phil
Well-Known Member
Very sensible. Why torture yourself and the kids needlessly? Road trips are why God gave us gasoline....this sounds awful enough that I’m thinking renting a gas-powered car is our only option for this trip.
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Very sensible. Why torture yourself and the kids needlessly? Road trips are why God gave us gasoline....this sounds awful enough that I’m thinking renting a gas-powered car is our only option for this trip.
We’re actually not quite there yet either with our son and I think diaper changes are probably easier than just starting potty training during a road trip, but having been through it with our daughter, they now sell these plastic bags with absorbable inserts in them that fit over the portable potty we used for our daughter. Everything was contained, she loved getting to pee on the turtles on the lining, and we loved being able to just tie the bag and dump it! They sell them on Amazon and while I don’t recall them being expensive, whatever they cost was worth it!A friend mentioned a hack for the potty. Bring some large/adult diapers to line the inside of the potty. Makes for easier cleanup on the road. I personally haven’t tried it yet, my granddaughter isn’t quite there.
I did something similar. But knowing what I know now, I wish I had been far less permissive.We dont let our kids use any screens for a trip under 2.5 hours (90% of our roadtrips). Then on longer we give them tablets and a hotspot, they can go for hours on end!
Oh? In hindsight what would you have changed.I did something similar. But knowing what I know now, I wish I had been far less permissive.
I would have been far less permissive of screen time - deferring cell phones till older ages, more restrictive limits on screen hours/times of day/particularly harmful applications (mostly games). That sort of thing. The occasional road trip tablet session probably would not be too harmful, but it all accumulates. It's too late now for me.Oh? In hindsight what would you have changed.
Its tough being a parent these days. I try to use us and our friends/family as example to our kids and explain how adults are really struggling with the balance and we had almost NO tech as kids!I would have been far less permissive of screen time - deferring cell phones till older ages, more restrictive limits on screen hours/times of day/particularly harmful applications (mostly games). That sort of thing. The occasional road trip tablet session probably would not be too harmful, but it all accumulates. It's too late now for me.
This. Abrp has settings, the defaults are usually ok, op may have fooled with them.I think you're not using ABRP correctly then.
Leave with 100%, stop at EA in Henderson, charge from 18% to 83%. Stop at Tesla in Gastonia, charge from 10 to 67% (I would go to 80%). Stop at Tesla in Commerce, GA and charge from 10 to 47%. Arrive with 20%.
If you don't have a Tesla adapter, ABRP tells you to charge in Henderson, then Greensboro and Greenville. No issue at all.
Can’t say I really miss those days???We’re actually not quite there yet either with our son and I think diaper changes are probably easier than just starting potty training during a road trip, but having been through it with our daughter, they now sell these plastic bags with absorbable inserts in them that fit over the portable potty we used for our daughter. Everything was contained, she loved getting to pee on the turtles on the lining, and we loved being able to just tie the bag and dump it! They sell them on Amazon and while I don’t recall them being expensive, whatever they cost was worth it!
Unless your kids have bladders of steel, I suspect you’ll be stopping more often than that. Breaking up the trip with more frequent but shorter travel stops may be a good thing. As others suggest, make the stops into fun stops however you can.I think you're not using ABRP correctly then.
Leave with 100%, stop at EA in Henderson, charge from 18% to 83%. Stop at Tesla in Gastonia, charge from 10 to 67% (I would go to 80%). Stop at Tesla in Commerce, GA and charge from 10 to 47%. Arrive with 20%.
If you don't have a Tesla adapter, ABRP tells you to charge in Henderson, then Greensboro and Greenville. No issue at all.
Also check if there is a hotel along the way with an EV charger in their parkade and a water slide feature.
are there plenty of Walmarts on your route? When my son was that age, he loved creeping around the toy aisle. Granted, their toys are all Chinese plastic, but he could gaze at the Legos, Nerf guns, skateboards and bicycles for hours. In the meantime, your Mach-e is charging to full capacity and you can grab a couple of coffees.Another vote for "just slow down and enjoy the trip". When travelling with our toddler I wouldn't try to do giant days regardless of the vehicle, and honestly in most real world cases the need to stop for potty and snacks happens as often as charge stops, and my charge is usually above my target % by the time everyone is done with those things anyway. Basically, the charge stop isn't actually slowing things down more than just the sanity stops we'd need either way.
I do recommend bringing a small travel potty if your 22mo is starting to use it, that helps with charge stops that don't have an easy bathroom nearby. Also, have a few outdoor toys to play with so they can squirt water or wave ribbons around in a grassy spot while charging - that will let them burn off some energy, and make it more likely that they will sleep between charges. Helps you too - I find I'm a lot less stiff and irritable after long drives in the MachE than in previous cars, partly due to the lower noise, and partly due to the enforced walking/stretching breaks.