RickLightning
Well-known member
The manufacturers have some notes that you can find, in very small print, along some lines that you mention. Keep in mind that the numbers they do post are via an EPA formula, so they can't be sued for misstating things since they're doing it the way the government says to do it.I appreciate your detailed thoughts in this thread.
We run our small business on a principle of total transparency.
Manufacturers of EVs would be well-served to adopt a similar principle. All we seem to see is the maximum advertised range, without a peep about how range will decline significantly in cold weather and with towing. The latter is an obvious impact, but it would not hurt (and maybe I have missed it) if in their advertising, there was at least footnote information on "expected" range in cold temperatures and towing certain loads.
With all that said, I am mildly disappointed but still thrilled with my Lightning. I am nowhere close to even thinking about turning in my Lightning. I was just a bit shocked earlier this week. The sting has worn off, and with the discussion here, it is easier to accept.
One of the challenges is how you explain things to the general population (anything, not just EVs) when a good portion doesn't care about details, and a good portion lacks the intelligence to understand. As a college student, I taught for the Red Cross, CPR classes. All materials were geared to a lower ability to understand (I think it was 7th grade / 13 years old) because anything more weighty got lost on the masses.
The other day on another forum someone complained about their vehicle getting lower winter mileage, and said a vehicle in 2013 also did that (8 years ago). They still haven't figured out, in 8 years, that cold weather and winter gas combined cut MPG. Sometimes you just can't fix people's brains.
It should be, but isn't, common sense that if you pull a big box trailer behind you you'll get lower MPG than if you pull a nice bolt, which will get lower MPG than if you pull a small open trailer (without tilted up tailgate). But keep in mind that it's not common sense to most to ensure they tow under capacity, they balance their load, etc. One reason Ford put in the scales was because people are too stupid to know when they're over capacity, or just don't give a crap.
For the small percentage of EV buyers that are outraged and give up, Ford and others will simply resell the EV to someone that isn't upset. Perhaps, eventually, EV knowledge will become common to everyone, but that's a long way off.
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