ILikeBigMutts
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Rarely take the Lightning on longer trips. Went on a 175-ish interstate mile trip (round trip) and underestimated effect of pulling a trailer. Small, aluminum 4x8 trailer, but it decreased mileage noticably. Florida, nice day in the 80s.
Starting home with 900lbs or so on the trailer, it seemed that all would be OK. I know chargers are plentiful, but I've only done home charging and didn't really want to go through the hassle of public charging. As the miles ticked by, the "miles available" kept trending downward toward the "miles to destination" (home), meeting at 25 miles.
I then began throwing cargo overboard. Turned off AC and fan, even turned off the radio. Reduced speed to around 55-60 (insanely slow on I-95 in south Florida). It worked! A gap started--slowly--opening up with battery miles remaining inching above miles to destination.
Knew there was a charger just off interstate about 3 miles from my house, but I'm feeling lucky (and sweaty).
Finally home, with 5 miles remaining!
How accurate is the mileage calculator? I really have no idea since I didn't run out of juice. However, my sense is that it was very close. I could actually watch the calculations move slightly in my favor in 1/10th of a mile increments when I turned off AC, lowered speed, etc.
I was a little surprised at how much of a difference it made when I turned off AC and lowered speed. I think lowering speed resulted in the most improvement.
It was a good thing my wife wasn't with me. She would NOT have appreciated my experiment.
The Lightning is my first EV, and I've for many years driven ICE F150s. Honestly, it's the best vehicle I've ever owned even with range restrictions. It would have been simple to plan for charging that didn't leave me white knuckled. I was just stubborn and curious.
Starting home with 900lbs or so on the trailer, it seemed that all would be OK. I know chargers are plentiful, but I've only done home charging and didn't really want to go through the hassle of public charging. As the miles ticked by, the "miles available" kept trending downward toward the "miles to destination" (home), meeting at 25 miles.
I then began throwing cargo overboard. Turned off AC and fan, even turned off the radio. Reduced speed to around 55-60 (insanely slow on I-95 in south Florida). It worked! A gap started--slowly--opening up with battery miles remaining inching above miles to destination.
Knew there was a charger just off interstate about 3 miles from my house, but I'm feeling lucky (and sweaty).
Finally home, with 5 miles remaining!
How accurate is the mileage calculator? I really have no idea since I didn't run out of juice. However, my sense is that it was very close. I could actually watch the calculations move slightly in my favor in 1/10th of a mile increments when I turned off AC, lowered speed, etc.
I was a little surprised at how much of a difference it made when I turned off AC and lowered speed. I think lowering speed resulted in the most improvement.
It was a good thing my wife wasn't with me. She would NOT have appreciated my experiment.
The Lightning is my first EV, and I've for many years driven ICE F150s. Honestly, it's the best vehicle I've ever owned even with range restrictions. It would have been simple to plan for charging that didn't leave me white knuckled. I was just stubborn and curious.