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Just did my first 500+ mi road trip

mrtyndall

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I just took my F-150 Lightning on a 280-mile road trip to Norfolk for work. Ive had the truck for about three weeks now and wanted to see how it handled range and charging on a longer drive. Before this, I drove a Model Y, which Ive taken on road trips to Detroit and all the way down to the Keys, so Im no stranger to EV travel.

Overall, Im pretty happy with the Lightnings performance. With winter weather and mostly highway driving, I was getting around 220 miles on a full charge in my Flash. That meant I had to stop twice to charge, adding about an hour to my trip. The biggest adjustment was the larger battery in the Lightning delivering similar range to the Model Y. I was used to 10 to 15 minute Supercharger stops, but now they take about twice as long. Not a huge deal, just something to get used to.

Charging was smooth. I used only Tesla Superchargers and had no issues accessing them aside from looking like I forgot how to park. Luckily, I found chargers I could pull up next to instead of having to take up two spots.


For navigation and charging info, I used ABRP with an OBD2 connector. It worked well for the most part, though I had to adjust some charging stops and the UX felt a bit clunky. I wanted to use Apple Maps, but its suggested charging routes added 40 minutes to the trip. I was also disappointed that I couldnt display Tesla Superchargers along my route since theres no way to indicate NACS compatibility.

BlueCruise on the interstate was a highlight. I actually preferred it over the FSD I used on past road trips. It made the long drive much less tiring.

Overall, it was a great trip, but I wish I was getting closer to 300 miles of range. That would have saved me some time by eliminating the need to charge along the way.
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JL13

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I just took my F-150 Lightning on a 280-mile road trip to Norfolk for work. Ive had the truck for about three weeks now and wanted to see how it handled range and charging on a longer drive. Before this, I drove a Model Y, which Ive taken on road trips to Detroit and all the way down to the Keys, so Im no stranger to EV travel.

Overall, Im pretty happy with the Lightnings performance. With winter weather and mostly highway driving, I was getting around 220 miles on a full charge in my Flash. That meant I had to stop twice to charge, adding about an hour to my trip. The biggest adjustment was the larger battery in the Lightning delivering similar range to the Model Y. I was used to 10 to 15 minute Supercharger stops, but now they take about twice as long. Not a huge deal, just something to get used to.

Charging was smooth. I used only Tesla Superchargers and had no issues accessing them aside from looking like I forgot how to park. Luckily, I found chargers I could pull up next to instead of having to take up two spots.


For navigation and charging info, I used ABRP with an OBD2 connector. It worked well for the most part, though I had to adjust some charging stops and the UX felt a bit clunky. I wanted to use Apple Maps, but its suggested charging routes added 40 minutes to the trip. I was also disappointed that I couldnt display Tesla Superchargers along my route since theres no way to indicate NACS compatibility.

BlueCruise on the interstate was a highlight. I actually preferred it over the FSD I used on past road trips. It made the long drive much less tiring.

Overall, it was a great trip, but I wish I was getting closer to 300 miles of range. That would have saved me some time by eliminating the need to charge along the way.
Congratulations on your first long trip with your F150 Lightning.
I'm currently 2,200 miles away from home with my 2023 F150 Lightning Platinum trim and we had to stop at 21 superchargers with a mix of EA,Blink, Shell Charge, and quite a few Tesla superchargers which are the best by far for reliability.
Anyway on your FordPass you should be able to show the Tesla requiring an adapter; make sure that the filter to hide the chargers with adapter isn't turned on (it did happen to me at first and I couldn't see the Tesla superchargers; it was very frustrating until I found out why).....
Good luck to you and happy travel with the awesome Lightning truck. 😎

Ford F-150 Lightning Just did my first 500+ mi road trip Screenshot_20250222-190139
Ford F-150 Lightning Just did my first 500+ mi road trip Screenshot_20250222-190117
 

explosive0

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Congratulations on your first long trip with your F150 Lightning.
I'm currently 2,200 miles away from home with my 2023 F150 Lightning Platinum trim and we had to stop at 21 superchargers with a mix of EA,Blink, Shell Charge, and quite a few Tesla superchargers which are the best by far for reliability.
Anyway on your FordPass you should be able to show the Tesla requiring an adapter; make sure that the filter to hide the chargers with adapter isn't turned on (it did happen to me at first and I couldn't see the Tesla superchargers; it was very frustrating until I found out why).....
Good luck to you and happy travel with the awesome Lightning truck. 😎

Screenshot_20250222-190139.jpg
Screenshot_20250222-190117.jpg
Are you able to send routes from the app to the car?
 

JL13

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Are you able to send routes from the app to the car?
Yes I use Google maps for the planning and the navigation with Android Auto. With Google maps you can also see the chargers after you select EV for the type of vehicle.....
But I didn't find a way to transfer the Google map planning to the Ford navigation automatically in the truck....🙁
I hope this helps.
 

B177y

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Are you able to send routes from the app to the car?
With ABRP paid version you can do that.

Plan a route on your phone or PC (preferred for me) and you can save it and use it in Android Auto. You can also tweak or edit along the way.
 

JL13

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With ABRP paid version you can do that.

Plan a route on your phone or PC (preferred for me) and you can save it and use it in Android Auto. You can also tweak or edit along the way.
Yes I have also used the ABRP (unpaid version) to find the chargers address and then copy / paste into Google Maps where I divided my total trip (2,000+miles) in three separate maps. Unfortunately Google Maps only let you enter 10 intermediate stops max per map; so each of my stops are the supercharger that I need. You can also confirm the superchargers operating status and availability with PlugShare .....
For some reasons Google Maps can't show all the superchargers for the long trip; it always come back with a server error in my case....
Happy driving this great and quiet truck!
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