Temps in the teens today. Left house for commute with 80% battery charge and returned with 40%. I am beyond regretful right now. I feel lost. The car didn't even catch on fire as promised to keep us warm.
Our TESLA-owning CRO moved and is doing hybrid at one of satellite offices. He has a 2 hr or so commute on days he comes in. Anyway, about a month ago the temp there weather was in the teens or so. He missed a morning meeting. Later that day, he apologized for missing the meeting - he needed to charge his TESLA because it lost so much charge.Teslag said:
Sub freezing temps have hit DFW tonight and I took the Tesla to the grocery store a bit ago. Left with 80% charge and came back with 68%.
Devastating. Seriously regretting this purchase now and will probably have to change my username again.
Did you have the cabin heating on?Teslag said:
Temps in the teens today. Left house for commute with 80% battery charge and returned with 40%. I am beyond regretful right now. I feel lost. The car didn't even catch on fire as promised to keep us warm.
aggiehawg said:Did you have the cabin heating on?Teslag said:
Temps in the teens today. Left house for commute with 80% battery charge and returned with 40%. I am beyond regretful right now. I feel lost. The car didn't even catch on fire as promised to keep us warm.
Mine was parked outside all day while I was work, and driving home I discovered the worst thing about my Tesla. some ice was forming on my windshield, so I turned on the windshield fluid, and nothing came out. It was frozen. Normally in an ICE car, the engine runs so hot that the windshield fluid will quickly melt. In the Tesla, it is in the Frunk, which is ambient temperature.Teslag said:
Temps in the teens today. Left house for commute with 80% battery charge and returned with 40%. I am beyond regretful right now. I feel lost. The car didn't even catch on fire as promised to keep us warm.
Rongagin71 said:
Microsoft News, which is left leaning, carried a little truth about EV's today.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/ev-drivers-discover-fundamental-flaw-in-car-battery-tech-as-30f-temperatures-hit-the-us/ar-AA1n0DMI?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=42da8ef017ce4b37bf86cc110f51c561&ei=63
Quote:
Jack is far from the only person to experience these issues, according to X users. Another said: "I live in a summer vacation area. Lots of residents have Lake homes here but live in one of the state's big cities. We gave snow and sub-zero temperatures and so one guy drove his EV here this morning to check out conditions here.
"But he was afraid to drive up the hill because of the snow. And he didn't know how long it would take to go 150 miles to his home. Well, it took five hours, he had to stop twice to charge, and the last charge only gave him 66%. No, thank you."
agracer said:don't worry, we will all still know the back stabbing, vaccine pushing fraudster that you are.Teslag said:
Sub freezing temps have hit DFW tonight and I took the Tesla to the grocery store a bit ago. Left with 80% charge and came back with 68%.
Devastating. Seriously regretting this purchase now and will probably have to change my username again.
Teslag said:
Temps in the teens today. Left house for commute with 80% battery charge and returned with 40%. I am beyond regretful right now. I feel lost. The car didn't even catch on fire as promised to keep us warm.
NASAg03 said:
No issue driving my Trooper this evening with -10F here in Colorado. It sat all week since I work from home, and was good to go just a bit ago. No battery conditioning or leaving it plugged in to keep it warm.
EV's....not so much. And once the battery is dead, you have to let it trickle-charge to warm up enough to super charge. Just wait until 2030 when the government mandates them all to be like this.
?ve=1&tl=1
https://www.foxbusiness.com/technology/chicago-area-tesla-charging-stations-lined-with-dead-cars-in-freezing-cold-a-bunch-of-dead-robots-out-here
Quote:
" Nothing. No juice. Still on zero percent," Tyler Beard, who had been trying to recharge his Tesla at an Oak Brook, Illinois Tesla supercharging station since Sunday afternoon, told the news outlet. "And this is like three hours being out here after being out here three hours yesterday."
Beard and several other Tesla owners were trying to charge their cars amid long lines and abandoned cars at other Tesla charging stations in the Chicago area, the news station reported.
"This is crazy. It's a disaster. Seriously," said Tesla owner Chalis Mizelle. Mizelle said she abandoned her car and got a ride from a friend after hers would not charge.
Quote:
The US electric vehicle market continues to grow despite many headlines implying the contrary. In the 4th quarter, sales of full battery-electric vehicles (BEVs) were up 29% compared to sales in the 4th quarter of 2022. Compared to the 4th quarter of 2021, sales were up 122%.
Kansas Kid said:
I found the photo of those cars lined up for get juice. Shocking how long it was.
