I can't find the EV thread as search on here is a little 'special' but thought I would share todays experience of using an EV at -2 degrees C. If someone wants to put this on the EV thread, that is fine as it is just something for EV pcurious people to be aware of. I am sure lots f people will say that newer batteries won't be affected in the same way or that ICE cars are also less economical in the cold. I am not trying to preach for or against EVs, just sharing some facts.
I have a ten year old Nissan Leaf which has a battery that has deteriorated so that in the best warm weather it has an indicated range, when fully charged, of 45 miles which actually translates to 25 - 30 miles*
Today, when fully charged, it had an indicated range of 22 miles which actually left me with an indicated 2 miles after driving 6.5 - so probably less than 8 mile range!
*I know the 'guess-o-meter' range prediction is based on the most recent driving but this was also in sub-zero temperatures doing the normal supermarket type trip that results in the 45 mile reading at 20 degrees in the summer.
Interesting real world experience, I've previously seen anecdotal reports that ev batteries don't degrade as much as experts thought they would. I guess various factors can influence battery health but a 10 yo car that might only be able to do 10 miles isn't a great lifespan.
I have similar with my golf GTE when using pure EV mode.
In the summer i can get to and from work just on electric power (charged 100% over night) in July I bought 0 petrol. No chance on winter with cold, lights and heater on.
I now drive to work in the morning in hybrid mode (well actually first few miles are in charging mode to get some heat in the system to demist/ defrost the car) and burn through an 80% charge coming home on electric.
It all academic now as the hybrid system shat itself with all the rain and needs VW to look at it (£150 to just look at it).
Am seriously thinking of going back to burning dinosaurs.
This the same gen1 leaf that when you bought it everyone told you about the shitty non temperature controlled battery?
Poor temperature regulation of NMC batteries causes exactly this issue.
Modern tech does indeed reduce degradation rate.
As another leaf owner who lives in a cold places, and has owned for a couple of years... this is what I've observed...
Heating on affects it obviously. What temp are you setting the aircon to? Mines at 62.
What's it like underwheel - if you're ploughing thro' slush that hammers performance.. ditto really heavy siting water.
Temp - are you charging in or out of a garage. This is the bi g one - IF you're charging in open air at -6 the batteries ability to charge and discharge gets reduced a lot, as the battery charging isn't smart enough to turn on battery heating. You thus never get that much power into the battery. Mine lives in an indirectly heated garage. Typically to drive to the office I'll use 10% battery. In the winter , even at -10, I'll use 13,14 % thanks to heating and prewarm, but the battery is charged in the comparative warm ´6C in the garage and 12 in the garage at work.
This is nothing to do with degredation. Keeping the cars in Californian temperatues exaggerates that
https://singletrackmag.com/forum/topic/the-electric-car-thread/
Took a few seconds to find using the search box.
Thanks Simon - MODS, close this one if you like
lots, like 25%-35% difference. Tesla model 3, normally c200 miles range every morning. Did a journey ive done previously on one charge (150 miles) no problem, totay, got to the supercharger with 3% left, 10 miles from the house. Only 3 years old!
Depends on how warm a car you like. Also what type of heater you have in it. VW do an optional heat pump heater which apparently uses less leccy.
I'm getting about 2/3 of the range I was getting in the summer. But then I preheat the car before I get in. Have the temperature set to 20C, heated seat and steering wheel on and lights on the whole time driving.
I’ve dropped from about 2.6 to 2.3 mi/kw.hr, so only about 12% ish. It’s hard to be precise though as things vary a lot and I’ve only had it since Sep so hard to make much of a judgement.
Short journeys are always much worse efficiency as the car heats itself up, I imagine that means that short trips in winter would be affected more than long runs?
Etron driver here.
June - sept - average 2.5 to 2.7 Mi/Kw
Oct - Nov - 2.3 - 2.5 Mi/Kw
Dec - 2.3 - 2.1 Mi/Kw
Last 3-4 days (-1 average temp). 1.7 Mi/Kw
Hi @jonnyboi
I’ve got an ETron too so am interested to hear about your experience. My experience roughly matches yours except for the last few days where I am seeing more like 2.3 over a long ish run. Was yours on short or long runs ?
