Yellow Buddy
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2022
- Threads
- 23
- Messages
- 2,311
- Reaction score
- 3,024
- Location
- Mid-Atlantic
- Vehicles
- F-150L Pro, Rivian R1T, Model S, Model X
- Occupation
- Smart Ass
It’s not just the temperature. I’ve gotten low numbers in 50F and windy/rainy and 2.0-2.2 in 35F where it’s calm.So, for a Ford, 50 degrees is cold? That’s incredible. Other EVs don’t see that sort of degradation until you’re below freezing. And, as I. My post, it got better mileage when it was in the 30s. Same speed. Same climate setting (actually with the climate control off when it did one of the worst legs). So, the “cold” explanation doesn’t hold up. An almost 40% reduction in range, unloaded, just because it’s in the upper 40s to low 50s is pretty sad. And, there are many posts/videos. Of folks out there getting 200 miles in these things at 70 mph. Yes, it’s as aerodynamic as a brick. But, it also has a huge battery compared to my previous EVs. So, I guess it’s useful as long as you never take it out of town.
It’s the aerodynamics. 70mph is where I’ve noticed it gets exponential every mph faster I go. That gets amplified with the weather, significantly more so than any other EV I’ve owned, including the Rivian.
In cold weather I see 10-25% increase consumption on my Teslas. About the same on my Rivian. On the Ford it’s been just a tick higher at 15-30%.
I should note that on my ICE vehicles I notice about the same percentage hit when my state switches to a higher ethanol blend…
The reality is we wouldn’t really care about the hit if we had the appropriate charging infrastructure and/or faster charging speeds
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