It depends on a few things, drag, weight, efficiency of power unit, outside temperature. Typical consumption is about 16 kWh/100 km on average for most EV's. In summer my BMW i3 can do 100 km with 10 to 14 kWh, in winter times 15 to 18 kWh. Lowering speed is a very effective measure because aero drag is squared with speed. Another thing is that density of air increases with lower temperature. Therefore in winter you have more aerodynamic drag.
TNTHead wrote: ↑10 Dec 2020, 22:23It depends on a few things, drag, weight, efficiency of power unit, outside temperature. Typical consumption is about 16 kWh/100 km on average for most EV's. In summer my BMW i3 can do 100 km with 10 to 14 kWh, in winter times 15 to 18 kWh. Lowering speed is a very effective measure because aero drag is squared with speed. Another thing is that density of air increases with lower temperature. Therefore in winter you have more aerodynamic drag.
I´ve wondered what are the conditions to homologate range, how much city, how much roads, how many stops... but never bothered enough to do a search
Check out this video from Matt Ferrell, he lives in Boston and they are worth it for him despite the cold climate.strad wrote: ↑10 Dec 2020, 23:25IF I lived somewhere like Arizona it would be interesting. However where I live in the winter I don't get enough sunlight to charge a solar powered security light.
It is interesting though.
Couple of questions I would have is how long do the solar panels last and how much does it cost to replace them.
Question only out of interest; do you notice / know how much of a difference drafting behind another car on the autobahn / motorway makes for EV consumption? We talk about the effect in F1 all the time, but I wonder about normal cars at normal speeds.TNTHead wrote: ↑10 Dec 2020, 22:23It depends on a few things, drag, weight, efficiency of power unit, outside temperature. Typical consumption is about 16 kWh/100 km on average for most EV's. In summer my BMW i3 can do 100 km with 10 to 14 kWh, in winter times 15 to 18 kWh. Lowering speed is a very effective measure because aero drag is squared with speed. Another thing is that density of air increases with lower temperature. Therefore in winter you have more aerodynamic drag.
I assume some of the 'dip' in efficiency in 2020 is a result of averaging relative to the days observed in the year thus far, and this will go up slightly with the addition of December's data?djos wrote: ↑10 Dec 2020, 23:59Check out this video from Matt Ferrell, he lives in Boston and they are worth it for him despite the cold climate.strad wrote: ↑10 Dec 2020, 23:25IF I lived somewhere like Arizona it would be interesting. However where I live in the winter I don't get enough sunlight to charge a solar powered security light.
It is interesting though.
Couple of questions I would have is how long do the solar panels last and how much does it cost to replace them.
I'm in Melbourne Australia, and while it doesn't snow here, it's one of the least sunny locations in Australia and my small 5.4kW system is saving me about $1,500 Aussie pesos per year:
https://pvoutput.org/aggregate.jsp?id=4 ... =27734&t=y
https://i.imgur.com/pwg3XFB.png
Regarding panel life, the good panels, eg LG Mono X series that I used, have a 25-year warranty, and are warranted to provide at least 87.9% of the specified output at the 25-year mark. Most common panels will be lucky to provide 80% of rated output after 25 years. I expect to keep my panels for at least that long.
PS, My Fronius inverter was warranted for 10 years and they recently just bumped that up to 15 years at no cost.
We are also only 11 days into December, so it should improve (it's now summer here).
Yes, that is self-evident considering you have stated where you live. My question related more to how the efficiency rating had been calculated.