Some fact checking says my experience of a 1/3 less range at -5°C is typical. Aparently 2/3 of that difference is down to the heater. But ICEs lose even more range due to inefficient cold engine running, if you can put up with not using the heater the EV loses less in cold weather than an ICE. Sources:
https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/fuel-economy-cold-weather
https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/cars/1539670/E10-Petrol-Dropping-Winter-Fuel-Economy
I'll continue using the heater, the only car that's had a heater I haven't used was a T2 because the heat exchangers were cracked and filled the cabin with carbon monoxide.
@whatgoesup mixture but no more that 35 miles and that included 20 miles of motorway/A road. sensible driving as well, under speed limit and no 'S' mode!
I find it hard to run without the heating on at some capacity as the windows tend to steam up. that said, I'm not prepared to freeze either. Sorry planet
But ICEs lose even more range due to inefficient cold engine running
Pretty sure I could still go over 650 miles in my ICE vehicle though between fill ups. I have done 720 miles in summer conditions. I only see a maybe a 3 or 4mpg reduction at most on medium or long journeys. Other than a longer warm up time for ICE cars things like more friction on cold tyre rubber are the same for ICE and EVs.
As for loss of efficiency on short local trips? Who cares? I just checked and I was a month between my two most recent top ups.
The inefficiency of cold ICE engines is one of those crap facts that EVC nerds bring up. It is true but the engines are designed to warm up really quickly so rarely relevant on most journeys of any length. I am surprised Edukator used it as most of what he says makes sense (sort of) environmentally
I’ll continue using the heater
Just wear a coat
PMSL, calling me a nerd with inconvenient facts about ICEs on a thread you started to slag off cold EV inefficiency, WorldClassAccident. 🙂
40 years ago diesel fuel used to "wax" in cold temps and clog the fuel filter. Modern fuel is less likely to suffer. Batteries have and will improve, assuming that they continue to power vehicles
Rolls-Royce have run a hydrogen-fuelled jet engine and diesel-hydrogen conversions are now available because batteries aren't practical for large, long-distance goods vehicles. Clever engineering is reducing emissions.
The 2030 ICE car and van ban on new vehicles isn't far away, but developmentally we've a long way to go
Ah yes, cold weather.
Our 2022 eNiro has a state range in summer of 450 km and, for the most part will achieve that, obviously with small variations for climate control and driving style (faster means less efficient, etc). Winter makes things a bit more difficult for us.
It is currently only about -10C at home, but that does impact the range dropping it to about 360km for the same type of journeys and driving style. It’s easy to see the drop that climate control has, but charging then driving gives a slight boost as the battery is warmer.
We’ll start seeing it creep up in range in March, but I expect it to drop to 350km when it starts getting properly cold.
But ICEs lose even more range due to inefficient cold
pre winter Gloucester to London 52.7mpg indicated, Saturday morning at -2 51.3mpg indicated.
I’m guessing you are talking about short journeys? Even so…
Thanks @jonnyboi - that makes sense. I’ve found day to day shortish journey efficiency has dropped a lot, in line with what you’ve said. Longer trips seem less affected.
So… range drops mostly for shorter journeys where range doesn’t generally matter as much, and only drops a bit for longer journeys where is generally does. Not so bad then and not dissimilar to ICE cars.
. It is true but the engines are designed to warm up really quickly s
Anecdotal sample size of one, my 2003 honda dinosaur burner takes under a mile to reach normal temp.
I'm loving this justification of "it doesnt matter that I've lots a lot of range because I only wanted to do a short trip any way".
wtf...
I previously used diesel and petrol cars.. .they both get hammered for fuel economy driving on slush as well , but that's rolling resistance increasing along with slipping. I doubt the efficiency change for the first 5 or 10 minutes will the engine warms does much .
My Leaf is 7 years old, 11 of 12 bars on the battery and will soon go over 150,000 km. Charging it in a garage is what makes a difference.
