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Quote from: KS Cleaning on January 14, 2026, 08:42:30 pmQuote from: dazmond on January 14, 2026, 06:10:13 pmQuote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 12:13:01 pmQuote from: Splash and dash on January 14, 2026, 08:59:27 amQuote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 06:28:53 amQuote from: Splash and dash on January 13, 2026, 08:18:27 pmQuote from: zesty on January 13, 2026, 04:44:32 pmQuote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.Be interesting to see how towing affects range ?I reckon it’ll hammer it, but I only use the cherry pickers locallyI had been thinking about this for people that tow caravans all over the place many ev cars can’t tow so will be interesting to see how this pans out .Yeah, I mean in the ideal world, we’d have the freedom to choose ev, petrol or diesel. All are needed. The obsession with net zero is ludicrous.No way I’d be getting an electric van if I was in a trade that did loads of miles, diesel is king. For me, going an average of 20-25 miles a day, the EV van is a no brainer. Not having to worry about dpf issues and all the other mechanical issues that go with using a diesel for short journeys is exactly what I want. I’m also quite keen to have a van that defrosts in the morning before I get in the van. As well as preheating the cabin. All little things that just make life easier.There's no issues with using diesel vehicles for short journeys. Ive never had a single issue and my van is 9 years old now.There are issues with using diesel vehicles for short journeys, the DPF cokes up.Maybe a blast up the motorway at high revs from time to time might help.
Quote from: dazmond on January 14, 2026, 06:10:13 pmQuote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 12:13:01 pmQuote from: Splash and dash on January 14, 2026, 08:59:27 amQuote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 06:28:53 amQuote from: Splash and dash on January 13, 2026, 08:18:27 pmQuote from: zesty on January 13, 2026, 04:44:32 pmQuote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.Be interesting to see how towing affects range ?I reckon it’ll hammer it, but I only use the cherry pickers locallyI had been thinking about this for people that tow caravans all over the place many ev cars can’t tow so will be interesting to see how this pans out .Yeah, I mean in the ideal world, we’d have the freedom to choose ev, petrol or diesel. All are needed. The obsession with net zero is ludicrous.No way I’d be getting an electric van if I was in a trade that did loads of miles, diesel is king. For me, going an average of 20-25 miles a day, the EV van is a no brainer. Not having to worry about dpf issues and all the other mechanical issues that go with using a diesel for short journeys is exactly what I want. I’m also quite keen to have a van that defrosts in the morning before I get in the van. As well as preheating the cabin. All little things that just make life easier.There's no issues with using diesel vehicles for short journeys. Ive never had a single issue and my van is 9 years old now.There are issues with using diesel vehicles for short journeys, the DPF cokes up.
Quote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 12:13:01 pmQuote from: Splash and dash on January 14, 2026, 08:59:27 amQuote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 06:28:53 amQuote from: Splash and dash on January 13, 2026, 08:18:27 pmQuote from: zesty on January 13, 2026, 04:44:32 pmQuote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.Be interesting to see how towing affects range ?I reckon it’ll hammer it, but I only use the cherry pickers locallyI had been thinking about this for people that tow caravans all over the place many ev cars can’t tow so will be interesting to see how this pans out .Yeah, I mean in the ideal world, we’d have the freedom to choose ev, petrol or diesel. All are needed. The obsession with net zero is ludicrous.No way I’d be getting an electric van if I was in a trade that did loads of miles, diesel is king. For me, going an average of 20-25 miles a day, the EV van is a no brainer. Not having to worry about dpf issues and all the other mechanical issues that go with using a diesel for short journeys is exactly what I want. I’m also quite keen to have a van that defrosts in the morning before I get in the van. As well as preheating the cabin. All little things that just make life easier.There's no issues with using diesel vehicles for short journeys. Ive never had a single issue and my van is 9 years old now.
Quote from: Splash and dash on January 14, 2026, 08:59:27 amQuote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 06:28:53 amQuote from: Splash and dash on January 13, 2026, 08:18:27 pmQuote from: zesty on January 13, 2026, 04:44:32 pmQuote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.Be interesting to see how towing affects range ?I reckon it’ll hammer it, but I only use the cherry pickers locallyI had been thinking about this for people that tow caravans all over the place many ev cars can’t tow so will be interesting to see how this pans out .Yeah, I mean in the ideal world, we’d have the freedom to choose ev, petrol or diesel. All are needed. The obsession with net zero is ludicrous.No way I’d be getting an electric van if I was in a trade that did loads of miles, diesel is king. For me, going an average of 20-25 miles a day, the EV van is a no brainer. Not having to worry about dpf issues and all the other mechanical issues that go with using a diesel for short journeys is exactly what I want. I’m also quite keen to have a van that defrosts in the morning before I get in the van. As well as preheating the cabin. All little things that just make life easier.
