There are superchagers all along I-10 (LA to Jacksonville) and every interstate
https://www.tesla.com/findus
https://www.tesla.com/findus
Don't really think MotorTrend has much if any agenda or a dog in the fight. They've always struck me as being very objective "about the car."Texasclipper said:
https://www.motortrend.com/reviews/road-tripping-in-our-long-term-electric-test-cars/
Just saw this on line and skimmed it. They mention that the Rivian now has a "camping mode" that only loses 4 miles of range per day when "shut off" instead of 16 (I think it was 16) that they previously experienced on one of their outings.
They also mention one road trip taking 2 hours longer in an EV than it would have in an IC vehicle. Lots of charging hassles mentioned and losing range due to the cold.
But they do try to put a positive spin on it referencing that some problems are due to the writer not having a home charger or a learning curve. But I'm shocked the mentioned the negatives at all.
Again, hard pass from me. Driving should not take this much logistics juggling, planning, and technical understanding. But I'm sure the EV lovers will be here to say its not that bad and all you need is a Tesla.
AgGrad99 said:Until they can compete with this...they're fighting an uphill battle to gain traction with anyone other than commuters.Quote:
When I pull into a gas station, I get a 100% full tank in about 3 minutes and I can drive 480 miles and not worry about cold, heat, ice etc.
aggiehawg said:
Got it. Thanks. At least they were prepared enough to know the distances between charging stations on the route.
I was wondering if they had gotten stranded somewhere but they did avoid that.
Does that update in real time if a charging station is down or full? And is that only for Tesla chargers or for all types of chargers?Teslag said:aggiehawg said:
Got it. Thanks. At least they were prepared enough to know the distances between charging stations on the route.
I was wondering if they had gotten stranded somewhere but they did avoid that.
A Tesla will generally calculate charging for you so you dont have to think about it. For example, if I put houston in the on board nav system it will determine charging stops, duration at each stop, and preheat the battery before I arrive.
Not sure what you mean.Teslag said:AgGrad99 said:Until they can compete with this...they're fighting an uphill battle to gain traction with anyone other than commuters.Quote:
When I pull into a gas station, I get a 100% full tank in about 3 minutes and I can drive 480 miles and not worry about cold, heat, ice etc.
Commuters who take road trips less than 500 miles makes up a majority of American vehicle owners.
He'd pull straight in. There are 8 SuperChargers at the FlyingJ on I-10 in Fort Stockton.jja79 said:
How long does a full charge take? Let's say a guy finds the one in Fort Stockton and two other guys that just drove in from Houston are in front. Might he have to wait a significant time?
aggiehawg said:Does that update in real time if a charging station is down or full? And is that only for Tesla chargers or for all types of chargers?Teslag said:aggiehawg said:
Got it. Thanks. At least they were prepared enough to know the distances between charging stations on the route.
I was wondering if they had gotten stranded somewhere but they did avoid that.
A Tesla will generally calculate charging for you so you dont have to think about it. For example, if I put houston in the on board nav system it will determine charging stops, duration at each stop, and preheat the battery before I arrive.
AgGrad99 said:Not sure what you mean.Teslag said:AgGrad99 said:Until they can compete with this...they're fighting an uphill battle to gain traction with anyone other than commuters.Quote:
When I pull into a gas station, I get a 100% full tank in about 3 minutes and I can drive 480 miles and not worry about cold, heat, ice etc.
Commuters who take road trips less than 500 miles makes up a majority of American vehicle owners.
I commute daily...but I also drive distance fairly frequently....like most families I know.
Most people need both capabilities, which means an ICE makes more sense.
You've also lamented that there is no ICE peer to your luxury performance SUV Tesla (for insurance cost comparison data), and that you almost never have had to even use a public charger as you use the one you installed yourself in the garage at home for a few pennies.Teslag said:aggiehawg said:Does that update in real time if a charging station is down or full? And is that only for Tesla chargers or for all types of chargers?Teslag said:aggiehawg said:
Got it. Thanks. At least they were prepared enough to know the distances between charging stations on the route.
I was wondering if they had gotten stranded somewhere but they did avoid that.
A Tesla will generally calculate charging for you so you dont have to think about it. For example, if I put houston in the on board nav system it will determine charging stops, duration at each stop, and preheat the battery before I arrive.
Yes, updates in real time. It's only for Tesla chargers but if you're driving a Tesla why use anything else? The super chargers will be shown with a corresponding red number indicating how many stalls are free. In a year of owning a Tesla I have never once had to wait on a charger.
Quote:
You've also lamented that there is no ICE peer to your luxury performance SUV Tesla (for insurance cost comparison data
What part of that is a lie? What analysis is available publicly of comparable insurance costs across classes of vehicles (ICE vs. BEV) which you haven't dismissed as 'wrong, not fair comparisons, anyone who accepts that is ignoring my vehicle which is so incredible as to be incomparable?'Teslag said:Quote:
You've also lamented that there is no ICE peer to your luxury performance SUV Tesla (for insurance cost comparison data
Lie. But that's how you roll on threads these days.
Quote:
Again, hard pass from me. Driving should not take this much logistics juggling, planning, and technical understanding. But I'm sure the EV lovers will be here to say its not that bad and all you need is a Tesla.
Texasclipper said:
But I'm shocked they mentioned the negatives at all.
We never go on a road trip under 500. Most of our trips are at least 900 miles. I grew up in Florida and almost all my friends and family live there. We always take our dogs so we drive. In laws lived in Tennessee, son lives in North Carolina. I think more people travel by car than you imagine, just because that is not your life style.Teslag said:Most americans don't plan road trips, even summer vacation road trips, over 500 miles.Hungry Ojos said:
Until there is a guaranteed range of at least 600 miles, on one charge, despite weather conditions, I think EV's are going to be utterly impractical for most. My biggest fear is my family being stranded somewhere when I'm not around. And since the range can fluctuate severely depending on the weather, it's impossible to plan a fool proof route.
The Bucee's chargers stay very full. Wouldn't doubt people often have to wait, and then wait some more to charge.Kenneth_2003 said:He'd pull straight in. There are 8 SuperChargers at the FlyingJ on I-10 in Fort Stockton.jja79 said:
How long does a full charge take? Let's say a guy finds the one in Fort Stockton and two other guys that just drove in from Houston are in front. Might he have to wait a significant time?
jja79 said:
That doesn't sound like a good selling point. If he's used 90% of his battery should it be 5 minutes, an hour?
techno-ag said:The Bucee's chargers stay very full. Wouldn't doubt people often have to wait, and then wait some more to charge.Kenneth_2003 said:He'd pull straight in. There are 8 SuperChargers at the FlyingJ on I-10 in Fort Stockton.jja79 said:
How long does a full charge take? Let's say a guy finds the one in Fort Stockton and two other guys that just drove in from Houston are in front. Might he have to wait a significant time?
This right here is just dumb. One would think the industry would get together and standardize the charging ports and stations so that it's like a gas station - doesn't matter the brand, they all work the same. Hell, you would think that with as hard as the feds are pushing and as much as they mandate sht on regular ICE vehicles, they would mandate this on EV's.Gigem_94 said:
Rivian and all other non Tesla EVs don't have access to supercharger stations that can fully charge in about 20 minutes. They're relegated 3rd party chargers that take hours. That's the biggest difference between Tesla and others right now. Road-trips in Tesla's are no big deal if you stick to interstates where the superchargers are