@cyure, you might also post a companion question to this thread: “What would make you switch from BEV to EREV?”
My answer is, “I’d rather ride my bicycle.”
My answer is, “I’d rather ride my bicycle.”
I’ll tag you in. Since I’m still learning. My daily commute is about the miles round trip and weekends maybe 100-150 miles depending on what’s going on. In theory majority of the time I work from home M and Th and sometimes T or W if I need quiet time. So in theory majority if I plugged in Sunday night and Wednesday night from say 7pm until 4pm (21 hours) is it feasible that I could get by without even adding a charger? Spaced out on that schedule I am thinking I could get by without a charger. ThoughtsYou can always tag me. I don’t mind.
I’m guessing you mean three miles round trip?I’ll tag you in. Since I’m still learning. My daily commute is about the miles round trip and weekends maybe 100-150 miles depending on what’s going on. In theory majority of the time I work from home M and Th and sometimes T or W if I need quiet time. So in theory majority if I plugged in Sunday night and Wednesday night from say 7pm until 4pm (21 hours) is it feasible that I could get by without even adding a charger? Spaced out on that schedule I am thinking I could get by without a charger. Thoughts
Even though it’s probably overkill (I work from home so some days I don’t even go anywhere) I’m still planning on getting a L2 charger. It will just make me feel better.Simplified math:
L1 charging means 1% per hour on a 120 kWh battery.
So you need 100 hours of charging to get 100% recharge on a 120 kWh battery.
Assuming 12 hours of charging overnight for 7 nights, that’s 84 hours.
You need an additional 16 hours distributed throughout the week to recover all 120 kWh or 350 miles if you drive the full 350 miles.
Or you can go 84% of your range weekly and recover all of that within a reasonable set of charging hours on a Level 1 charger.
If you have an L2 charger (say, 2.4, 4.8, 7.2, or 9.6 kW charge rate), for a 120 kWh battery:
2.4 kW charge rate recovers 2% per hour, so you only need 50 hours, so 4 12-hour nights plus a couple of hours will recover 100%.
4.8 kW charge rate recovers 4% per hour, so you only need 25 hours, or 2 12-hour nights plus an extra hour.
7.2 kW charge rate recovers 6% per hour, so you only need 17 hours, or 1.5 12-hour nights.
9.6 kW charge rate recovers 8% per hour, so you only need a single 12 hour night plus a half hour sometime.
There is a slight flaw in this thought. You do not have electricity everywhere. I can circle a huge portion of Montana where electricity and charging don’t exist. However, I can take gas with me anywhere.If you think logically about charging.. you have electricity everywhere. Gas is in a storage tank and it expires. If you have a gas motor in your hybrid/plug-in hybrid/erev, you need to run the motor often and you still have to service it at least every 5k miles.
Low voltage charging, at a 110v outlet, it is possible. It's slower, and better for your batteries.
I read somewhere, someone had a plug-in hybrid RAV4 prime and was able to get someone at the Casey's general store to allow this person to plug in their RAV4 to one of their wall outlets. It took 10 hours or so.
If you are in dire straits, you still have options with a full BEV. It seems like gas stations are everywhere, but think about it. Electricity is literally everywhere.
As BEVs continue evolving the charging infrastructure in the vehicle will get better and better. It won't be a bad idea to just sit somewhere and charge at 110v every now and then. Also, as the charging architecture improves, the charging rate at 110v may not be that slow.
The other thing is how the harvester + electric models use lithium iron phosphate batteries vs the nickel manganese cobalt batteries in the BEV models. Also the harvester model cuts your electric range in half and lowers your towing capacity.
I think if more people knew more facts about all of it, it would be beneficial.
Totally. We have three for two cars...Even though it’s probably overkill (I work from home so some days I don’t even go anywhere) I’m still planning on getting a L2 charger. It will just make me feel better.
Also, if it’s very cold where your car is charging, it’s possible you will use more charge than I estimated and your car won’t charge up as much overnight in the very cold, so you might be better off with an L2.Even though it’s probably overkill (I work from home so some days I don’t even go anywhere) I’m still planning on getting a L2 charger. It will just make me feel better.
Garage but it’s not heated and yes it gets cold here. Next week we will be down into single digits at night.Also, if it’s very cold where your car is charging, it’s possible you will use more charge than I estimated and your car won’t charge up as much overnight in the very cold, so you might be better off with an L2.
And recovering from a long trip is quite a bit quicker with an L2.
@cyure, you might also post a companion question to this thread: “What would make you switch from BEV to EREV?”
My answer is, “I’d rather ride my bicycle.”
The chainsaw won't be hard, but the tractor... It may be a while (unless you modify it yourself which seems highly likely in your case).I'm trying to pipe down a bit so others can speak up.
I'm so glad I don't have to deal with fossil fuels and the massive inconveniences they create for most of my use-cases. I have just two more engines to get rid of (diesel tractor and gas chainsaw).
My experiences with BEVs have me ready to toss the diesel engine out of my tractor in favor of a battery and electric motor.
