Arsenic17
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Arsenic
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2022
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 314
- Reaction score
- 257
- Location
- Denver, CO
- Vehicles
- MME GT 2023 Vapor Blue
- Thread starter
- #1
With Google Maps now showing state of charge and integrating charging stops, it has become my go to for navigation for the following reasons:
Surely I am not the only one that feels this way? Ford needs to get their shit together. I would blow my brains out if I had to rely on the Ford Nav daily for any reason.
- Somehow despite the Ford Nav presumably understanding the efficiency of the car better, Google Maps is consistently way more accurate in terms of range and usage. It's usually spot on in terms of my arrival SoC for all trips. Ford is just embarrassing. It seems to be particularly terrible when elevation changes are involved, but even on flat ground its horrid.
- For example, had a trip the other day starting near 10k feet elevation and going down to 5k feet. 140 mile trip. Started with 49% SoC. Ford Nav wanted me to stop for a ~30% charge in the middle of the trip and had me getting to end with 15% or so. Thus thinking I would use like 64% battery on this trip. Google had me stopping for a ~10% charge and had me getting home with 15%, thus thinking I would use 44% for the trip. I know from experience Google made way more sense so I went with that routine. For most of the drive the cluster was showing my projected range was significantly below how far it was to my charging stop. What a joke. Let's just say I made it home with 13% battery and didn't charge at all. Using a total of 36% to go 130 miles, with a new elevation loss of ~5k feet.
- Had same experience on a largely flat roadtrip a few months ago. Ford constantly showing I would have no hope to make it to the next charger. Google showing I would have plenty of buffer. Google always steered me right, and even Google is somewhat conservative and often depletes faster than reality.
- Ford Nav constantly routes me to stupid chargers at dealerships. I haven't been able to figure out how to exclude networks and such on either platform, but at least Google takes me to actual public DC stations and not awkward stealerships, often ones that aren't even Ford.
- Ford Nav has some really annoying quirks in the Denver area. If you disable HOV lanes in the nav settings, often it will then completely avoid highways which have only 1 HOV lane of the 3 or 4 total lanes. There are a lot of highways here like that. So in order to not have it totally avoid highways, I have to leave HOV on and it constantly tells me to exit and enter HOV. Super annoying. None of this happens with Google.
- Google real-time traffic is way more accurate. Ford seems really hit or miss. Either it is low temporary or spatial resolution, or both smeared together.
- Only benefits I know from Ford Nav are:
- It will precondition the battery as you near your DC station. Doesn't seem like Google does that.
- Ford Nav UI is better and more usable in the car. The view of exit lanes and such is nicer. The charger details are nice.
Surely I am not the only one that feels this way? Ford needs to get their shit together. I would blow my brains out if I had to rely on the Ford Nav daily for any reason.
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