jbirdzee
Well-known member
- Thread starter
- #1
With the SR and ER trucks having the same torque but different horsepower, I am led to believe that the two versions share the same motors but you get more HP from the ER version because it runs at a higher voltage. Do I have that right?
My work commute is mostly highway, ~72mph, 55 miles each way. I have two questions:
1. Are we likely to see a drastic difference in the ER version of this truck combating bad aerodynamics and headwinds compared to the SR at freeway speeds?
2. With regards to pack cycling, (I do not have charging at work), with 110 miles round-trip I figure I'm cycling my battery 50% on each work day, possibly more with freeway speeds or in the winter. For trips to work I won't be hauling anything other than myself, but I am thinking I would be cycling the SR pack more than the ER battery and would end up hastening degradation. I would be interested in hearing a battery expert's thoughts on that.
My work commute is mostly highway, ~72mph, 55 miles each way. I have two questions:
1. Are we likely to see a drastic difference in the ER version of this truck combating bad aerodynamics and headwinds compared to the SR at freeway speeds?
2. With regards to pack cycling, (I do not have charging at work), with 110 miles round-trip I figure I'm cycling my battery 50% on each work day, possibly more with freeway speeds or in the winter. For trips to work I won't be hauling anything other than myself, but I am thinking I would be cycling the SR pack more than the ER battery and would end up hastening degradation. I would be interested in hearing a battery expert's thoughts on that.
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