Drove from Heathrow back to North Yorkshire yesterday. Averaged 4 miles/kWh in my Model 3, up from 4.5 miles/kWh in the summer, on all-season tyres. Heat pump makes a huge difference.
Only thing I don't like is that the Tesla pre-heats the battery for fast charging, but on a long cold journey this can give away as much as 10kWh of capacity. I've stopped doing this now, as I'd prefer to take an extra ten minutes on the charger as opposed to spending an extra fiver on electricity.
[i]PMSL, calling me a nerd with inconvenient facts about ICEs on a thread you started to slag off cold EV inefficiency, WorldClassAccident.[/i]
Please accept my apology, text is hard to put intonation into. I am not trying to insult you, just saying the cold ICE engine inefficiency and irrelevant after the first few minutes of a journey and was surprised you were perpetuating the twist that suggested it wads a significant factor when people are talking about 150 - 600 mile journey distances. I didn't mean to imply you were a nerd and actually said I was surprised that you were using and argument usually reserved for nerds.
Also, I was not slagging off electric cars. Just stating the effect of the cold on my own car - that I bought and paid for to try the electric experiment, rather than being allocated a company car, and use more frequently, but for less mileage, than any of my other cars.
As I said right in the very first post : [i]I am not trying to preach for or against EVs, just sharing some facts.[/i]
If you wanted to try MTBing would you buy a Raleigh Shopper or a current 150mm 27.5 Enduro bike? In ICE terms you're comparing a 50s Moris Minor with your AMG. Even when new the Leaf had all the flaws of a first generation EV. How old is the battery now? It's impressive the thing still charges at all.
I agree with you. A 2011 Leaf is early generation electric compared with a 2007 ICE. That is why I am not slagging off all EVs.
Where it is a valid and useful reference is for showing the impact of cold on the batteries. Because my Leaf is so crap with only about 40% of its battery useable, the impact of the cold is magnified.
This does not mean that every latest Telsa or wizz-bang (wizz-buzz?) electric car will be reduced to a 10 mile range each time it snows but it does allow people to see that the temperature, once it drops below zero at least, has a disproportionate effect.
One useful thing I have learnt fromt his thread is the effect of the cold on the charging capability of batteries. This probably goes a long way to explaining why the total range when 'fully charged' was just 22 miles instead of the normal 40+ miles. This is the main reason, I thought, for these threads. To share experiences and understanding. If it is just to shout at people who question 'THE TRUTH' then perhaps I should retreat to the polite and reasoned discussions of the F1 thread 🙂
We get around 145-150- miles in the summer and around 110-120 miles in the winter from our i3.
Another thought that springs to mind. Those classic news stories like this morning - of people stuck in their cars, in snow on the M25 (or wherever). How long can you keep the car warm with an EV vs a tank of dirty diesel? (Hopefully you’ve planned appropriately and have a full tank for your journey, venturing into the winter conditions!).
Genuine question, not a dig.
WCA - thanks for starting the thread. The impact of cold weather on EV range isn't something I'd thought much about, but living in a cold part of the country (currently -13C) with limited charging facilities, it's plainly going to be a major issue for me.
I can't comment on this as my Leaf has such a poor battery I never use the heater but if on a modern and well designed i3 the range drops about 25% in the cold then I would pack a spare coat and take an independent heater before venturing out on any long trips. I remember being stuck on the motorway for 4 hours between Lancashire and Yorkshire one Christmas after a crash blocked it. Me, Mum and my sister all cuddling like inbreds on the back seat under coats hoping to be saved soon. Not something I would wish on anyone.
I’m loving this justification of “it doesnt matter that I’ve lots a lot of range because I only wanted to do a short trip any way”.
wtf…
Well it doesn't matter, you just plug in when back home so you're back up at 80% or 100% next time you need the car. It just costs a bit more because the of the heater use and all the other seasonal stuff mentioned has increased consumption....just like an ICE car.
