What? No. They’re not suggesting lowering it to 5 at all. No one thinks the maximum should be set at the average (apart from a credit card company that I quit, but that’s another story).
The article is saying that most people who insist on a 35 cube tray tend to use about 5 cubes daily and some of them just don’t need the 35 and might be absolutely fine with a 20 cube or even a 15 cube tray.
Let’s put it back in miles. The study found:
350-375 mile EVs: 11.3% of range used daily
Which is about 50 miles.
What “few extra errands” do you have that cause you to drive hundreds of miles? That’s not an errand, it’s a road trip.
Personally I drive round trips of 30 miles a day and 80 on Saturdays. Several times a year, we go further and then I stop every couple of hours to charge for 25 minutes or something. I’d rather stop every three hours, but it’s worth it for the convenience and economy of home charging and the joy of driving I get.
If you go on more road trips than we do, you probably want a bigger range, but my humble family car 150 mile EV is more fun to drive than any other vehicle I’ve driven, including an overpowered automatic BMW that was lovely but not nearly as much fun.
I’m not ever going back to boring sluggish driving, spongy acceleration and annoying commuting and all those endless endless visits to petrol stations.
The cheap petrol station is a ten minute drive from my house. Filling takes a few minutes. My diesel had more range and I could eke it out to a fortnight, but the petrol one was every week. People expect me to be upset about stopping for 25 minutes and messing with my phone, going to the loo, eating a bit of food every couple of hours, ten times a year, but I used to go to the petrol station every week! I don’t miss it AT ALL.
I spend hours and hours in my EV every week. It’s genuinely fun to drive. The odd visit to the motorway service station is no biggie. I love my EV. I tried it for the curiosity, and love it for the driving experience
What? No. They’re not suggesting lowering it to 5 at all. No one thinks the maximum should be set at the average (apart from a credit card company that I quit, but that’s another story).
The article is saying that most people who insist on a 35 cube tray tend to use about 5 cubes daily and some of them just don’t need the 35 and might be absolutely fine with a 20 cube or even a 15 cube tray.
Let’s put it back in miles. The study found:
350-375 mile EVs: 11.3% of range used daily
Which is about 50 miles.
What “few extra errands” do you have that cause you to drive hundreds of miles? That’s not an errand, it’s a road trip.
Personally I drive round trips of 30 miles a day and 80 on Saturdays. Several times a year, we go further and then I stop every couple of hours to charge for 25 minutes or something. I’d rather stop every three hours, but it’s worth it for the convenience and economy of home charging and the joy of driving I get.
If you go on more road trips than we do, you probably want a bigger range, but my humble family car 150 mile EV is more fun to drive than any other vehicle I’ve driven, including an overpowered automatic BMW that was lovely but not nearly as much fun.
I’m not ever going back to boring sluggish driving, spongy acceleration and annoying commuting and all those endless endless visits to petrol stations.
The cheap petrol station is a ten minute drive from my house. Filling takes a few minutes. My diesel had more range and I could eke it out to a fortnight, but the petrol one was every week. People expect me to be upset about stopping for 25 minutes and messing with my phone, going to the loo, eating a bit of food every couple of hours, ten times a year, but I used to go to the petrol station every week! I don’t miss it AT ALL.
I spend hours and hours in my EV every week. It’s genuinely fun to drive. The odd visit to the motorway service station is no biggie. I love my EV. I tried it for the curiosity, and love it for the driving experience