Mach-Lee
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Lee
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2021
- Threads
- 262
- Messages
- 11,344
- Reaction score
- 24,963
- Location
- Wisconsin
- Vehicles
- 2022 Mach-E Premium AWD
- Occupation
- Sci/Eng
My take is that if Ford can show instantaneous fuel economy in their ICE vehicles (which they do), they can show the same type of info in their EVs. In particular, I'd like to see a "past 1 minute" average display. Some people will find that useful, even non-engineers.I'm pretty interested that this is your take on this, you of all people should know that the majority of that information especially in real time just doesn't matter, in fact serves little to no purpose outside of some aggregated minimum for utility, which is provided by ford and along with most of the design queues of this car is simply omitted, aren't you an engineer?
Ford's previous EV, the Focus Electric, had this type of live/recent efficiency display. A bunch of us were surprised when that got omitted from the new Mach-E model.
Not sure if you've even been in a situation where you were trying to make it to a charger but had a dramatic decrease in efficiency that caused you to arrive much lower than anticipated, but it's scary. I'll give an example of why you want a recent average display:
I was on my last leg of a road trip. Cruise control was locked in at 75 MPH for the past two hours. I was getting a typical 2.6 mi/kWh. Route planning said I was going to arrive with about 12% at my destination and was stable the whole way so far. But then with about 45 minutes left, a cold front came through and it started raining. I pressed on. About 20 minutes later, the route planning suddenly said I was going to arrive with only 5%! WTF. So I slowed down to 70. Then a few minutes later ABRP said I needed to slow down to 55 MPH! I did, but then a couple minutes later it said I wasn't going to make it! By this point the charge level was down to 9%, I still had about 20 miles left to go, and there were no DC chargers anywhere nearby being a rural area. I got off the freeway and started driving even slower. A while later I got the "Chargers Unreachable" message on the display. But my rough calculations said I would just make it, so I continued going <45 MPH. Finally I arrived at my destination with only 4% remaining, but the trip efficiency display had only decreased to about 2.3 mi/kWh. That was close!
The route planning initially said I was going to arrive with 12% verses 4%, an error of 8%. But that's with slowing down. If I would have maintained 75 MPH the rest of the way, I wouldn't have made it, which means the actual error was likely >12%. That's very high error because typically I get there within about 5% or less of predicted.
Eventually I figured out the reason the predictions were way off was because the rain, wind, and lower temperatures from the cold front dramatically decreased my efficiency during the last leg of the trip. I estimate the efficiency dropped from 2.6 mi/kWh to only 1.8 mi/kWh. Had I been able to see that drop on a live efficiency display, I would have taken action to slow down much sooner and more aggressively than I did. It took me about 20 minutes to get a handle on the efficiency situation instead of it taking just a glance, which wasted precious time. That trip is why I really want the live display in my next EV.
Sponsored