So another question. Would it be sufficient to have a larger gas tank as part of a tow package? So those who don’t need it/want it aren’t paying for it.
In my younger days (early 20s) I would easily go about 400 miles. I could go from Houston to central Nebraska with only 2 stops. These days... yea I need more breaks.Thanks. I am legitimately curious. We have done a few cross country trips and many day trips and we stop often for stretch breaks, bathrooms, food, etc To me even 500 is more than I would need. We did one cross country trip in the Wrangler and one in the Supra and they both have about 320ish mile range. We would stop when we were down to about a third of a tank so we were probably going about 250 miles between stops. This is why I think the BEV will be perfect for us.
So another question. Would it be sufficient to have a larger gas tank as part of a tow package? So those who don’t need it/want it aren’t paying for it.
That’s the thing. Let’s say someone only does long trips requiring the Harvester to kick on infrequently, then you have even more gas sitting there and getting old.It's presumably a basic plastic tank, so I doubt the material cost would vary that much, but regulatory cost might be a bear with additional EPA tests and crash tests likely required. I think pulling a Slate and offering a single option with longer-than-anticipated range might make more sense, but not going crazy or anything. There aren't many negatives to going with a bigger tank if space is available to my knowledge. Just make sure you use ethanol-free gas or fuel treatment if you only drive in EV mode.
It's a sealed evap system, so leaving the tank partially full shouldn't hurt anything. Less weight to carry around the rest of the time!That’s the thing. Let’s say someone only does long trips requiring the Harvester to kick on infrequently, then you have even more gas sitting there and getting old.
I know you saw this in my other thread, but chiming in here all the same.Thanks. I am legitimately curious. We have done a few cross country trips and many day trips and we stop often for stretch breaks, bathrooms, food, etc To me even 500 is more than I would need. We did one cross country trip in the Wrangler and one in the Supra and they both have about 320ish mile range. We would stop when we were down to about a third of a tank so we were probably going about 250 miles between stops. This is why I think the BEV will be perfect for us.
Still better than the 180 miles I get in my 20-year old Toyota at 90mph! That's from full tank to I-really-need-to-stop. I don't have many range-anxiety concerns about EVs, haha.I know you saw this in my other thread, but chiming in here all the same.
Just pointing out that ~320 mile EPA range, doesn't typically mean ~250 miles between stops, at least with a BEV at highway speeds.
My EV has an EPA rated 320 mile range. The longest stretch I've ever done on the highway in one go, was 248 miles. And that was from ~92% charge, down to 11% charge. But my shorter stretches that used from ~85% charge, down to ~19-25%, were only 160 miles (speed and elevation are tough).
Not trying to dissuade from the BEV, just pointing out that 350 miles of bev range, probably won't work out to 350 miles of highway range, depending on where you live/what speeds/temperatures you drive in.
My Jeep is nearly 30yrs old, so I understand. 250 miles is pretty optimistic anymore (although TBH, I don't do long road trips with that vehicle anymore).Still better than the 180 miles I get in my 20-year old Toyota at 90mph! That's from full tank to I-really-need-to-stop. I don't have many range-anxiety concerns about EVs, haha.
You're range numbers will be quite excellent when driving under 60MPH
The problem (for me) is driving under 60MPH for long distances
That is when I usually want go a little faster
ARGH!
Yes, agreed, this might be what Space EV was talking about when it comes to driving style. His numbers are great in his example, but his average speed to achieve those numbers was just a tick under 60MPH over 4 hours and 17 minutes.On my summer road trips, that is a solid 20mph under the speed limit.
So its 20-30mph slower than most other travelers on the road. That would even be 10mph slower than the limit for semi-trucks.
I get going slower for efficiency. But at a certain point it becomes a safety issue.
I will sometimes though take shorter (mileage) routes that have lower average speeds but similar times, because I know the EV's are better at efficiency in those situations.
So I thought the same thing..I’m in Idaho but I have played around with it more…and BEV should be sufficient. Here is ABRP (with Scout Traveller based on estimated battery and efficiency). Totally possible (now the question is do you want to stop and charge or stop and gas? (Edited to add photo that didn’t upload the first time)Last year I did the following trip (it’s in another thread somewhere). The EV Scout could have never done this loop without a significant detour. It’s reasons like this that my reservation is for a Harvester. EV lifestyle when I want it, and gas when I need it. 85% or so of other reservation holders agree with me.
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Well now I have to download that app!Also just discovered that the ABRP app has added both Scouts..but I don’t think the efficiency is correct (1.74 for Terra vs 4.08 for Traveller). Anyone with experience what to guesstimate more accurate efficient (not towing of course!)
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Didn’t want to delete this but wanted to update. The efficiency for the Traveller is wrong (4.08 miles/kwh) as default so this is not correct. Once I get a better estimate for efficiency I will repost. But the sentiment is that charging infrastructure even in rural Idaho/Montana is starting to improve….perhaps by 2028 enough that EREV won’t be as “needed”.So I thought the same thing..I’m in Idaho but I have played around with it more…and BEV should be sufficient. Here is ABRP (with Scout Traveller based on estimated battery and efficiency). Totally possible (now the question is do you want to stop and charge or stop and gas? (Edited to add photo that didn’t upload the first time) View attachment 16912
We don't know the exact efficiency.Also just discovered that the ABRP app has added both Scouts..but I don’t think the efficiency is correct (1.74 for Terra vs 4.08 for Traveller). Anyone with experience what to guesstimate more accurate efficient (not towing of course!)
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