I’ve posted versions of these maps elsewhere, but I had a little bit of time to write some new code and map out the isodistance maps from each DCFC in the US and Canada (the only regions for which I have data—I know I could pull other data, but these were easy).
Previously I just used a radius instead of mapping along roads. These new maps use mapped roads in OpenStreetMaps. If there are any roads that aren’t in that database, they were not included.
This first map is 80 km or ~50 mile isodistance polygons. The other maps are still being generated and will take a bit of time to finalize. I hope to have them done in the next couple of days.
I created a heatmap-like result for this to highlight where there’s almost no chance of running out of battery if you pay much attention to your battery. Interestingly, west of about 100 degrees longitude, things suddenly get much more sparse until you get to California and the Pacific Northwest. A reminder that this is a map for 80 km (50 miles), so this is kind of a bare-bones sparsity. The black lines are the edges of the polygon—the roads that don’t have many other roads branching out from them. This map is for you to worry about taking a road trip in your old Leaf, not for your Scout.
Previously I just used a radius instead of mapping along roads. These new maps use mapped roads in OpenStreetMaps. If there are any roads that aren’t in that database, they were not included.
This first map is 80 km or ~50 mile isodistance polygons. The other maps are still being generated and will take a bit of time to finalize. I hope to have them done in the next couple of days.
I created a heatmap-like result for this to highlight where there’s almost no chance of running out of battery if you pay much attention to your battery. Interestingly, west of about 100 degrees longitude, things suddenly get much more sparse until you get to California and the Pacific Northwest. A reminder that this is a map for 80 km (50 miles), so this is kind of a bare-bones sparsity. The black lines are the edges of the polygon—the roads that don’t have many other roads branching out from them. This map is for you to worry about taking a road trip in your old Leaf, not for your Scout.