MikeNovack wrote: ↑Tue Apr 29, 2025 4:18 pm
ivan wrote: ↑Mon Apr 28, 2025 3:32 pm
The 'range' quoted for all electric vehicles tend to be rather fantasy-driven. In the old days, you have mpg at 30mph / 56mph / 70mph, and if you drove your car mainly at these speeds you'd see generally something similar to what was advertised, given correct tyre pressures and without excessive load on decent roads.
Well ........ for decades over here we've had the same complaints about EPA figures for the mpg of gas and/or diesel vehicles. Vehicle owners complaining they get far less mileage in practice. Especially on the "city" part but also on "highway" (which is NOT continuous highway).
Hogwash! I am not saying this is not the experience of these drivers. It is their driving habits. I have always, every car I've driven, been able to equal or better the EPA figures. But other drivers in the household get about 10% less mileage. I am of course talking about summer driving*. It is all about "anticipation". Did you SEE that red light ahead? Take your foot off the accelerator, letting the car coast, arriving still moving as the cars ahead began moving when the light changed, so you never had to completely stop. Or like my grandson, drive up to that line of cars, stop, then resume.
* The only cars I've driven that did as well in winter were the Saabs. They had adjusting air intake heaters so the temperature of air in remained the same, winter of summer. Our current Subarus lack this and my experience in winter temps is about 10% worse than summer(and above freezing for this as the pressure drop as air speeds up in the intake lowers the temperature). The Saabs had the air pre-heat to prevent icing in the carb.
Just to say, in case you didn't know, Europe has a different test cycle for EV's than the US EPA.
Our WLTP range ratings are about 12-15% greater than the EPA ranges. So whilst the EPA figures appear to be somehing many drivers can achieve if they drive reasonably, the WLTP figures seem a bit silly. We also used to have the NEDC (not even damn close) figures that were higher again, and there's the Chinese range estimates using CLTC which are ridiculously generous.
The stupid thing is that the EPA figures use a simple 'fudge factor' of multiplying the test range results for a car by 70% (I think), to give the reasonably good EPA estimates. Suggesting that if the WLTP had a fudge factor of 0.85 (or if they already use one, it was altered accordingly) then the numbers would work better.
I only mention this, as folk seeing range estimates on for example a news article, or Youtube video, need to note what region/test cycle the figures refer to. Eg if it's talking about a Chinese BEV that has 400 miles of range, then that might be more like 300 miles at WLTP, or 260 miles EPA.
[Obviosuly this relates to estimated range from a battery charge, not the actual distance travelled as recorded by the odometer, as per the court case.]
PS @ Admin - Is there a prize for the most boring post ever made ....... asking for a friend?