Yep. Witness the FordPass app. Doesn't instill a lot of early confidence.Sweet! Hopefully it will work well from the get-go. Not being sarcastic, just being a realistic early adopter.
Remember that For hasn’t rolled out the entire Ford Pass app. I recommending withholding judgement until we see the whole thing.Yep. Witness the FordPass app. Doesn't instill a lot of early confidence.
Not sure if that's a good thing or a bad thing (knowing that this is what we're seeing with the simpler parts, and the more complicated stuff is yet to be added). ?Remember that For hasn’t rolled out the entire Ford Pass app. I recommending withholding judgement until we see the whole thing.
I think the later is the right thing , not all suppliers have credit card readers.I was, but that actually brings up another question... do we really need an account set up for some retail chargers if we're just swiping/tapping a credit card? I would think if paying "at the pump" so to speak (via credit card swipe/tap), then we wouldn't need an account.
Or do some retail chargers not have credit card readers (and thus require pre-registration)?
With what appears to be an FE. Wonder if it was all in Unbridled mode.2.7 kWh/mile on the freeway? ....238 miles.
Sounds about right, if he's been driving interstate for most of that. 70 MPH speed limit in that area. 238 / 270 range = 12% 70 MPH loss. That's about what I would expect.2.7 kWh/mile on the freeway? ....238 miles.
If the dash map was showing where he'd been, then that was also a net elevation gain going west and up into Pennsylvania from the east coast like that.Sounds about right, if he's been driving interstate for most of that. 70 MPH speed limit in that area. 238 / 270 range = 12% 70 MPH loss. That's about what I would expect.
And lots of mountains. Yes, you regain a lot in the downhills and braking but probably only 60-70% so lots of elevation changes will result in at least another 30% range loss even with a net zero elevation change.If the dash map was showing where he'd been, then that was also a net elevation gain going west and up into Pennsylvania from the east coast like that.