Yep. We don't do as much wood cutting as we used to, so I'm not rushing to replace the chainsaw. And the tractor... Well, we'll see. Every time I fire it up I get the urge to replace the diesel with electric. But I need a lot more space in my workshop before I'll pull the engine.The chainsaw won't be hard, but the tractor... It may be a while (unless you modify it yourself which seems highly likely in your case).![]()
JD had one in the oven. Case/IH has or had the Farmall 75C. Which would meet my requirements. May have to look into the electric tractor againYep. We don't do as much wood cutting as we used to, so I'm not rushing to replace the chainsaw. And the tractor... Well, we'll see. Every time I fire it up I get the urge to replace the diesel with electric. But I need a lot more space in my workshop before I'll pull the engine.
Several brands were working on them. But I haven’t seen much movement lately. Kubota had a nice-looking one, but I believe it’s only available in the EU. And I can’t afford the bigger ones most brands have been developing. I need a ~25 HP-sized tractor for my purposes (the one I have is the biggest I could afford and it’s a bit small). I don’t know if Case/IH ever released their Farmall electric. I read about it a few years ago, but haven’t seen anything interesting since.JD had one in the oven. Case/IH has or had the Farmall 75C. Which would meet my requirements. May have to look into the electric tractor again
Well now you have me dreaming out loud. Run a IH 656 Hydro. All I would need is an electric motor to run the hydraulic pumps.Several brands were working on them. But I haven’t seen much movement lately. Kubota had a nice-looking one, but I believe it’s only available in the EU. And I can’t afford the bigger ones most brands have been developing. I need a ~25 HP-sized tractor for my purposes (the one I have is the biggest I could afford and it’s a bit small). I don’t know if Case/IH ever released their Farmall electric. I read about it a few years ago, but haven’t seen anything interesting since.
Many of the brands had also been trying to cram the electric part in with autonomous, tablet-driven, excessive nonsense. All I want is to plug in my tractor so it’s always ready to go, never have to go to a gas station again, and have quiet so I can listen to my audiobooks while working on the ranch.
The nice thing about my tractor is the diesel engine is just there to run the hydraulic pump. The drive motor doesn’t need to be very complex to accomplish the job. I believe replacing the diesel engine with an electric motor and mounting a controller and battery box (somewhere...) would only cost a fraction of what a new eTractor would cost. And it would have the added benefit of increasing the weight of the tractor so I can dig through the limestone here. But the time cost to do the conversion is too high for me right now.
The biggest factor I see here is NOT having to worry at all about any of the math (and the extremely long duration required to charge such a large battery pack, so slowly). Piece of mind, convenience, and a fast recovery from a long road trip and returning with a low SOC are all good reason to get one. You can find decent LII's for $500 bucks and if you don't have a long run for your wiring, you could pay in the neighborhood of $500 bucks for an installation. Short money over the life of your EV ownership period for peace of mind... AND, in the event of an emergency where you suddenly need to drive some longer distance, it will be nice to know your truck will always be sitting there with 70% SOC. Battery life, health and longevity won't be an issue charging all the time on LII either. Just my $02. cents!I’ll tag you in. Since I’m still learning. My daily commute is about the miles round trip and weekends maybe 100-150 miles depending on what’s going on. In theory majority of the time I work from home M and Th and sometimes T or W if I need quiet time. So in theory majority if I plugged in Sunday night and Wednesday night from say 7pm until 4pm (21 hours) is it feasible that I could get by without even adding a charger? Spaced out on that schedule I am thinking I could get by without a charger. Thoughts
Agreed.The biggest factor I see here is NOT having to worry at all about any of the math (and the extremely long duration required to charge such a large battery pack, so slowly). Piece of mind, convenience, and a fast recovery from a long road trip and returning with a low SOC are all good reason to get one. You can find decent LII's for $500 bucks and if you don't have a long run for your wiring, you could pay in the neighborhood of $500 bucks for an installation. Short money over the life of your EV ownership period for peace of mind... AND, in the event of an emergency where you suddenly need to drive some longer distance, it will be nice to know your truck will always be sitting there with 70% SOC. Battery life, health and longevity won't be an issue charging all the time on LII either. Just my $02. cents!
Talked to a friend who’s an electrician. Will cost me about $1200 because I’ve got one spot left in panel so we’ll need to get creative or add a 100amp panel which may need anyway as we may finish our attic area over our garage. My initial thought on no L2 charger is just my schedule. I’d have 18 hour windows with no driving 3 times a week so not bad and commute round trip being 7 miles I’d be able to go for awhile. And work travel I have work truck and if I keep the new division growing at work I’m convincing work to get me a terra as they want to start converting fleet to EV. Not to mention our southern office in Charlotte is only a couple miles from the new SM headquarters.The biggest factor I see here is NOT having to worry at all about any of the math (and the extremely long duration required to charge such a large battery pack, so slowly). Piece of mind, convenience, and a fast recovery from a long road trip and returning with a low SOC are all good reason to get one. You can find decent LII's for $500 bucks and if you don't have a long run for your wiring, you could pay in the neighborhood of $500 bucks for an installation. Short money over the life of your EV ownership period for peace of mind... AND, in the event of an emergency where you suddenly need to drive some longer distance, it will be nice to know your truck will always be sitting there with 70% SOC. Battery life, health and longevity won't be an issue charging all the time on LII either. Just my $02. cents!