The bigger issue for me (seeing 2.8-3 miles per KWh in this weather instead of 3.5 ave) will be the slower charging speeds at the rapid chargers I use on the odd occasion I'm doing a big journey. Ionity last week was ~35Kw- 55 for all the cars plugged in (the lower number is 10% of their stated potential speed!). That one never runs that fast even in summer in my experience and so I won't be paying their monthly subscription when the Hyundai one runs out. I don't have preheat battery on my car (which I regret not ordering) but interesting to read the Tesla guy saying he's decided just to not use and instead take a hit on the charging time rather than pay for 10 min of pre-heating.
The hit is most extreme at the start of a journey or for a short trip, so an EV with a tiny range like this is going to be an extreme example.
I've done the same 200 mile journey perhaps 100 times across all seasons and on that I see a difference between the extremes of about 30%. But NB it needs more than just low temperatures to get to the winter extreme on a longer journey - either extra wind resistance or wet to affect consumption that way.
We get around 145-150- miles in the summer and around 110-120 miles in the winter from our i3.
Yep, same here. Ours has the heat pump thing. Range has dropped to around 100 in the current -4 temp but will also go up to 160+ during the hottest days but your figures are our average.
Nearly 3 years old and the battery does not seem to have degraded at all. Goes back next May though and will be replaced with a second hand petrol/diesel simply because the cost of a new lease is stupid.
[i]I’m loving this justification of “it doesn't matter that I’ve lots a lot of range because I only wanted to do a short trip any way”.[/i]
I guess I am the exception because I specifically bought this car to only do short journeys. The idea was this would reduce unnecessary wear on the engine of the Maserati I was planning, but failed, to buy - I know, I am such an eco-bunny I found myself blushing.
This meant I was fine with a 30 mile range as it was only to be used to go to the train station and local shops. Before anyone starts, I have a knackered ankle and blue badge because I can't walk there. This was just before the global plague when all long distance travel stopped so the little shitbox actually became my main vehicle. As pedlead says, you do a journey and on your return just plug it back in*. This is a mind set change from ICE where you fill up and then drive around for ages until the warning light comes on and then fill up again. Neither approach is particularly good or bad, just different.
*The Leaf has no charging logic so you actually are better not charging it every time but rather only charge once it has dropped below 50%. Fortunately my car is sio crap, this is pretty much every journey anyway.
Your 'THE THRUTH' isn't a representative truth. It's so far from the experience of current EV users I'd describe it as anti-EV propaganda from a petrolhead fossil fuel fan. 1 sports car, 1 AMG, 1 porsche-based kit car planned, have I seen a van too? 1 diesel garage heater planned.
You provide the information, it's easy to interpret. You're one of the most prolific posters on here, WorldclassAccident. I love some of your stuff, the arty stuff, the DIY stuff, your various toys (including the Leaf because you use it as a toy like the sports car rather than main transport) etc.. but we are never going to agree on some stuff and forums are not only about sharing experieinces and understanding, they're about personal responsibilities in society.
a petrolhead fossil fuel fan. 1 sports car, 1 AMG, 1 porsche-based kit car planned, have I seen a van too? 1 diesel garage heater planned
Stalkers have been convicted for less
The impact of cold weather on EV range isn’t something I’d thought much about, but living in a cold part of the country (currently -13C) with limited charging facilities, it’s plainly going to be a major issue for me.
Where do you actually go though? Unless you were going to a 'big city' you are unlikely to go anywhere near the 200 miles+ winter that any half decent (Korean) modern EV can do.
I can do a sub zero run from the FRB to Glencoe ski centre and home again, without charging and coming back with 30 miles+ left on the range. That seems about as far as I could be bothered to drive in a day? Not in the van mind, that's a different story. A heat pump makes a huge difference, as expected.
🙂 An outbreak of understanding I feel. Good.
Yes, I enjoy my cars, arts etc. I only drive one car at a time and they are all at least 2nd hand so re-use rather than replace. The Porc-chop / Citwrong is going to replace the red sports car as a 1:1 swap. Diesel heater will be run on bio-fuel and allow me to continue to re-use and recycle scrap materials into my sculptures etc.
