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Hi!
Posted: Tue Jun 06, 2023 9:21 am
by ExiledTyke
Morning all. Only just found my way here from a recommendation although I know a few will recognise me from other boards.
As my name suggests I'm in Yorkshire with 3.6kW of panels a 6.3 kWh battery, a PHEV on the way (not practical for me to go full BEV yet) (but the Zappi is already installed and working) and a small investment in the latest two Ripple projects.
Looking forward to some interesting discussions and learning at lot!
Re: Hi!
Posted: Tue Jun 06, 2023 9:44 am
by Joeboy
Welcome to the space ET, We are keeping a running tally of members RE gen and Ripple too. You may wish to PM Nowty some details as he is keeper of the list.
https://camelot-forum.co.uk/phpBB3/view ... &start=170
Re: Hi!
Posted: Tue Jun 06, 2023 10:24 am
by Fintray
Welcome to the forum.
Re: Hi!
Posted: Tue Jun 06, 2023 10:45 am
by Mr Gus
I always think of Tyke as being a term still kicking in Geordie-land. (the origin is old norse, depending on application refers to a bitch (as in female dog) cur, lazy man,.. so watch out if tw@ts like Boris Johnson use it, it will likely not be so affectionately meant
Etymologically speaking it has a wide & varied history, but works for me as an affectionate put down.
Which reminds me, I had completely forgotten about "inky fool" website, time to read the etymologicon again.
Welcome E.T,
Re: Hi!
Posted: Tue Jun 06, 2023 10:48 am
by dan_b
Welcome to the Round Table!
Re: Hi!
Posted: Tue Jun 06, 2023 1:18 pm
by ExiledTyke
Mr Gus wrote: ↑Tue Jun 06, 2023 10:45 am
I always think of Tyke as being a term still kicking in Geordie-land. (the origin is old norse, depending on application refers to a bitch (as in female dog) cur, lazy man,.. so watch out if tw@ts like Boris Johnson use it, it will likely not be so affectionately meant
Etymologically speaking it has a wide & varied history, but works for me as an affectionate put down.
Which reminds me, I had completely forgotten about "inky fool" website, time to read the etymologicon again.
Welcome E.T,
Perhaps I put myself down too much. And yes you are correct it's usage increases the further North you get.
"tyke
in British English
or tike (taɪk IPA Pronunciation Guide )
NOUN
1. a dog, esp a mongrel
2. informal
a small or cheeky child: used esp in affectionate reproof
3. British dialect
a rough ill-mannered person
4. Also called: Yorkshire tyke British slang, often offensive
a person from Yorkshire
5. Australian offensive, slang
a Roman Catholic
Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers"
E.T. also works nicely - thank you.
Re: Hi!
Posted: Fri Aug 11, 2023 4:35 pm
by Mart
Hiya ET. Sorry for the late hello, completly missed this thread somehow.
Glad to see you on Camelot too, now.
Re: Hi!
Posted: Tue Aug 15, 2023 10:09 pm
by Adokforme
Mart wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 4:35 pm
Hiya ET. Sorry for the late hello, completly missed this thread somehow.
Glad to see you on Camelot too, now.
S'funny, I missed you too ET, so welcome indeed.
I had been rather occupied on matters elsewhere lately, but at least the PC has now been given a clean bill of health, not to mention an upgrade, so will
hopefully keep me in touch with everyone for a while longer as yet!
Re: Hi!
Posted: Wed Aug 16, 2023 8:16 am
by Stinsy
ExiledTyke wrote: ↑Tue Jun 06, 2023 9:21 am
Morning all. Only just found my way here from a recommendation although I know a few will recognise me from other boards.
As my name suggests I'm in Yorkshire with 3.6kW of panels a 6.3 kWh battery, a PHEV on the way (not practical for me to go full BEV yet) (but the Zappi is already installed and working) and a small investment in the latest two Ripple projects.
Looking forward to some interesting discussions and learning at lot!
Hi, I’m interested in your thinking with the PHEV.
I’ve had a few PHEVs and for a while thought they were the perfect solution to those who couldn’t afford a big-battery BEV. All your local errands are done on electric and the car can still effortlessly do long journeys (unlike LEAF/Zoe/eGolf type 100-mile BEVs which make long journeys a feat of endurance). The cheapest, used, big-battery BEV was £35k not very long ago while you could buy a PHEV for £10-15k.
However things have changed! A used 64kWh Kona can be had for less than £15k and there are a load of used iD3s and Teslas in the 15-20K price range. These are completely capable BEVs that can do long journeys without missing a beat. I took my iD4 on our family holiday to Cornwall the other week and it was embarrassingly simple. 1x 10-min charge in each direction and charged once while we were down there. Absolutely zero drama. Frankly no need for the car to have that much range, I’d have been perfectly happy with 2x 15-20 min charges.
While I’m not selling our Golf GTE anytime soon, I’m struggling to understand why people still buy PHEVs now BEVs are so capable and affordable.