it through my son whose best friend works in the plant," he says, and being the sort of guy who enjoys messing abount in battery-powered boats or racing electric buggies around the garden, Mr Beesley knew he had to get involved.

"If you want something, you'll go for it, don't you?" he grins.

Mr Beesley took delivery of his Mini-E in December 2009 as one of the so-called "pioneers" who pay just over £300 per month to take part in BMW Group's electric motoring trial.

And it has not been an entirely smooth experience.

During sub-zero temperatures, the battery capacity dropped to a range of just 40 miles, compared with almost 100 miles during summer, he recalls.

And, well, that's it. Beyond such teething problems, which BMW insists will be overcome before it starts selling electric cars to consumers, he has not had any problems whatsoever.

In short, Mr Beesley says, the experience has given him an insatiable thirst for more. These days, he rarely drives anything other than the Mini E.

"It is a totally different experience to anything I've driven before and probably anything I'll be driving in the future," says Mr Beesley, a petrolhead whose other cars include three large Lexus saloons, a Chrysler Voyager, a Smart car and an enormous Winnebago mobile home.

"Yes, I like big cars," he says. "But I have begun to question whether big cars is the way forward."

So Mr Beesley is far from livid about the electric Mini's shortcomings.

Rather, he is furious because he will have to hand it back when the first part of the Mini-E trial comes to an end next week, on 11 June.

As yet, the BMW Group has not got a production model for sale, so Mr Beesley has been driving a prototype.

"I cannot fault the thing, even in its present form," he says.

"People say it does only this many miles or that many miles or that it takes so-and-so long to charge it.

"Meanwhile, I go past the petrol stations and laugh at the silly sods wasting time and money filling up fuel."

The Mini-E is clearly very cheap to use, though Mr Beesley has no idea exactly how much it costs him.

"I'm told it's about £3 for a full charge, but it never is a full charge because the battery is never actually empty," he says.

The realities of living with an electric car are very different from what most people would expect, Mr Beesley explains.

"I never used to consider how far my journey would be," he says. "I now reckon my average journey is five to 10 miles. I guess people think they drive more miles than they actually do.

"Clearly, if you do 90 miles per day, then this is probably not the car for you, but how often do you drive more than 90 miles in one stretch? And how often do you have sub-zero temperatures in Britain?"

Mr Beesley is even taking issue with the supposed need to roll out public charging points to molify people's range anxiety.

On most journeys, there is no need to top up the batteries to get home, Mr Beesley insists.

"And if I go to see a client in High Wycombe or my auntie in Southampton, it is not a problem if I want to plug into their socket while I'm there. It's just a bit of fun."

BMW says it takes about three hours to charge the battery with a 30-amp fast-charger, which uses the same type of electric cable that electric cookers use, or eight hours when using an ordinary 13-amp socket.

But again, Mr Beesley insists that once you get used to electric motoring, even this seems irrelevant.

"I come home, I get out of the car and I plug it straight in. It takes about two or three seconds and it charges on low tariffs overnight," he says.

"All this stuff about range and charge time amounts to scepticism and objection.

"Why do you want to keep objecting about something that is fantastic?"

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