Sklith
Well-known member
Wh/mile or kWh/100 miles are what I prefer, and I hope Ford allows us to see those metrics since miles/kWh is logarithmic and prone to misrepresentation of how efficient a vehicle is.
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My cars have reported it both ways. Chevy volt and bolt were miles/kWh. Volvo EV kWh/100 miles. It would be nice if we can choose how it is displayed.Wh/mile or kWh/100 miles are what I prefer, and I hope Ford allows us to see those metrics since miles/kWh is logarithmic and prone to misrepresentation of how efficient a vehicle is.
I was kind of bummed when I found out EPA rating had basically nothing to do with EPA at all. The OEM's say what the number is and give it to EPA.
This is not correct. EPA rating is directly related to the EPA test cycles. There's just various test cycles and ways you can convey that.I was kind of bummed when I found out EPA rating had basically nothing to do with EPA at all. The OEM's say what the number is and give it to EPA.
EPA will test. I'm not sure if they always do physical tests, however.It's a calculation not an actual test. I
The information I've seen is that only the platinum trim has charging ports on both sides of the vehicle. The others just have a dummy panel on the side without a port.Yes on charge flaps both sides. One side for DC charging is ok, but level 2 on either side, or both at the same time would be great for garage /public charging situations.
EPA will test. I'm not sure if they always do physical tests, however.
https://www.myev.com/research/buyers-sellers-advice/how-the-epa-rates-electric-vehicles#:~:text=An electric vehicle is tested,back to a full charge.
Wow, I never realized the Platinum had dual charge ports. The demos all seemed to have a dummy panel on the passenger side. Due to the way my parking area is set up I'd prefer to have the port on the passenger side but I can live with either one.The information I've seen is that only the platinum trim has charging ports on both sides of the vehicle. The others just have a dummy panel on the side without a port.
TomMolog is on this site and commented on the F150 Lightning FB page so I'd be very surprised if it didn't show up on Inside Evs soon. (Shameless plug for the Inside Evs podcast on Fridays at 930a)
No trim level has the charging port on the passenger side. They are all on the driver.Wow, I never realized the Platinum had dual charge ports. The demos all seemed to have a dummy panel on the passenger side. Due to the way my parking area is set up I'd prefer to have the port on the passenger side but I can live with either one.
On MME, Ford updated the DC charging curve so that charging speed doesn't drop off a cliff at 80%. You can charge to 90% on a road trip. I assume the same will be true with Lightning.Going below 20% is fine as long as you don't let it sit there and continue to drain over night. For road trips charging to 100% is fine, then you would dc fast charge once you reach 10% - 20% charge, up to 80%.
I would also not be surprised if Ford kept a little in reserve too just in case. On the MME the EPA range creeped up a bit after first year as the powertrain was retuned via OTA. Would not be surprised at a slight range increase MY 23 and MY24. These could also update MY22 after the fact.On MME, Ford updated the DC charging curve so that charging speed doesn't drop off a cliff at 80%. You can charge to 90% on a road trip. I assume the same will be true with Lightning.
Unless you need that extra 10-20%, it's still best to keep it at 80%. It's better for battery life, but for me, it's mostly about time.On MME, Ford updated the DC charging curve so that charging speed doesn't drop off a cliff at 80%. You can charge to 90% on a road trip. I assume the same will be true with Lightning.