Quote from: zesty on January 14, 2026, 06:28:53 amQuote from: Splash and dash on January 13, 2026, 08:18:27 pmQuote from: zesty on January 13, 2026, 04:44:32 pmQuote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.Be interesting to see how towing affects range ?I reckon it’ll hammer it, but I only use the cherry pickers locallyI had been thinking about this for people that tow caravans all over the place many ev cars can’t tow so will be interesting to see how this pans out .
Quote from: Splash and dash on January 13, 2026, 08:18:27 pmQuote from: zesty on January 13, 2026, 04:44:32 pmQuote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.Be interesting to see how towing affects range ?I reckon it’ll hammer it, but I only use the cherry pickers locally
Quote from: zesty on January 13, 2026, 04:44:32 pmQuote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.Be interesting to see how towing affects range ?
Quote from: Jonny 87 on January 13, 2026, 12:57:22 pmCheck out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.Useless van to me, only the e custom is rated to tow over 2 tonne, and I need that for regular cherry picker towing. Be great for those of you who don’t tow though. Although, doesn’t look as nice as an e custom.
Check out the price of some Renault traffic E-Techs. One year old, hardly any miles, and only £15,000 plus vat. One year old electric van is the way to go if you want a new vehicle with warranty that isn’t going to burst the bank.
So that’s me done a weeks work with my E Custom. The van itself is quite brilliant, a pleasure to drive, very smooth and it glides nicely over the various road surfaces, in fact it’s such a comfortable ride that I now find it a drag to drive our X4M about town as it obviously has much stiffer suspension. I don’t have a home charger installed yet so I’m relying on public chargers at the moment which is a bit of a pain. The van only charges to 90% ( I will need to look into this ) which gives a range of 160 miles, the reality is that of the predicted 160 miles I will actually get around 130 miles in the winter months. Not a problem as I don’t do a lot of miles.The ratchet strapping of the flat tank isn’t ideal but it is the best solution at the moment, I have one strap going over the top to pull it down to the floor and another going around it pulling it towards the bulkhead, it does feel solid but of course it isn’t crash tested, but then the Waterworks professionaly fitted system for EV’s won’t have been crash tested either? I mentioned in another thread that the water sloshing was terrible in the flat tank, I have added 25 metres of 100mm perforated drainage pipe cut into shorter lengths, this has made a big difference. All in all a very positive first week, the only negative so far being that there doesn’t seem to be a viable option of a bolted in tank/frame.
Quote from: KS Cleaning on January 12, 2026, 11:26:22 pmSo that’s me done a weeks work with my E Custom. The van itself is quite brilliant, a pleasure to drive, very smooth and it glides nicely over the various road surfaces, in fact it’s such a comfortable ride that I now find it a drag to drive our X4M about town as it obviously has much stiffer suspension. I don’t have a home charger installed yet so I’m relying on public chargers at the moment which is a bit of a pain. The van only charges to 90% ( I will need to look into this ) which gives a range of 160 miles, the reality is that of the predicted 160 miles I will actually get around 130 miles in the winter months. Not a problem as I don’t do a lot of miles.The ratchet strapping of the flat tank isn’t ideal but it is the best solution at the moment, I have one strap going over the top to pull it down to the floor and another going around it pulling it towards the bulkhead, it does feel solid but of course it isn’t crash tested, but then the Waterworks professionaly fitted system for EV’s won’t have been crash tested either? I mentioned in another thread that the water sloshing was terrible in the flat tank, I have added 25 metres of 100mm perforated drainage pipe cut into shorter lengths, this has made a big difference. All in all a very positive first week, the only negative so far being that there doesn’t seem to be a viable option of a bolted in tank/frame.The waterworks systems are crash tested now .
I wouldn’t worry KS. Even a bolted down tank is gonna smash you to bits in a bad crash. I had a crash in the ice back in 2016. The only crash I’ve ever had since driving at 17. My tank was 3/4 full and an old man in a saloon slid straight into my near side, the speed was about 50mph when you comobine both vehicles colliding. My tank was absolutely fine. Van was repaired and back on the road 2 months later. His car was a write off.I think you need to be involved in a really bad crash/sudden stop to succumb to the tank flying through the bulkhead. My tanks have never been bolted in.
