I didn’t watch the video - I rarely watch them for the very reason you state in paragraph 2.Basically left out any good details.
What could have been a great video; Ended up looking like a TikTok advert for an f150.
But there was one shot of the trip details.
167 miles (with 7% left).. 178 total.
1.8 miles/kwh
2.5 hours of driving.
So average speed 67mph.
Not great, looked like good weather and a good speed for a test. Looked flat.
That's around 30 miles less than what the early reviews suggested the efficiency could be on freeway, around 2.2.
Gonna feel bad for those people who were hanging on for dear life that ford was sandbagging range.
Basically left out any good details.
What could have been a great video; Ended up looking like a TikTok advert for an f150.
But there was one shot of the trip details.
167 miles (with 7% left).. 178 total.
1.8 miles/kwh
2.5 hours of driving.
So average speed 67mph.
Not great, unless a strong headwind; looked like good weather and a good speed for a test. Looked flat.
That's around 30 miles less than what the early reviews suggested the efficiency could be on freeway, around 2.2. 20 miles less than EPA.
Gonna feel bad for those people who were hanging on for dear life that ford was sandbagging range.
Just wait until cold winter weather hits!If the trip *average* speed was 67 it's likely his cruising speed was much higher, probably 75ish. You're going to see 1.8mi/kwh(or less) at 75, no doubt about that. I just went down to a concert in the Bolt and was at ~65 on the way down due volume on the expressway, on the way back I was at 75-80 most of the way. My efficiency was 4.4 mi/kWh on the way down and 2.9 on the way back. The reality is people most likely need to adjust their driving habits in these vehicles to get EPA range. We're going to be inundated by people complaining about range because they haven't been informed about this.
The other option is understanding and using the DCFC network to improve trip times. Ain't nothing wrong with going 80 and making a 15 minute charging stop instead of driving 65 and getting there on one charge. For a 200 mile trip (in an SR truck), driving faster and making a charge stop will get you there sooner.
The sky is falling!!!Just wait until cold winter weather hits!
Yeah, it was obvious that they weren't really sandbagging range once we knew how big the batteries were.Gonna feel bad for those people who were hanging on for dear life that ford was sandbagging range.
This may be a repeat of what happened with most early gen EVs (ie early Nissan Leaf, BMW i3, Fiat 500e, etc) -- if history repeats itself, this will result in short term glut of second hand SR F150 Lightnings in 2-3 years...then again may be not as the effects of the chip shortages and used car pricing surge seem likely to continue into this time period.......The reality is people most likely need to adjust their driving habits in these vehicles to get EPA range. We're going to be inundated by people complaining about range because they haven't been informed about this.
...
To add to this..Closer to 200 is the expected highway range on the SR battery.
178'ish is very realistic depending upon speed and wind.
He talks openly about going 72-75mph on the highway.
Ford F-150 Lightning EPA Range And Efficiency Officially Listed (insideevs.com)
I would assume (with 99% certainly) that the EPA tests were run using the AT tires as that is the default tire. The All Season for XLT/Pro at options.There are SR batteries using all season tires vs the Pros AT tires which will have a range hit. While not 1:1, Rivian has published a 10-15% range hit on their 20” AT vs 21” AS as an example.