anonymouse
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 12, 2023
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 204
- Reaction score
- 33
- Location
- Oxfordshire UK
- Vehicles
- Taycan Turbo Sport Turismo J1.2

In some ways Taycan is a bit like the early days of Tesla in the UK: on a good day, charging is fantastic, fast, easy. On a bad day, you get to a ionity charger and it is full of clueless and stubborn newbies charging to 100%, with a queue waiting; you go to a Porsche dealer, and theirs is broken or closed; you get to an InstaVolt and the parking space is 0.1 mm wider than your tires; you end up at Shell, paying a fortune…..
Trips across Europe are an absolute breeze. The IONITY network is easily as good as Tesla’s. And Tesla, of course, are opening their own network quite quickly (outside UK).
But in the UK the infrastructure rollout is just very, very slow; and the early implementers made bad choices (only 1-2 stalls, poir central monitoring and/or engineer cover, bad locations etc).
Planning with ABRP is essential for a long journey; you need a back up plan, which could be a slow option (I plan to use only 100kW+ chargers and there are usually plenty of slower ones as a fallback). And frankly, you need to be prepared to pay the extortionate prices at Shell, and others, which will be part of your backup plan..
Personally, all this is outweighed by the fantastic driving of a Taycan. It’s just so much more fun than a Tesla. I’m prepared to accept the need for a bit of extra planning, and the occasional delay. I am optimistic that the network will get better; the question is whether it will improve faster than the U.K.’s growth in EVs.
Trips across Europe are an absolute breeze. The IONITY network is easily as good as Tesla’s. And Tesla, of course, are opening their own network quite quickly (outside UK).
But in the UK the infrastructure rollout is just very, very slow; and the early implementers made bad choices (only 1-2 stalls, poir central monitoring and/or engineer cover, bad locations etc).
Planning with ABRP is essential for a long journey; you need a back up plan, which could be a slow option (I plan to use only 100kW+ chargers and there are usually plenty of slower ones as a fallback). And frankly, you need to be prepared to pay the extortionate prices at Shell, and others, which will be part of your backup plan..
Personally, all this is outweighed by the fantastic driving of a Taycan. It’s just so much more fun than a Tesla. I’m prepared to accept the need for a bit of extra planning, and the occasional delay. I am optimistic that the network will get better; the question is whether it will improve faster than the U.K.’s growth in EVs.