I agree that my consumption is higher than strictly necessary but it is also consumed with a conscience. I find a balance in my life where I am comfortable between personal gratification, adding benefit to others, and mi9nimising my damage impact on the planet.
We all make that choice, consciously or otherwise. Do we drink coffee - I do - which has been imported from elsewhere even though it is not necessary to our life? Do we burn plastics in our back gardens or use landfill? Do we have children?
Lots of choices and some of them can be quite provocative which is why discussions can easily descend into silly name calling. Thankfully we are more grown up than that.
Anyway, I think the point about the impact of cold has been discussed and I have learned about the effect of the cold on charging. We have reached a mutually acceptable position of respected difference and all is (relatively) well on STW.
My Gen 2 Leaf Tekna is 8 years old and I've had it for 6.5 of those.
11 bars and 70k of which I've put 66k on it. Range has gone down about 10% in that time do now it does about 70 miles in the summer and about 60 in the depths of winter. - I mainly drive it flat out everywhere with the heater or a/c on and today had the heated seats and steering wheel on too!
I love it but as i found out last night, it is completely totally unvbeliveably rubbish on snow. Having no gears and loads of torque just means either teh traction control kills all the power and it practically comes to a stop or with the traction off it spins everywhere. Had to abandon it last night about 1 mile from my house as I live on a hill and then go home to get my snowsocks. With snow socks on this morning it got up our icy hill that even my neighbour in his faux 4 x 4 couldn't
I'm a bit bemused at the arguments that seem to be taking place, so will ignore all of that and spoil the fun with some data.
Downloading the "short term memory" data from my ETron - basically a trip computer that automatically resets itself every time the car is off for two hours or more (so one set of data could be two individual trips if one started within two hours of the other).
I put this into Excel, split into "months" as a rough surrogate for temperature. I'm sure it's possible to download temp data from somewhere and pull that in, but this will do for now.
As expected, efficiency changes a LOT with trip length, more so than it does for temperature.
[url= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52557933872_70b83c2289_c.jp g" target="_blank">https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52557933872_70b83c2289_c.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/2o5n9DE ]efficiency graph[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/85556236@N06/ ]markwsf[/url], on Flickr
Trying to summarise this, for driving >75 miles my avergae efficiency has dropped by 14% from Sep to Dec, and for driving <50 miles it's dropped by 25%. Seems to roughly match the real world experiences described by others above.
[url= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52558860630_6d98630769_o.jp g" target="_blank">https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52558860630_6d98630769_o.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/2o5rU9f ]averages[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/85556236@N06/ ]markwsf[/url], on Flickr
Interesting real world experience, I’ve previously seen anecdotal reports that ev batteries don’t degrade as much as experts thought they would. I guess various factors can influence battery health but a 10 yo car that might only be able to do 10 miles isn’t a great lifespan.
Isn't most of that because they only had a ~50 mile range to begin with? Which means the kind of person buying them is going to be the type that want's to see a return on the investment so probably had a ~49 mile commute. Which mean the batteries get thrashed, having to run 100%-0% every day, flat out (because maximum discharge rate is a function of capacity).
Compare to ~300mile range cars that are doing potentially a million miles with manageable levels of degradation because the same journey is less than 15% of the capacity, and the battery is barely ticking over whilst delivering it.
Like saying "this 10 year old 10.8V Black and Decker drill is crap, we should stick with hand drills". Whilst ignoring that Makita 18V tools exist for a reason.
will ignore all of that and spoil the fun with some data
Thank you - very informative.
Where's that 'Like' button?
Do we burn plastics in our back gardens
Please tell me people don't really do that 😬😬😬
Anyway, I don't have an EV but I do have an ebike, and when riding it in temps of about 3C last week I noticed the range had dropped by a good 25%.
Which was a bit surprising. But interesting to see that it's just as much of an issue for EV drivers!
Trying to summarise this, for driving >75 miles my avergae efficiency has dropped by 14% from Sep to Dec, and for driving <50 miles it’s dropped by 25%. Seems to roughly match the real world experiences described by others above.