Quote from: zesty on January 18, 2026, 08:07:06 amI wouldn’t worry KS. Even a bolted down tank is gonna smash you to bits in a bad crash. I had a crash in the ice back in 2016. The only crash I’ve ever had since driving at 17. My tank was 3/4 full and an old man in a saloon slid straight into my near side, the speed was about 50mph when you comobine both vehicles colliding. My tank was absolutely fine. Van was repaired and back on the road 2 months later. His car was a write off.I think you need to be involved in a really bad crash/sudden stop to succumb to the tank flying through the bulkhead. My tanks have never been bolted in.I’m not worried Zesty, more intrigued. Waterworks and Ionics ( who champion the use of crash tested systems ) have installed their systems into EV vans, but neither have said they are crash tested, just curious as to how they’ve secured them?
Quote from: robert mitchell on January 16, 2026, 03:41:21 pmQuote from: KS Cleaning on January 12, 2026, 11:26:22 pmSo that’s me done a weeks work with my E Custom. The van itself is quite brilliant, a pleasure to drive, very smooth and it glides nicely over the various road surfaces, in fact it’s such a comfortable ride that I now find it a drag to drive our X4M about town as it obviously has much stiffer suspension. I don’t have a home charger installed yet so I’m relying on public chargers at the moment which is a bit of a pain. The van only charges to 90% ( I will need to look into this ) which gives a range of 160 miles, the reality is that of the predicted 160 miles I will actually get around 130 miles in the winter months. Not a problem as I don’t do a lot of miles.The ratchet strapping of the flat tank isn’t ideal but it is the best solution at the moment, I have one strap going over the top to pull it down to the floor and another going around it pulling it towards the bulkhead, it does feel solid but of course it isn’t crash tested, but then the Waterworks professionaly fitted system for EV’s won’t have been crash tested either? I mentioned in another thread that the water sloshing was terrible in the flat tank, I have added 25 metres of 100mm perforated drainage pipe cut into shorter lengths, this has made a big difference. All in all a very positive first week, the only negative so far being that there doesn’t seem to be a viable option of a bolted in tank/frame.The waterworks systems are crash tested now .Are they crash tested in an EV? How do they secure them?
Quote from: KS Cleaning on January 16, 2026, 05:06:08 pmQuote from: robert mitchell on January 16, 2026, 03:41:21 pmQuote from: KS Cleaning on January 12, 2026, 11:26:22 pmSo that’s me done a weeks work with my E Custom. The van itself is quite brilliant, a pleasure to drive, very smooth and it glides nicely over the various road surfaces, in fact it’s such a comfortable ride that I now find it a drag to drive our X4M about town as it obviously has much stiffer suspension. I don’t have a home charger installed yet so I’m relying on public chargers at the moment which is a bit of a pain. The van only charges to 90% ( I will need to look into this ) which gives a range of 160 miles, the reality is that of the predicted 160 miles I will actually get around 130 miles in the winter months. Not a problem as I don’t do a lot of miles.The ratchet strapping of the flat tank isn’t ideal but it is the best solution at the moment, I have one strap going over the top to pull it down to the floor and another going around it pulling it towards the bulkhead, it does feel solid but of course it isn’t crash tested, but then the Waterworks professionaly fitted system for EV’s won’t have been crash tested either? I mentioned in another thread that the water sloshing was terrible in the flat tank, I have added 25 metres of 100mm perforated drainage pipe cut into shorter lengths, this has made a big difference. All in all a very positive first week, the only negative so far being that there doesn’t seem to be a viable option of a bolted in tank/frame.The waterworks systems are crash tested now .Are they crash tested in an EV? How do they secure them?They are bolted through the floor (not chassis), the waterworks system has a panel that blows out and releases the water in big impact , meaning you will get wet but the tank wont move.
Another issue is screwing the electric hose reel down. It’ll have to be right by the rear doors in the e transit custom, as the battery doesn’t go that far back. What did you do KS?
And is the Ply glued to the floor, or screwed near the wheel arches?
Quote from: zesty on Yesterday at 09:39:42 amAnd is the Ply glued to the floor, or screwed near the wheel arches?The 18mm ply is a tight fit between the ply lined wheel arches, I have then used 4 ‘L’ brackets that connects the 18mm ply to the wheel arches.
Quote from: zesty on Yesterday at 07:05:42 amAnother issue is screwing the electric hose reel down. It’ll have to be right by the rear doors in the e transit custom, as the battery doesn’t go that far back. What did you do KS?Just screw the reel down to a piece of plywood. That's what I do.👍
Quote from: dazmond on Yesterday at 03:38:29 pmQuote from: zesty on Yesterday at 07:05:42 amAnother issue is screwing the electric hose reel down. It’ll have to be right by the rear doors in the e transit custom, as the battery doesn’t go that far back. What did you do KS?Just screw the reel down to a piece of plywood. That's what I do.👍Yep, that’s what I’ve done previously, but you need to make sure the plywood is secured to the van floor.