CHARGE UP

Citroen e-C4 X is a smart and smooth EV but you need a vital bit of kit before you buy

Although running an electric car is cheaper than a petrol car, EV ownership is still only for the 'haves' and not the 'have nots'

SO you’ve decided you want to buy an EV.

With constantly sprouting clean air zones, pinballing pump prices and a dithering Government which can’t make up its mind about petrol cars, you think the time is right.

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Whether you like the £35k Citroen e-C4 X’s slightly odd looks is a matter of personal taste, but it is undeniably refined and smooth to drive

Make sure to have an Ohme wallbox installed on your drive

How do you start?

Get down to the local dealerships for a few test drives?

Jump on Auto Trader?

I can tell you, there’s no point in doing any of that until you’ve found a home charger, checked it’s compatible with your home’s circuitry and had it installed.

Because life with an EV when you don’t have a home charger is miserable.

I spent a month driving the £35k Citroen e-C4 X without a charger at home.

And when I say driving, I mean limping it to the nearest public chargers, paying a fortune to leave it there for six hours hooked to the feebly slow 7kW boxes, then walking 20 minutes home in the rain.

Thankfully, the following month, I had an Ohme wallbox installed on my drive.

Smart piece of kit

I could hook the car up in seconds, it charged overnight so I was always topped up – and I could actually focus on what the car is like for this review.

Which is a good thing, because without all that distraction I soon learned the e-C4 X is a rather smart piece of kit.

Whether you like its slightly odd looks is a matter of personal taste, but it is undeniably refined and smooth to drive.

Citroen has gone for a more progressive acceleration experience here, rather than the urgent and hyper-responsive flex of many EVs.

Relaxed driving manners are complimented by Citroen’s trademark cosseting suspension, and the driver’s seat is one of the comfiest chairs I’ve ever sat in.

I mean of all chairs, not just in a car.

The interior is relatively minimalist, but Citroen has included a bank of physical buttons for the important stuff.

The important numbers? A claimed 220-mile range in the smaller 50kWh version I was driving.

I managed to get 190 out of it on a full charge driving normally, so not too shabby.

Nicely, the e-C4 X supports 100kW rapid charging, which can top the battery to 80 per cent in 30 minutes.

Although running an electric car is cheaper than a petrol car, EV ownership is still only for the “haves” and not the “have nots”.

By which I mean people who HAVE a driveway and not those who HAVE NOT got a driveway.

Because without a home charger, forget it.

No wonder the Government has kicked the ban of petrol and diesel cars down the road.

This country has a very long way to go to ensure people who live in flats or terraced houses or don’t have a private driveway can get by with an EV.

YOU might think that one EV charger is just the same as another, right?

Wrong.

Previously EV chargers were little more than a socket on your wall.

But the latest generation can integrate with the cheapest electricity rates, meaning you can run your car for less than £2.50 a week.

The one I’ve been using, Ohme’s Home Pro, charges your EV at the cheapest times via specialist off-peak tariffs from firms like Octopus and OVO.

That means drivers can save money when charging their EVs, while also helping energy companies to balance out electricity demand.

CITROEN E-C4 X 50kWh

  • Full charge Standard Variable Tariff, 28p/kWh, total £14.
  • Full charge Intelligent Octopus Go, 7.5p/kWh, total £3.75.
  • Ohme Home Pro charger is £999, standard installation included.
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