DaMeatMan
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Joe
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2021
- Threads
- 46
- Messages
- 497
- Reaction score
- 1,191
- Location
- Toronto, ON, Canada
- Vehicles
- Mustang Mach-E Premium AWD Extended Range Battery
Almost everyone who makes a post like this and say "they are only getting xxx km or miles at full charge" are simply looking at the the GOM (Guess'o meter).I have an extended range Mach e and I'm only getting 330kms at full charge. What is going on. The best i got was 430kms in the summer, but now it's 330 at best. Is there something wrong here?
With that said, if you actually go out and DRIVE the vehicle from 100% to 50%, I'm fairly certain you'll come to an amazing realization. Which is that you actually get far more than was projected, particularly if you don't have the heat cranked. So do yourself a favor and start there.
With that said, Ford is being super pessimistic to ensure that their customers who are likely first time EV drivers, get a projected figure that (at least) projects what is actually achievable in the real world, rather than assuming customers know about cold weather range losses, showing them the same figures they saw in the summer and then leaving them stranded on the side of the road.
Given that temps have suddenly dropped recently, they also assume you're going to do what anyone does when it gets cold (crank the heat), and that my friend uses ALLOT of energy. Just assume that if you do actually do that, you're going to lose about 100km right there. If you don't do that, then you will likely go quite a while before the GOM's projected range starts to decrease. But understand that ANY vehicle in the colder weather, particularly with snow on the ground is going to run allot less efficiently. Once you have snow or slush on the ground you can add increased drag to the equation as well. But the big one is heating the cabin.
Things you can do to minimize losses in an electric vehicle during colder months is:
- minimize use of cabin heat and use seat warmers or steering wheel heater. This draws hundreds of watts vs thousands of watts for cabin heat. In a combustion engine vehicle this heat is practically free since it's normally radiated out into the air anyway and the produce 70% waste heat and 30% locomotion. But with electric vehicles that are over 75% - 80% efficient you need to actually WASTE energy ON PURPOSE to produce heat in the cabin.
- if you plug in at night always precondition the cabin while plugged in since it takes less energy to maintain that heat, and it's initial heating which uses most energy and you want to draw that power from the wall outlet, and not your battery
- re-inflate tires to offset pressure losses due to colder air (cold air contracts)
- Don't drive like a maniac and keep at or below speed limits.. ya I know that's boring but speed kills range
- pay attention to your current consumption and adjust behaviors (before) range loss, rather than after range loss and then end up scratching head wondering where it all went. For context the extended range MME 4X requires an efficiency of 5km/kwh to achieve its rated range of 440km. So if your seeing 3 or 4 km/kwh, ask yourself what u can do to fix that. This is a metric that is dynamically changing, and you can see in near real time how your behavior changes this stat. So forget the GOM, and pay attention your efficiency. A realistic number to shoot for is about 4 - 4.5 km/kwh in winter driving, which would net you about 350km - 396 km which would be considered very good for the cold winter months.
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