Reign of Ravens
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2021
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 462
- Reaction score
- 506
- Location
- Hawaii
- Vehicles
- 22 Mach-E Premium, Chrysler PacHy
This may not be true. Electrek recently had an article about how Tesla battery longevity does not seem to be impacted by frequent DC fast-charging. Granted, that's Tesla and not our Mach-E's, but I thought it was interesting, and I was also under the belief that DC fast-charging would be worse for batteries. Maybe that only applied to the Nissan Leaf, which does not have an active cooling system for its batteries.Also DC charging causing battery degradation much faster.
I'm not sure that it doesn't impact stopping for our cars. AWD in an electric vehicle usually means there's an entire additional motor in the vehicle. That matters because EVs utilize regenerative braking (engine braking) and ours blend it with the friction brakes when stopping. Having a second motor means more regenerative braking power. It would make sense that stopping capabilities should be at least a bit better on the AWD models.AWD does not affect handling of the car - it just makes taking off much easier on slippery surfaces. It does nothing to help steering or stopping.
We only ever hear about 0-60 times. I wish someone would do a 60-0 study because I've never been able to get a definitive answer on this one.
I need it in Hawaii.AWD is only needed in Northern climes, otherwise it is a range defeater.
Our highway on-ramps are ridiculously short, and some connections to highways don't have any acceleration zone before you're merging with traffic. Faster acceleration is critical.
I guess that's technically just the acceleration boost from the second motor, and not really needing all wheels to be active, but meh... point stands for our vehicles, and what taking AWD gets you.
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