That's interesting. Any idea why journeys of 25-50 miles appear to be more significantly affected than journeys <10 miles? If those are averages, presumably there's point in there that's really dragging the average down? Or did you just not do very many journeys in that range so there's possibly one big outlier?
Any idea why journeys of 25-50 miles appear to be more significantly affected than journeys <10 miles? If those are averages, presumably there’s point in there that’s really dragging the average down? Or did you just not do very many journeys in that range so there’s possibly one big outlier?
Probably just "noisy data" - as you say a few outliers which will have a large effect as there's not that many points. Oct and Nov were also pretty warm so assuming temp drops over those months is a bit crude.
The graph of actual data points is shown in my post - you can see the low distance journeys there. Interestingly, taking a further look the data seems to show that efficiency flattens off at less than 10 miles, so it's more of a "curve to 7-10 miles" and then a flat line from there on.
If terms of why efficiency is lower for short trips, and why it's more affected by temp than longer trips there's been some discussion over the last few pages, but in short it's the energy needed to heat up the cabin, motor, batteries etc from cold - over longer trips this has more miles to average out over. And the temp delta from "cold" to "warm" is greater in the winter.
So what I'm seeing so far is a steady state efficiency drop of circa 13% plus a "chunk" of energy needed to heat the car up. Also bear in mind it's just one case, one car, relatively limited number of data points and with data from Sep to Dec this year - not a massive range. I've also not done many short trips during the cold snap, just long ones.
EV's are not that efficient 'shocker'
I wont be buying an EV anytime soon having had one for 4 years in the past. If you live in the right climate, do the right type of journey, carry the right type of stuff (ie nothing heavy or on the outside of the car or tow) then they are good.
I am more than happy to keep using petrol or diesel for now, although I really do miss getting in to a nice warm car in the morning. You have to pre warm an EV using the mains supply unless you want it to eat battery.
EV’s are not that efficient ‘shocker’
Sorry, what?
1.5p/mile and 37g/km CO2 is pretty efficient, no?
Actually more like 1.8p/mile in winter, but the 37g/km number is from my charger this morning so it reflects the cold weather.
You have to pre warm an EV using the mains supply unless you want it to eat battery.
Yeah but if you're commuting then you can afford to do that. You don't need mega range if you are just driving to work and back.
I would love my own EV rather than a lease, and I would tow with it too. Yeah, it's slower, because you have to stop more, but I can put up with that for one or two trips a year.
If you live in the right climate, do the right type of journey, carry the right type of stuff (ie nothing heavy or on the outside of the car or tow) then they are good.
I reckon a large majority of people satisfy all those criteria.
Efficiency depends totally on the attributes you use to calculate it and what you choos eto mean efficient.
EV CARS ARE NOT EFFICIENT ways of flying to the moon
ICE CARS ARE NOT EFFICIENT ways of collecting penguin faeces
When you start to add factors like towing capabilities, unfavourable terrain or climate etc you can make them inefficient. Energy use and energy source are just two attributes. It is a bit like ICE engines are inefficient in the cold - true but less so that EVs with the heater on and towing a caravan for 400 miles. Much more true for the 1/4 mile to the garage and back for a pack of fags type trip.
I have a diesel that is nice and warm when i get in it in the morning.
Just start the heater (timer or remote) or if it's a longer journey, or really cold, start the engine AND heater (remote start only).
Uses under 0,1 litres of fuel to bring the cabin up to temperature on the heater (takes 10 mins at -5) and about 0.15-0,2 litres if both are running (10 minutes at -10).
If i just use the heater it means i save about third a litre of fuel on the way to work. If i start the engine, i save about 2/3rds. That's the complete consumption.
It's a judgement call every morning though, is it cold enough, where am i going, who is going to be in the car, is the car encased in ice and/or snow.
It's a very similar calculation for an EV. Preheat cabin/battery/stuff and have better efficiency as soon as you start moving, or use the internal losses related to use/inefficiency to heat everything up and "save" the energy that you would have used to preheat.
the 37g/km number is from my charger this morning so it reflects the cold weather.
