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
I own that model, happy with my purchase. You don't state what year though. The 2023.5 and forward had a good change to the cooling and heating system that should improve range.We are strongly considering buying a Mach-E Premium RWD (big battery). We’ll be asking the salesman these questions shortly, but I’d really like to hear answers from actual owners like you folks! If any of you have a few moments to answer these questions we’d much appreciate your time. Thanks!
Thanks again!
- Realistically, how much range can we expect at temperatures of 40F, 72F, and 100F, with reasonable levels of climate control and pretty-conservative driving style?
- We can use Tesla Superchargers now (if we have the NACS adaptor), right? Does the adaptor limit charging speed?
- We can still use Electrify America, EVgo, Chargepoint, etc, right? That is, Ford striking a deal with Tesla didn’t PO Electrify America or something crazy like that, right?
- How hot does the frunk get in 95-degree weather? On the one hand, it’s not ventilated, so it should be hotter than outside, but on the other hand, it’s not exposed to sunlight either, so hmmm…
- Please tell me about the reliability or not of your Mach-E…?
I get a realistic 250 miles between charges on a road trip with modest climate control. That includes charging to 80 percent and charging up again somewhere in the 10 to 15 percent range. My 0 to 100 range on freeway is probably 320 to 340, but i dont usually push it on either end.
My at home range is hard to say. On cold days the heater comes on to heat the battery, and the cabin (i tend not to preheat because the ford app is bad at it), and then do a short trip (like a few miles to the store). The drive to the store (not freeway) is almost nothing but the heating is a lot. If i do a longer trip (an hour to another town) the heating of the battery is essentially spread over time. What is real is i never need to think about public charging during the course of any normal day, and that includes days where i have to drive an hour and a half somewhere, and back.
The car has been reliable except for bluecruise. It tends to throw 'driver facing camera fault' errors. It is sporadic and has been to the dealer 4 times. They always do a software update and shrug, which is frustrating.
I recently got the a2z adapter and have used it in anger a few times. It changes everything. Yes you can still use all the other networks, but supercharge stations are the easy button except for parking and getting the adapter on. The stations are all 250kw so you dont need to learn arcana about charger types (eg evgo 200kw max out at 71kw on a 400v architecture car, but an ea 150kw delivers all the way to 160kw). The number of stalls at a supercharger is usually a lot more than other networks where there might only be one or two, and a big station is 20, while a big tesla station is 100. The annoyance is we don't have access to the entire network but it is still so, so, much better to have. Road trips just aren't an issue any more.
The larger battery charges more kw, thus more miles per minute, but there are more miles in the tank, so you're charge times are about the same. On a road trip it seems a couple of tacos and a bathroom break are 20 to 25 minutes which is a decent 60 percent charge, and back on the road. In round numbers 10 percent is 30 miles on a 91kwh battery but we get anywhere between 2.8 and 4.0 m / kwh depending primarily on traffic. More traffic is more efficient because it keeps us more in the 60mph zone, and drafting naturally. The open road we are temped to flow at 75mph with no draft targets, that hits the low end of the range.
I don't road trip much. I charge at home. If you have home charging an ev is a great thing, especially one with this much range.
I would say the most common non tesla evs i see on the road are rivian, id.4s and ioniq5 and bolts, probably in that order. If i was in the market today i would look at the toyota brzx, which has similar interior space to a mache. The 800v architecture of the ioniq is a plus, as is the interior space, but i didn't optimize for road trips. I love the fit and finish and solidity of the car, and fords conservative engineering of the battery pack. I am also glad i didn't go through the hvbjb issues (while parts still seem to fail, just like the similar part failed on my uncle's tesla, it isn't the high rate pre mid 2022). It seems most other companies had teething pains of some sort or other, buying just about anything now gets you past the early adopter pain.
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