ABRP and Plug Share are HUGE helps with EV road trips.
Smart carSo I did a “manager’s special” car rental for a trip in a couple weeks. It was $205 for 8 days, so ridiculously cheap.
But the vendor is Thrifty and the car type is an Electric Vehicle.
Anyone know what I'm likely to get? The only part that makes me nervous is there will be about a hundred mile stretch crossing the Everglades from Fort Lauderdale to Fort Myers where there is no infrastructure.
It’s a factor with combustion engines as well, but this will be the first time in a pure EV.
1 owner, accident free, under 120k miles, not an ugly car type, and a mostly flawless body are my standards.
I said for myself, bought an Odyssey with 100k miles for the wife and kids. Set me back $16k which hurt my frugal brain a little.
My car has had nothing but oil changes and the van has had spark plugs and tires. I voluntarily changed the timing belt right after we bought it. Cars are very reliable until 150k miles if you take care of them, and pretty reliable until 200k. I just have to hope that 1 owner took good care of their vehicle but most people who spend enough to buy new keep up good on the maintenance.
Thanks … that’s a huge help!And finally, here is an example of a drive where you want to make sure you have a pretty full battery when you arrive
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Just finished up a round trip to Orlando and back a few weeks ago in our new Model X. About 3,000 miles total. With the extended range compared to my Model 3 and all of the new 250kW Superchargers they've built along the route over the past couple of years, it was a much quicker trip than the one I took 2 years ago. Less time spent charging and I was able to skip past almost all of the older 150kW stations and even a good number of the 250kW stations. Think I only had to stop at 1 of the 150kW stations this time, the one in Kuttawa, KY.
We've got a free trial of FSD going now until December 1st. It was pretty sweet being able to use that out on the open road but I will say that even when telling it to make minimal lane changes, it wanted to switch into the fast lane a bit too much for my preferences. But I like to wait until someone passes me so I can trail them, I don't like being the lead car in the fast lane if I can help it. It also would unexpectedly slow down when passing the Minimum Speed 40mph signs in Georgia because it thought those were new speed limit signs. Had to keep an eye out for those. All in all, a really great drive. Was able to do 860 miles in one day on the way back even when I was sick as a dog, without feeling fatigued because of the assistance from autopilot.
Or when they have a reliable 600 mile range. I’m one of the outliers that can drive that much in a single day for work purposes.I will buy one when there are A LOT more charging stations, such that I don't have to plan long trips around where they are, and when the charging doesn't take much longer than filling up my gas tank.
We had a 2013 Volt that we leased for $185/month. That was such a fun vehicle and way better design than the Bolt. The eRange was not great but you could put gas in the generator. Such a brilliant idea for the early adopters. Not sure we will ever spend the money for an eVehicle unless it's mandatory or less expensive than a combustible. I would love an EV GMC truck though.Those have to be the ugliest ass cars I have seen
Seemed the ethical thing to do as i am the only electric vehicle owner charging from the (common) garage outlets.Why did you offer to pay something? That sounds strange if it’s already included
Advice on the oil change, find someone who will pick it up and return it.We have about 3,000 miles on our Tesla. We've now spent around 80 minutes waiting to charge. I fill up my Kia about every 300 miles and it takes me around 5 minutes each time. So we've spent around an extra 30 minutes to charge during this time. Every 5k miles, I get my oil changed in the Kia, which usually takes about an hour of my time.
Yeah, maybe it's not always convenient but it really isn't as bad as I thought. On Friday, when we knew we had to charge for 30 minutes at a Hy-Vee, I walked over to a ****'s and shopped for some shoes. I got back to the car and it was ready to go.
When we originally bought this Tesla, I only did it because we still had an ICE vehicle for long trips. The more I drive the Tesla, the more I think the next vehicle will be another EV. Maybe we've just gotten very lucky.
I'm not big on other people driving my vehicles.Advice on the oil change, find someone who will pick it up and return it.
Unless you go to Jiffy Lube, they drive them anyhow to warm up the oil and do a quick inspection.I'm not big on other people driving my vehicles.
And that's another thing I don't doUnless you go to Jiffy Lube, they drive them anyhow to warm up the oil and do a quick inspection.