greenne
Well-known member
- First Name
- Nathan
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2021
- Threads
- 27
- Messages
- 1,894
- Reaction score
- 2,305
- Location
- Niskayuna, NY
- Vehicles
- 2022 Lightning (Ordered 6/19, delivered 10/28/22)
TBH this seems like common sense to me. For example, if you go down a flat road with "one pedal" on you are constantly putting energy in the battery when in regin and pulling energy away when stepping on the pedal. It may be small, but there will be transition losses.Many people have done range experiments in my electric motorcycle groups and have found that coasting when off the throttle results in a greater range per charge than allowing regen to engage when off the throttle. As a result many prefer the choice to have regen only engage when actively braking so as to allow coasting in all scenarios where they don't want to slow down rapidly or maintain speed.
When I get my truck, I'll prioritize my decision based first off of comfort and second off of impact on range.
Coasting all the energy goes toward vehicle motion(minus friction). It should be more efficient.
*IF* you can stop using the brake pedal without using the friction brakes(blended braking) and coast on the flats, you'd conserve range more than one pedal due to transition(or is it transmission?) losses. I'm sure some others would disagree, but to me it seems like basic physics....
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