FCBlitz said:Kansas Kid said:
I found the photo of those cars lined up for get juice. Shocking how long it was.
Amaizing how the Dems messed up and created that first energy crisis.
Quote:
One man only got a few cents worth of gas the first time he tried to fill up. But he was shown an act of kindness. Del Dahl was watching WCIA's severe weather forcast. One of our warnings was to make sure your car is full of gas in case of an emergency. So he went to the gas station, but that's when he ran into an unexpected problem.
Dahl says, "I put my card in, everything was approved and I jumped back in the car because it's cold." It turns out it was too cold. All of the pumps were frozen and hardly any gas was coming out.
Wowzers. That's got to be the biggest example yet of whataboutism I've seen on this thread. And that's including hundreds of teslag's posts.Kansas Kid said:
I found the photo of those cars lined up for get juice. Shocking how long it was. If you have to rely on public chargers for daily driving because you can't charge at home, EVs are not a good option for most people.
Yeah we wouldn't need any more coal plants if everyone bought a Tesla and helped power the grid at night.one safe place said:
Can't wait for a Tesla owner to claim that not only did his car not lose any charge after a 500-mile trip with temperatures in the teens, but when he got home there was a power outage and he was able to supply power to half his town.
Not me. You saw my laughing face. But I'm also familiar with your posting history on this thread.Kansas Kid said:
And some people have absolutely no sense of humor.
aggiehawg said:
The reason why is The Hubs has a hard time keeping the lake house golf cart charged, all of his tools charged.
We have multiple 200 amps drops on the ranch. But keeping that many things charged even on a trickle cell does not work forever. They die.
Until battery tech makes a HUGE advancement, EVs are futile.
Now, tell me why I am wrong.
Fair enough.Quote:
The one thing I would add, is her comparison to the issues she faces on the ranch about the batteries dying even on trickle is different with EVs is because they have better batteries and battery management systems.
aggiehawg said:Fair enough.Quote:
The one thing I would add, is her comparison to the issues she faces on the ranch about the batteries dying even on trickle is different with EVs is because they have better batteries and battery management systems.
But what is a "battery management system"?
I don't own an EV but I think the simple explanation is that lithium batteries don't work if the battery is below 32F so there are ways to gradually warm the battery...but nothing works if there is no juice.aggiehawg said:Fair enough.Quote:
The one thing I would add, is her comparison to the issues she faces on the ranch about the batteries dying even on trickle is different with EVs is because they have better batteries and battery management systems.
But what is a "battery management system"?
Teslag said:
EV sales up 29% in the 4th quarter, up 122% in the past two years.
https://cleantechnica.com/2024/01/14/us-ev-market-grows-29-in-4th-quarter-tesla-holds-56-market-share/Quote:
The US electric vehicle market continues to grow despite many headlines implying the contrary. In the 4th quarter, sales of full battery-electric vehicles (BEVs) were up 29% compared to sales in the 4th quarter of 2022. Compared to the 4th quarter of 2021, sales were up 122%.
And of course the Model Y, America's favorite car, has a lot to do with it.
Quote:
If Automotive News' estimates can be believed, the Model Y had a huge year.
That and it had absolutely nothing to do with the limitations of the car and was something created by the Feds screwing up. Two situations are not remotely comparable.techno-ag said:Wowzers. That's got to be the biggest example yet of whataboutism I've seen on this thread. And that's including hundreds of teslag's posts.Kansas Kid said:
I found the photo of those cars lined up for get juice. Shocking how long it was. If you have to rely on public chargers for daily driving because you can't charge at home, EVs are not a good option for most people.
This is where I get confused. Using battery power to heat or cool batteries to enable charging?Quote:
EVs also have heating/cooling systems that keep the battery at optimal temperature when charging to further protect your battery.
During WW2 the economy was highly managed by the Feds including oil prices - oil found and developed in Texas because of the war continued after the war to be price controlled to the advantage of the Yankee based car production industry/unions so real gasoline prices did not hit until the Arabs organized the other oil producers.agracer said:That and it had absolutely nothing to do with the limitations of the car and was something created by the Feds screwing up. Two situations are not remotely comparable.techno-ag said:Wowzers. That's got to be the biggest example yet of whataboutism I've seen on this thread. And that's including hundreds of teslag's posts.Kansas Kid said:
I found the photo of those cars lined up for get juice. Shocking how long it was. If you have to rely on public chargers for daily driving because you can't charge at home, EVs are not a good option for most people.