UK electricity carbon intensity is currently ~280g CO2 / kWh (lowest 270, peak 291)
Ignoring charging losses, etc, 37g/km implies 7.5km / kWh or 4.7 miles/kWh
That seems much higher than the miles/kWh figures experienced in the previous posts. 2miles / kWh would correspond to ~90g/km CO2 currently.
I reckon a large majority of people satisfy all those criteria.
Ok let me rephrase - you are never going to get claimed EV ranges due to climatic factors.
ie in the winter they use more power to heat up. In the summer they use more energy keeping cool. Yes I know ICE is subject to the same losses, and it would be interesting to see comparison in overall loss of efficiency. I would imagine though the graph of fall off in efficiency of ICE isnt as great with age as with battery
Anecdotal sample size of one, my 2003 honda dinosaur burner takes under a mile to reach normal temp.
I'd hazard a guess you are looking at water temp not engine temp. My petrol car reaches normal temp according to the temperature gauge very quickly, but when I dig into the car info, it shows oil temp takes at least 5 miles to reach the same temp.
Last week we took a 230mls range EVito tourer on a 65 mile journey. We switched the heaters on and it went from 230mls to 180 immediately. So we ended up doing the journey with intermittant heating to clear the windows. Thankfully i drove and had heated seats. We needed to get back the next day and managed it with heating blaring and 19mls left on range. So 230mls range went down to about 150mls real range with sparodic heating.
I have a C300 hybrid. Its amazing with its 11kw electric 100bhp topping up the 200bhp diesel. 650mls diesel range plus 30mls (Summer) or 15-20mls electric range. It is bang on with its range when used around town and can sometime go a month without putting diesel in it. I end up doing about 30% driving on electric.
Best thing is the pre climate control. Get into a tropical temp car, turn heating off and enjoy the full range available.
I am assuming most EVs now come with heated seats and some kind of air scarf so they heat the people rather than having to heat all the air in the car and tusing that to heat the people. With the heated seats on and air scarf blowing at 22 degrees I am quite comfortable with the roof down in sub-zero temperatures in my Kleemann Planet Destroyer and still get 40mpg+
When you start to add factors like towing capabilities, unfavourable terrain or climate etc you can make them inefficient.
The same factors affect ICE cars just as much, if not more.
UK electricity carbon intensity is currently ~280g CO2 / kWh (lowest 270, peak 291)
sauce
Ignoring charging losses, etc, 37g/km implies 7.5km / kWh or 4.7 miles/kWh
That seems much higher than the miles/kWh figures experienced in the previous posts. 2miles / kWh would correspond to ~90g/km CO2 currently.
Yeah that's about what we have been getting the last month or so, so I guess the charger is using an average not the number from the last charge. My wife got 4.2 this morning, going uphill. Last 30 days average is 4.88.
2 m/kWh is awful, about as bad as it gets (in fact that's the worst figure I've seen reported ever). So it's equivalent to an ICE car getting 20mpg.
2 m/kWh is awful, about as bad as it gets (in fact that’s the worst figure I’ve seen reported ever).
Yep. Go Audi !!!
[i]The same factors affect ICE cars just as much, if not more.[/i]
Quite possibly, they just appear to have a greater capability/capacity to cope with it
Quite possibly, they just appear to have a greater capability/capacity to cope with it
True. I considered driving to Scotland in my EV, but ended up taking the diesel instead. It could have been done in the EV but it would have taken a few hours extra. In the grand scheme of things, that's not that high a price to pay for cleaner air and lower CO2 emissions.
Winston - snow ice is the only time I use Eco mode, to kill the torque. And winter tyres.
It is the easiest, and cheapest car I've owned. The thought of owning a petrol engine makes me wince.
[i]It is the easiest, and cheapest car I’ve owned.[/i]
Same here. It has reduced to car to another household appliance. It takes no thought or interest toi use it and it just works. It is the automotive equivalent of a microwave.
In fact that is quite a good analogy.
When microwave ovens first came out there were evangelists saying the microwave replaced everything in the kitchen other than a can opener and you had scaremongers telling you they were the work of the devil and would kill you all
Nopw, most people have them and just use them where the are useful and use other tools for other tasks.
