Doobster6
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Len
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2024
- Threads
- 19
- Messages
- 225
- Reaction score
- 278
- Location
- Exton, PA
- Vehicles
- 2024 Mach-E Premium extended battery, Vapor Blue
- Occupation
- Retired manufacturing executive
- Thread starter
- #1
Not Really…..that would violate the known laws of chemistry physics. Then again………
So here’s what’s going on. When I first took delivery of my 2004 Premium 4-ER at the end of July in 2024, it was delivered with 7 miles on the odometer, a 100% charge and 303 miles showing for range. Throughout the colder winter months, I saw that range drop to as low as 255, accounting for the lower efficiency of cold batteries as well as the perpetual use of the traction battery to heat the cabin. I’ve been waiting for the warm weather to return so that I could re-evaluate the amount of range loss after one year.
A couple of weeks ago I re-set the driving history so that a new average mi/KWh would be measured and used by the car’s computer to calculate predicted range; one based now on warmer-weather efficiency. I’m a month shy of the one year anniversary as I write this and when I looked this morning the overnight recharge to 90% reported a 289 mile range. These figures imply a total range of 321+ miles, a nearly 6% INCREASE in range!
This is yet again another example of the GOM (guess-O-meter) being unreliable, right? Or is it? The car’s computer probably does something no more complicated that multiplying the percentage of charge available by what it has ‘observed’ as the driver’s actual day-to-day mi/KWh; an easily determined value based on watching the actual flow of battery power measured against the actual miles driven; a number that evolves over time as more data is accumulated. At ‘birth’ and without having a history of actual driving data, it might use a ‘factory-preset’ value that dovetails with the 99 MPGe figure published on my car’s window sticker. I calculate that Ford’s ‘expected’ typical driver mi/KWh is 3.32 for my car (303/91.1).
But I always drive in ‘Whisper’ mode and in a manner that reflects my more casual retired lifestyle (as opposed to the more ‘dynamic’ days of my youth). Using the ‘My Trip’ app, I regularly see 4.1-4.3 mi/KWh in non-highway driving and only drop down to 3.3-3.5 when on the highway doing 75+ mph. I trust the ‘My Trip’ real-time calculations because I think it an easy thing for the car to determine, and since my regularly observed efficiency (4.15) is 25% better than Ford’s (apparent) expectation of 3.32, shouldn’t I be able to trust my improved range calculation? And BTW, while I regularly see 4.1-4.2, I also throw in enough highway miles so that the invisible calculation I can’t see (the accumulated mi/KWh since the last reset), is actually the number the car is using in its predicted range calculation.
Because of that I never expect to see a range prediction as high as 378, which is what 4.15 mi/KWh would deliver for a 91.1 KWh battery pack. But theoretically at least, anyone ‘casually’ driving along flat roads at 45 mph or less, and stopping frequently at intersections and thus constantly recharging the battery, might actually be able to travel that far on a full charge.
Maybe the GOM isn’t as bad as we’ve been lead tro believe?
So here’s what’s going on. When I first took delivery of my 2004 Premium 4-ER at the end of July in 2024, it was delivered with 7 miles on the odometer, a 100% charge and 303 miles showing for range. Throughout the colder winter months, I saw that range drop to as low as 255, accounting for the lower efficiency of cold batteries as well as the perpetual use of the traction battery to heat the cabin. I’ve been waiting for the warm weather to return so that I could re-evaluate the amount of range loss after one year.
A couple of weeks ago I re-set the driving history so that a new average mi/KWh would be measured and used by the car’s computer to calculate predicted range; one based now on warmer-weather efficiency. I’m a month shy of the one year anniversary as I write this and when I looked this morning the overnight recharge to 90% reported a 289 mile range. These figures imply a total range of 321+ miles, a nearly 6% INCREASE in range!
This is yet again another example of the GOM (guess-O-meter) being unreliable, right? Or is it? The car’s computer probably does something no more complicated that multiplying the percentage of charge available by what it has ‘observed’ as the driver’s actual day-to-day mi/KWh; an easily determined value based on watching the actual flow of battery power measured against the actual miles driven; a number that evolves over time as more data is accumulated. At ‘birth’ and without having a history of actual driving data, it might use a ‘factory-preset’ value that dovetails with the 99 MPGe figure published on my car’s window sticker. I calculate that Ford’s ‘expected’ typical driver mi/KWh is 3.32 for my car (303/91.1).
But I always drive in ‘Whisper’ mode and in a manner that reflects my more casual retired lifestyle (as opposed to the more ‘dynamic’ days of my youth). Using the ‘My Trip’ app, I regularly see 4.1-4.3 mi/KWh in non-highway driving and only drop down to 3.3-3.5 when on the highway doing 75+ mph. I trust the ‘My Trip’ real-time calculations because I think it an easy thing for the car to determine, and since my regularly observed efficiency (4.15) is 25% better than Ford’s (apparent) expectation of 3.32, shouldn’t I be able to trust my improved range calculation? And BTW, while I regularly see 4.1-4.2, I also throw in enough highway miles so that the invisible calculation I can’t see (the accumulated mi/KWh since the last reset), is actually the number the car is using in its predicted range calculation.
Because of that I never expect to see a range prediction as high as 378, which is what 4.15 mi/KWh would deliver for a 91.1 KWh battery pack. But theoretically at least, anyone ‘casually’ driving along flat roads at 45 mph or less, and stopping frequently at intersections and thus constantly recharging the battery, might actually be able to travel that far on a full charge.
Maybe the GOM isn’t as bad as we’ve been lead tro believe?
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