davidd
Member
Is anyone pushing their Focus electric to its limits? I want to be able to commute about 60 miles, some city some highway, between charges.
Hmm, how did you come up with this figure of 1/3? It makes no sense. The energy originally stored in the battery always accounts for all the usable range. Regenerated energy actually accounts for none of the usable range.brogult said:Regenerated energy accounts for a third of your usable range.
davidd said:Thanks for the input. I live in Dallas, Tx and drive about 55 miles one way to work. My biggest expense every month is for fuel. I have wanted to go with a EV but just couldn't make the dollars work when the FFEs were $50,000. Now that they are a reasonable price am going to give it a try.
Agreed... this just seems to be semantics.brogult said:I understand that the regen energy doesn't "magically appear". My point is just that if you don't recapture it, you lose about a third of your range.
Yep 1/10 regenerative average is closer for my experience over the past month as well.jmueller065 said:That 1/3 figure is a bit high. For most of my driving is more like 1/10 and it can vary greatly depending on where you are driving (you could drive 50 miles down the highway using cruise and only regen when you exit).
Okay, but I think you've misinterpreted it. That display shows a mileage estimate (based on the energy captured by regeneration) that overlaps with the "main" range estimate. The display isn't showing miles that can be considered "in addition" to the main estimate -- is a simple translation of the captured energy into miles as something that is easy to relate to (than, say, a read-out of the same thing in kWh).brogult said:I get my 1/3 figure by looking at my display after I shut the car off. It gives you that figure.
No, you can actually go about 76 miles, even at freeway speeds, if you keep you keep consumption 250-260 Wh/mi -- without doing any regeneration at all. I've done it.brogult said:I understand your theoretical example where you could get maximum range without any regen, but that is pretty unlikely.
No, sorry if I was confusing. I didn't mean to say 76 miles was the "absolute" maximum range.Abelgoddard said:I certainly can't claim to be an expert here, but it sounds like wattsup is wrong, if I understand him correctly. They way I read that last post is that 76 miles is the maximum distance you could drive at all on a single full charge, which is just not true.
Those people simply aren't driving at 60 mph and averaging 250 Wh/mi (which would only yield about 76 miles, as shown above).Abelgoddard said:... how are people clocking 100+ miles on a single charge?
Unfortunately, you've been mislead by the way in which Ford chose to display changes in the mileage estimate with the so-called "status" number (which is actually very useful once you understand how it works, but often leads to misconceptions about regeneration).Abelgoddard said:I mean, I know that one time on my normal 17 mile route to work (roughly 3/4 is Dallas city traffic) I've started with an estimate of 70 something miles, and ended with a regen number of +15.
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