When microwave ovens first came out there were evangelists saying the microwave replaced everything in the kitchen other than a can opener and you had scaremongers telling you they were the work of the devil and would kill you all
Air Fryers are the new Microwave then (or even EV)
No!!! Air Fryers are evil. They will give you cancer and cat aids. Stick to the microwave - they can do anything!!!
😉
It has reduced to car to another household appliance. It takes no thought or interest to use it and it just works.
For most peoples use of cars, for most journeys this is exactly what is needed and what people want. For "fun" that's very different, and an ICE car is much more entertaining. I'd love something a bit rorty to go alongside the EV for occasional fun.
In the interest of science, I just nipped to the shops with all heating off before - the car has sat outside for over 24hrs and it’s zero dwg c out.
It’s a 3.7 mile round trip, with a 5-10 min stop half way.
Efficiency was 2.3mi/kw.hr which is way better than the 1.2 I’ve seen on the same round trip with heating on. 2.3 is about what I’m seeing on long runs with heating on in this weather, so it’s clear that the running the heating to warm the car up from cold has a pretty significant effect.
Isn’t one of the big pluses with EVs that you can use an app to set it to be warm and toasty before unplugging from the house and getting into it ?
@iainc - yes, it’s a lovely feature at this time of the year. My chilly trip was just an experiment to see how much effect heating the car has on cold weather efficiency.
Isn’t one of the big pluses with EVs that you can use an app to set it to be warm and toasty before unplugging from the house and getting into it ?
You can do that with an ICE as well if it has an aux heater.
Vauxhall ComboE for work here (so potential future bike van for someone when it's end of lease! (probably 5 or 7 years)
The official range is 170 miles with a 50kW battery, we are told to expect real life range of about 125 miles fully laden with a ladder roof rack.
I'm loving it, had it a few weeks and it tends to do 2.5-2.7m/kWh, though I reckon it would get towards 3m/kWh if I tried. 65mph long distance it does about half the indicated range, (I'm sure the range on an ICE car would also do this if you had reason to watch it) and town work up to 30mph including heavy congestion it's getting about 90% of the indicated range. I've hardly used Eco or turned the climate control off.
Fully charged indicated range has gradually dropped from 169 miles down to 150 over the last couple of weeks, inline with the temperature drop, quite happy with that...thought it might be worse.
I've topped it up twice whilst out and about on ultrafast chargers, I'm sure there will be occasions where it's inconvenient or I have to wait an hour to get on a charger but then again I'm driving something that's 80-90% efficient using electricity that in my case is 80% zero carbon, vs diesel that wastes over 50% of the energy (and petrol up to 80%) in waste heat/noise.
I’ve recently come back from Dubai where it was 35deg + I did wonder how running the aircon on full would effect battery.
from what people are saying above it wouldn’t use that much battery?
it’s clear that the running the heating to warm the car up from cold has a pretty significant effect.
Some cars have a heat pump for heating which is more efficient than a resistive heater. I'm fairly sure Hyundai have heat pumps as standard now but it's an option on VWs. Not sure about other brands.
For some ICE figures affected by the cold I drove the 5.5 litre V8 about 15 minutes to a shop and then back again both ways had the heated seats on max and the climate control set to 22 degrees. It was -1 when I started.
23.7mpg on the way there. The engine oil went from -2 (cooler than the external thermometer strangely) up to 85 in about the first 5 minutes by which time the car was nice and warm. I suspect the mpg for those first 5 minutes was dire and then closer to the return journey for the next 10 minutes.
32.4mpg for the return journey. Car still warm and so was I.
As you can see, it is considerably worse than the 45mpg achieved on the long cruise up to Manchester in the summer but I think on shorter journeys like this one, which was in reasonably heavy traffic (5pm) I would only be getting mid-30s anyway.
When my wife started this commute in September we were getting 5.2 or so, yesterday it averaged 4.5 in temps of about -2 or -3 in the morning and around 0 on the way home.