Automobile Enthusiasts
Related: About this forumI Rented an Electric Car for a Four-Day Road Trip. I Spent More Time Charging It Than I Did Sleeping
I thought it would be fun. Thats what I told my friend Mack when I asked her to drive with me from New Orleans to Chicago and back in an electric car. Id made long road trips before, surviving popped tires, blown headlights and shredded wheel-well liners in my 2008 Volkswagen Jetta. I figured driving the brand-new Kia EV6 Id rented would be a piece of cake. If, that is, the public-charging infrastructure cooperated. We wouldnt be the first to test it. Given our battery range of up to 310 miles, I plotted a meticulous route, splitting our days into four chunks of roughly 7½-hours each. Wed need to charge once or twice each day and plug in near our hotel overnight. The PlugShare appa user-generated map of public chargersshowed thousands of charging options between New Orleans and Chicago. But most were classified as Level 2, requiring around 8 hours for a full charge.
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Over four days, we spent $175 on charging. We estimated the equivalent cost for gas in a Kia Forte would have been $275, based on the AAA average national gas price for May 19. That $100 savings cost us many hours in waiting time. But thats not the whole story. New Orleans, our starting point, has exactly zero fast chargers, according to PlugShare. As we set out, one of the closest is at a Harley-Davidson dealership in Slidell, La., about 40 minutes away. So we use our Monday-morning breakfast stop to top off there on the way out of town.
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After the Birmingham suburbs, our journey takes us along nightmarish, dark mountain roads. We stop for snacks at a gas station featuring a giant chicken in a chefs costume. We lean heavily on cruise control, which helps conserve battery life by reducing inadvertent acceleration and deceleration. We are beat when we finally stumble into our Nashville hotel at 12:30 a.m. To get back on schedule, we are up and out early, amid pouring rain, writing the previous day off as a warm-up, an electric-car hazing. For the most part, we are right. Thanks to vastly better charging infrastructure on this leg, all our stops last less than an hour.
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Leaving Chicago after a full night of sleep... As intense wind and rain whip around us, the car cautions, Conditions have not been met for its cruise-control system. Soon the battery starts bleeding life. What began as a 100-mile cushion between Chicago and our planned first stop in Effingham, Ill., has fallen to 30... We feel defeated pulling into a Nissan Mazda dealership in Mattoon, Ill. How long could it possibly take to charge the 30 miles we need to make it to the next fast station? I wonder. Three hours. It takes 3 hours. I begin to lose my mind as I set out in search of gas-station doughnuts, the wind driving sheets of rain into my face.
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Back on the road, we cant even make it 200 miles on a full charge en route to Miner, Mo. Clearly, tornado warnings and electric cars dont mix. The cars highway range actually seems worse than its range in cities. Indeed, highway driving doesnt benefit as much from the cars regenerative-braking technologywhich uses energy generated in slowing down to help a car recharge its batteryKia spokesman James Bell tells me later. He suspects our car is the less-expensive EV6 model with a range not of 310 miles, as listed on Turo, but 250. He says he cant be sure what model we were driving without physically inspecting the car.
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To save power, we turn off the cars cooling system and the radio, unplug our phones and lower the windshield wipers to the lowest possible setting while still being able to see. Three miles away from the station, we have one mile of estimated range. Charge, Urgently! the dashboard urges. We know! we respond. At zero miles, we fly screeching into a gas-station parking lot. A trash can goes flying and lands with a clatter to greet us. Dinner is beef jerky, our plans to dine at a kitschy beauty shop-turned-restaurant in Memphis long gone.
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The following week, I fill up my Jetta at a local Shell station. Gas is up to $4.08 a gallon. I inhale deeply. Fumes never smelled so sweet.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/i-rented-an-electric-car-for-a-four-day-road-trip-i-spent-more-time-charging-it-than-i-did-sleeping-11654268401 (subscription)
cilla4progress
(25,916 posts)US doesn't yet have the proper infrastructure for EVs, sounds like.
question everything
(48,812 posts)brush
(57,556 posts)that the reublicans and Manchin/Sinema defeated.
I think it's best to hold off on buy and EV for now, unless it's just for city driving.
LisaM
(28,604 posts)If you're stranded in an EV and someone has to come tow you, that defeats the whole purpose.
We get great mileage in our hybrid and I don't even pay attention to the price of gas (I'm not trying to downplay that high gas prices are a huge problem for a lot of people, but we don't use half the gas that a lot of people do).
cilla4progress
(25,916 posts)May I ask what you are driving?
LisaM
(28,604 posts)If I had bought new I would likely have gone with an American brand, but it's done well for us. Mileage is over 53 mpg. And we don't have range anxiety.
KS Toronado
(19,580 posts)Thank you for buying one.
mitch96
(14,658 posts)a plug in hybrid. 40 miles on "E" juice is about what I would need for around town stuff.
Plug it in for the evening and then repeat the next day. Long trip? you have a gas engine to go the distance.
Until you can go 300 miles and an electric "fill" in the same time a gas engine can do it, it's gonna be a long road for pure electric. YMMV
m
Casady1
(2,133 posts)no conflict here. I would never trust the WSJ on something like this.
rurallib
(63,201 posts)question everything
(48,812 posts)And.. you may want to open your mind. Just a little?
Would you throw away a recent WSJ poll how most support abortion?
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1016324147
question everything
(48,812 posts)That Sander? Sherrod Brown?
Very unfortunate to find on these pages limited vision of real reports.
Casady1
(2,133 posts)of driving long distance with an EV on youtube. This guy tries many types and discusses driving long distance with an EV. By the way your "name" should be used when using the WSJ for an accurate review of driving an EV long distance.
https://www.youtube.com/c/OutofSpecReviews/videos
question everything
(48,812 posts)and thought of sharing it here. Perhaps I should have posted in the Lounge where lighter minds reside.
Casady1
(2,133 posts)due diligence when providing information.
question everything
(48,812 posts)It is up to you, if so desire, to rebut the facts. But too many here, too lazy to rebut just say Oh, the WSJ not worth reading.
And this is supposed to be a place of independent and critical thinking. Obviously not by everyone.
Casady1
(2,133 posts)factual information and you like to promote Murdoch.
question everything
(48,812 posts)pwb
(12,199 posts)Poor planning and choice of vehicle IMO.
Shermann
(8,647 posts)If there aren't enough fast chargers along the route, your trip is going to suck. If you take the trip to that destination anyways, that outcome shouldn't be a surprise.
In fairness, there were some unforeseeable events which exacerbated the situation.