Greenheart
Well-Known Member
Not strictly relevant, but interesting...
I can't recall if any conclusion followed the suggestion, earlier this year, that if one had no diesel auxilliary, but instead ran a diesel generator and a huge battery bank on board, one could legitimately run an electric propulsion motor, whilst legally paying the reduced rate for the fuel that recharges the batteries. How could HMRC analyse the use of a 2000 amp-hour domestic supply, to ascertain how much diesel was burnt for propulsion?
Granted, an electric auxilliary may come with its own gainsayers...
...one or two thoughts here:
http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=268793&highlight=sick+of+your+old+diesel?
...but once the recharging of the batteries is accounted for, this could be a neat way to cut your fuel duty. Which you'd need to do, having shelled out £10K on batteries, generators, motors...
I can't recall if any conclusion followed the suggestion, earlier this year, that if one had no diesel auxilliary, but instead ran a diesel generator and a huge battery bank on board, one could legitimately run an electric propulsion motor, whilst legally paying the reduced rate for the fuel that recharges the batteries. How could HMRC analyse the use of a 2000 amp-hour domestic supply, to ascertain how much diesel was burnt for propulsion?
Granted, an electric auxilliary may come with its own gainsayers...
http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?t=268793&highlight=sick+of+your+old+diesel?
...but once the recharging of the batteries is accounted for, this could be a neat way to cut your fuel duty. Which you'd need to do, having shelled out £10K on batteries, generators, motors...