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7 votes
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How Japan is losing the global electric-vehicle race
6 votes -
The first (and now last) overhead wire electric ferry in Europe
2 votes -
In Norway, the electric vehicle future has already arrived – the air is cleaner, the streets are quieter, but problems with unreliable chargers persist
4 votes -
Waymo One doubles service area in Phoenix and continues growing in San Francisco
4 votes -
A drive to Taco Bell
4 votes -
GM killed the Chevy Bolt — and the dream of a small, affordable EV
12 votes -
The first of its kind in the world, an e-motorway may lead to an expansion of a further 3,000 km of electric roads in Sweden by 2045
3 votes -
Colorado becomes first state to pass “right to repair” law for farmers
14 votes -
The insane engineering of the M1 Abrams
8 votes -
The world's greatest fighter jet: The F-15 Eagle
1 vote -
Can Burning Man pull out of its climate death spiral?
10 votes -
Tesla sued over claims staff used cars’ cameras to spy on drivers
9 votes -
Chinese EV maker NIO has opened its first European "Power Swap Station" in Denmark – drivers can stop to replace their battery with a fully charged one
13 votes -
Dodge Ram electric pick-up has 500-mile range
8 votes -
I climbed inside a giant robotic parking garage
2 votes -
My first electric road trip into rural Colorado
Last weekend, my girlfriend and I drove down to attend the Monte Vista Sandhill Crane Festival. It's a roughly 4 hour/200 mile drive from Denver down to Monte Vista, with lots of variation in...
Last weekend, my girlfriend and I drove down to attend the Monte Vista Sandhill Crane Festival. It's a roughly 4 hour/200 mile drive from Denver down to Monte Vista, with lots of variation in elevation. I got a Tesla Model Y last June, and since then haven't really had the chance to go out into the remote mountains of Colorado with it.
This weekend would be my first such excursion. Getting down to Monte Vista is absolutely no problem. At about the halfway point in the trip, there's a Tesla Supercharger. That, combined with the range of the car meant that conserving battery was no problem at all.
I was worried, however, about how the car would fare down in Monte Vista for the three days we would be there for the festival. There are no charging stations of any kind in downtown Monte Vista itself (though there are a couple of slow chargers on the outskirts of town, slow chargers with nothing around them are kind of useless). However, there were fast chargers in the towns nearby! One in Del Norte, and another couple in Alamosa, both a 20 minute drive out of Monte Vista. My plan was to charge up at those every evening while we were down there.
On the trip there, we left Denver at 100% SoC, and the battery and cabin preheated for 30 minutes beforehand. We arrived at the Poncha Springs supercharger with about 17% SoC, plugged in and charged to 90%, which took about 40 minutes. The reason for charging this high was because I wasn't sure what state the non-Tesla fast chargers would be at when we got down to our destination area. My plan was to head from Poncha Springs toward the Del Norte fast charger; arrive at 60% and charge back up to 90% before driving around to look for the cranes.
We arrived in Del Norte at 60% SoC as expected, but we found the one fast charger already occupied when we got there. Thankfully, we waited less than 5 minutes for the owners to get back finish charging, after which I was able to plug in and start charging.
This charger was advertised as a 62 kW charger, but for the hour we spent charging there, the charge rate never went above 30. I'm sure part of this was that I was charging from 60-90%, and part of it was that it was cold out, and the Tesla lacks the ability to precondition the battery en route to non-Tesla fast chargers. We ended up charging there for about an hour to get the same charge that the supercharger gave us in 15-ish minutes.
Luckily, there was a brewery/pizzeria and a neat antique shop just a block away.
At some point in the trip, I became aware through Plugshare that the fast chargers down in Alamosa were being taken down that weekend for upgrades. They were installing more stalls, and I guess that necessitated taking the existing ones offline. Now instead of 3-4 fast charging options in this area, I was down to just one. I was certain that because those chargers were down in Alamosa, many more people would come up to use the single charger in Del Norte. Further, I knew that lots of people came down for the crane festival, and so I was worried that there would be an increase in the number of EVs competing for this one charger.
When we got to our hotel in Monte Vista, I noticed there were outlets near the parking lot. I asked the front desk for permission to charge my car in the lot overnight, but was denied because "it would cost them too much money". I thought about offering to pay for the privilege, but the person at the desk didn't really seem interested in pursuing that line of conversation further.
Overnight, the battery stayed charged at pretty much the same level, only losing 1% indicated charge. We got up at 5 AM in order to see the cranes take off from their roosting location in the wetlands, and go out into the fields to loaf (this is the technical term :D). We spent the rest of the day driving around the back roads and farm roads, watching the cranes in the fields.
The whole day I was checking the charge point app to see if the one fast charger available to us was in use, in order to judge how busy it was, and to plan when we might go charge there. Surprisingly, not once did I see it in use!
