Download the PDF manual to your computer, phone, and tablet. Then you can easily search for any term.I know I’ve seen it before but I can’t for the life of me find that part in the manual right now. Which section is it under?
Just did that!Download the PDF manual to your computer, phone, and tablet. Then you can easily search for any term.
First, if you look, you’ll notice I’m not the one that brought it up in this thread.Good lord Frankie give it up. This is huge news for more people than trap speeds, and Kyle is one of the best in the business by far. Even if Kyle were to ask there’s no way they’d say anything, there’s an embargo until Mid-October as reported by Mike Levine on Twitter. There’s going to be no-comment on driving dynamics or performance from any reputable outlet until then. Anyone that jumps the gun runs risk of getting blackballed by Ford going forward. It’s not worth the risk to anyone in the business to push those buttons with automakers. Even then, Kyle admitted he hasn’t done enough research yet to understand the problem you’re blaming him for not bringing up. I appreciate the fact that he does his research before trying to pin someone to the wall. He’s done great analysis of the charging curve with InsideEVs.
Here’s the trap speed thread for your reference, in case you forgot where to find it.
Here’s another one. Stop bringing your issue into every irrelevant thread. It’s absolutely an issue and until the embargo and media drive you’re unlikely to hear anything.
Please, let others talk about other topics they care about in the appropriate threads.
I agree.Moving the charging cliff to 90% means that not just longer lunch stops will be more useful but also the stops early in a trip won't be wasted. If my first stop from home is at 70% then plugging in to get back to 90% is an opportunity I won't want to miss.
I just hope people don't get their expectations set for 90% based on this. I read it more as a maybe. Both a maybe of it happening at all, and a maybe as 90% being the new number (vs like 85% or something).I agree.
DC charging to 90% more reasonably enables EV road trips in my standard range Mach-E. I'll have a larger buffer to arriving to the next charging stop (it it's backup), and this will make me less anxious.
I am new and haven't followed Ford's journey with the Mach-E, but battery advantage is the biggest advantage in EVs now when everyone is forced to a few suppliers now and that's it. You have a fire/battery issue like GM (I'm a Bolt EV owner) and everything is literally shut down. You can't sell a thing and also have no clue what the supplier is doing. I honestly feel battery supplies will be extremely limited for many many years. Tesla's Musk stated they were backordered to the tune of 80,000 poweralls alone. You have every EV maker and then some coming with EVs (Audi, BMW, Porsche, VW, Hyundai) and there are only so many around.Usually, the legacy corporate types that talk about EVs give generally sweeping statements and don't get into the weeds because they don't have a clue what owners experience.
Agree. Something like 85% before cliff diving would be useful to many provided other factors align to mitigate damaging effects.I just hope people don't get their expectations set for 90% based on this. I read it more as a maybe. Both a maybe of it happening at all, and a maybe as 90% being the new number (vs like 85% or something).
No doubt any expansion would be nice though. While the current charge curve works fine for me as it is, no one will complain about saving a few more minutes. ?
Hmmm. I guess it depends on what is meant by "massively behind". I consider it smart for Ford to have waited to really jump in until battery tech got good enough to deliver 300 mile range in desirable body styles. Starting any sooner wouldn't have made much sense for them IMO.I'm glad and really hoping Ford continues to admit they are massively behind, but try to improve (be humble that you're playing massive catchup...hard for any legacy company (look at what Tesla/Amazon did to Walmart/ToysRUs/etc... Tesla is worth more than every auto maker combined).
I just stopped at the Huber a heights one on a road trip and was stuck with the 34kW charging. It was horrible. 1 hour + for 115 miles of range needed to the next stop. An ID4 showed up and thought that was the max their car could do… they had bought it recently and only charged it there.You heard wrong.
I reported the Huber Heights location was only giving 34kw at the 350kw locations. On August 29th. Now, 3 weeks later, PlugShare shows the same issues...https://www.plugshare.com/location/171776
Two Chevy Bolt owners thought 34kw was normal... One said the chargers "ramp down during peak electrical demand".
Go look on PlugShare for Gainesville.
https://www.plugshare.com/location/192956
Here's Bushnell, FL. I reported them also. Weeks later, still broken...https://www.plugshare.com/location/158468
You discovered what I did - that most EV drivers have no clue about charging. We talked with an ID4 driver and had to help him get it charged, all he could talk about was 3 years of free charging. He also told me that his car and mine had the same fast acceleration...I just stopped at the Huber a heights one on a road trip and was stuck with the 34kW charging. It was horrible. 1 hour + for 115 miles of range needed to the next stop. An ID4 showed up and thought that was the max their car could do… they had bought it recently and only charged it there.
Yeah ID4 get free EA charging, hopefully it’s not doing ONLY DCFC though, yikes.I just stopped at the Huber a heights one on a road trip and was stuck with the 34kW charging. It was horrible. 1 hour + for 115 miles of range needed to the next stop. An ID4 showed up and thought that was the max their car could do… they had bought it recently and only charged it there.
A lot of this lack of knowledge is lack of dealer training or caring about EVs. Most car salesman think it's a passing fad that won't last. Others think it won't matter in their lifetime.You discovered what I did - that most EV drivers have no clue about charging. We talked with an ID4 driver and had to help him get it charged, all he could talk about was 3 years of free charging. He also told me that his car and mine had the same fast acceleration...
Woman pulled up in brand new Audi. Stuck in her credit card, had no knowledge of charging speeds or anything else for that matter.
They also know Ford is moving away from the dealer shenanigans, so they really have no incentive to learn about all this stuff.A lot of this lack of knowledge is lack of dealer training or caring about EVs. Most car salesman think it's a passing fad that won't last. Others think it won't matter in their lifetime.
Move over Dino Dealers! EVs are here to stay!
Much like their petrol products, their time is limited. Learn the new products or go extinct!