bbulkow
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Brian
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2022
- Threads
- 24
- Messages
- 889
- Reaction score
- 729
- Location
- menlo park, california
- Vehicles
- Honda CRV
- Thread starter
- #1
Received '23 Premium RWD ER Thursday. Wrote this Saturday, now with 250 miles on the clock.
- BlueCruise took 48 hours to activate. All you peeps who said "I got a new '23 and no bluecruise!", it appears to be account setup and verification - a matter of time. The dealer had told me 48 hours, and that's about what it was for me. It's not about setting up the cell modem, although who knows, maybe that puts you earlier in the queue.
- BlueCruise is pretty spanky good. I had it on bay area roads (101) and it worked as advertised. I use the auto lane change - I don't think it's slow, it's just polite, as polite as I aspire to be and never quite am. My partner did make fun of Blue Cruise : what's the point if you still have to pay attention?
- WITH ONE MAJOR SAFETY EXCEPTION. There are a few spots on 101 in the bay area where Blue Cruise believes the speed limit is 45 and 55. I'm certain there was construction there 6 months ago, but there's nothing there now. It's 65MPH and traffic is flowing 70 to 75. Bluecruise "helpfully" resets your cruise speed and starts dropping pretty quick (staying within regen), giving you enough time to react, but it's unsafe. This is a serious issue. Any idea of someone to yell at @Ford? It seems hard to turn off? There's a system setting for "speed limit assist" but I don't think it takes effect for BlueCruise? Checking that out today.
- Disappointed with the RWD performance, yes, as expected. The horsepower numbers aren't that different from my Honda CRV. The 3 is a bit lower and more fun, too, but I was buying a car with semi-SUV cargo capacity and I knew it. "As expected". It's still an EV, just a kinda big hulking one. The suspension seems fine - tight enough, not too tight. I wouldn't call it a great driving car by any stretch.It is nice being in a modern car with RWD, did get the wheels spinning a few times.
- Charging times seem long compared to the Tesla 3. I'm having to deal with public charging while I get my box installed (no 220 plugs in my house, long story). I hit a DC fast charger, and wish I knew how fast it was really charging…. according to the box, 50KW. I hit the same spot later, lower on charge, and maybe I got to 70KW? Wasn't terribly cold (55F?). Reading up, it looks like you get 150KW and similar only when you're really quite low (10%?), so doing 10% -> 50% charges might be optimal. When I get my home charger, I'd expect to do away-from-home only when I need a few more miles on a longer driving day, so just driving it to 10% to get a bump to 30% to get home then putting it on overnight would be a quick stop, so this goes away.
- Charging. Non-tesla networks have chargers Near Things! One is near a large and fancy shopping mall, so I cruised over to my favorite fancy food store, stopped for a coissant and an espresso, got a nice 20%.. Very different from the parking lot of an apandoned Sears, and a scary parking lot between a 24 hour fitness, taco bell, and mcdonalds. For a road trip, close to the freeway and no amenities *is* better, though. But we also see Magic Docks rolling out at Supercharger stations, so in 12 months I hope the "either or" will be a thing of the past.
- Dealer experience was OK(ish)! I've had an order on the books since 9/7/22 and no motion. With tax changes of '23, I wondered if "my car" (RWD ER Premium "Orange") was nearby. I found one at the closest local dealer, oddly enough, out of a 500 mile radius search there were only 2. 5 miles away! I went down partially because I was still on the fence with Red (orange is better!), partially because I wanted my partner to give a thumbsup (she's picky; she did), and I had never sat in one. I told the sales guy I would do the deal at MSRP, and he tried playing all the usual games but not very hard. Paid cash, spent maybe an hour and a half at the dealer between sitting in it (going home), doing some initial paperwork (which put the sale on the books from their perspective but wasn't very binding), and doing the final paperwork (acutal DMV bill of sale and actual check). Being a few miles away helped ("wait for your manager? yeah, here's my cell number, text me one word yes or no, I'm out of here though"). I considered taunting them by asking for a discount… but took the car at MSRP. Man, these things are going to be tough to move at MSRP, it's just not that much car for the money with Tesla afoot.
- Charging and route planning software is far worse than I thought! I had some fantasy that between Android Auto enabling third party, Google Maps, and all the charging networks, I would be able to say "find a charge on the way home" and it would work. So not so! ABRP's android auto hangs too much (and is designed for longer trips). Google's "charging stations" shows those near and for a few searches showed Teslas but I'm not sure why (I had set "my plugs"). ChargePoint / PlugShare / EA / EvGo / Shell are too hard to use on the car screen while driving - the UIs just need help (Ford and Google have "speed of charge" as an always-exposed button, which is key for the driver, and number of chargers / number of fast and slow chargers currently available just right in the list). Essentially, a co-pilot will be key on longer trips - eg, they can drive, I can sort through the 5 networks and what taquerias are good to find the optimal lunch spot.
- Astonishingly, Ford's nav and route is not bad at all. I might say it's on par with Tesla. It's good at filtering fast and slow, seems to show what's available and what's not. Looks like that's the best choice if you're actually driving and decide you need a bump on the way home.
- Trouble with PAAK (resolved). Yesterday, I decided to enable "mykey" (sounded friendly), then I realized it was some kind of Parental Control, so I removed "mykey", and right about then, my PAAK stopped working. Ok, remove my PAAK create a new one. When I did that, creating the new PAAK failed. Luckily, I had created both the door code and the emergency start code, and I had wrapped a fob in foil and stashed it. After much thrash, it seems that if you create a PAAK, and your phone screen timeout is 15 seconds, if your lock screen hits, when you come back to the app you're on a different page. I just fooled with the phone and kept touching it so it didn't go to sleep, now I have a new PAAK and it works fine. Teething, but please Ford, attention to details!
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