Since we had had a great day watching cranes, we decided to leave a day early. We had enough charge to get to the Poncha Springs supercharger, and from there back home with no issues.
I thought I would conclude with a few bullet point takeaways from this trip:
- Range anxiety is real. I spent a lot more time thinking about where to charge and if I could charge enough on this trip
- Being away from the Tesla Supercharger network sucks. A whole set of fast chargers I was relying on was taken down exactly when I needed them. They're slower, you have to worry about them not functioning much more.
- Tesla is opening a supercharger site in Alamosa! They filed for the permit just this week. This will basically erase the anxiety I had last weekend on future trips
- Total energy costs for this 500 mile trip were about $35. That feels pretty cheap to me!
13 votes -
A bus that transforms into a train
5 votes -
Electric bikes overtake buggies for some Amish
11 votes -
Can a booming start-up scene help Norway turn its back on oil's poisoned pill? The oil-rich nation's green surge is not as big as it should be
4 votes -
Tesla's squandered lead
10 votes -
Tesla recalls 362,758 vehicles in the US, says Full Self-Driving Beta software may cause crashes
14 votes -
The insane engineering of the F-35B
5 votes -
Our new off road Kid Rig - from 'Not a Wheelchair'
4 votes -
US pilot shot down four Soviet MiGs in thirty minutes – and kept it a secret for fifty years
8 votes -
Lithium company Ioneer scores $700 million conditional loan from Energy Department for Nevada plant
4 votes -
Tesla video promoting self-driving was staged, engineer testifies
9 votes -
eBikes face safety hurdles
7 votes -
Crippling Hitler's navy – the battle that knocked out 50% of the Kriegsmarine's destroyers in Norway
4 votes -
Europe's largest deposit of rare earth metals has been found in Sweden – may not reach market before 10-15 years' time due to environmental risk evaluations
5 votes -
Right-to-repair advocates question John Deere’s new promises
9 votes -
The American Farm Bureau Federation and John Deere have signed a 'Memorandum of Understanding' allowing US customers to fix their own equipment
27 votes -
As demand for electric vehicles soars, Stora Enso in Finland has hired engineers to look into the possibility of using lignin, a polymer found in trees, to make batteries
6 votes -
Here’s the electric car that Sony is going to build with Honda
6 votes -
Four of out every five cars registered in Norway last year was an electric car, according to data released by the Norwegian Road Federation
9 votes -
As e-bike fires rise, calls grow for education and regulation
10 votes -
Tesla: Our ‘failure’ to make actual self-driving cars ‘is not fraud’
9 votes -
Help me find vehicle customization video games
Hi, lately I've been thinking a bunch about Phantom Crash, which I played on an XBox. It was a mecha battle arena game. It had two main modes (three if you count skipping through interminable...
Hi, lately I've been thinking a bunch about Phantom Crash, which I played on an XBox. It was a mecha battle arena game. It had two main modes (three if you count skipping through interminable conversations with NPCs). First, you'd take your mech into an arena and blow people up. Then you'd go to your garage, spending your winnings on upgrading your mech.
The degree of customization you could achieve was striking. There were big options like wheels / legs / hover platform, and a variety of energy / mass / missile weapons. You could get different aim assist chips that had meaningfully different characteristics. You could tune almost any piece of equipment to be lighter or heavier, and a heavier gun really felt more powerful in the arena.
TBH the actual combat was only alright, but we loved the game anyway.
Are there any other games out there that have this kind of feedback loop? Playable today is best, but I'd also go down an internet archaeology hole.
8 votes -
Swedish truck manufacturer Scania the first in Europe to pilot autonomous vehicles while delivering commercial goods – pilot project covering a stretch of some 300km
4 votes -
Can you live with a Citroën Ami? We put the dinky EV to the test.
5 votes -
Design collective Andra Formen has created furniture from electric scooters fished out of the canals of Malmö
4 votes -
With bi-directional charging, the Volvo EX90 basically works as a power bank, allowing the battery to store electricity that can later be transferred back into an owner's home
4 votes -
Before his battery behemoths, Rivian’s billionaire founder made an eco sports car
4 votes -
Mercedes makes better performance, increasing horsepower and torque while dropping 0-60 times, a $1,200 subscription in its EVs
5 votes -
All-terrain wheelchairs arrive at US parks: ‘This is life-changing’
11 votes -
The Udbyhøj Cable Ferry across Randers Fjord in Denmark is electric-powered – but rather than batteries, it's plugged into mains electricity
8 votes -
US to fly supersonic bomber in show of force against North Korea
3 votes -
In the 80s an unlikely collaboration between environmental activists and the pop group A-ha inspired Norway's electric car revolution
5 votes -
Shared micromobility company Bird said it will fully exit Germany, Sweden and Norway – winding down operations in several dozen small to mid-sized markets
3 votes -
This 1970s tank simulator drives through a tiny world
8 votes