In This Issue
- Flanigan’s Net Positive: Our First EV Road Trip
- Saluting Dubai and COP28
- EV Charging Highlights
- Virtual Power Plant Strategies
- Irrigation Canal Solar
- Salton Sea Lithium
- Long Duration Energy Storage
- Repurposing Wind Turbine Blades
- EV Charger Connectors / Plugs
- Flanigan’s Eco-Logic Podcast Updates
Flanigan’s Net Positive: Our First EV Road Trip
Our first EV road trip. I’ve been driving EVs regularly for over six years now, but never have dared venture out of range. But now we’re gambling on Tesla’s charger network; going all-electric in Terry’s Tesla to Vegas. It’s only 233 miles from our home to the Wynn. The Model Y’s extended range is purported to be 330 miles. So no problem right?
The mountains are formidable. We climb out of the LA valley floor, up from San Bernardino, up the Cajon Pass. I’m always struck by the scale and grandeur and majesty of nature that is so close to the madness of the urban sprawl of Los Angeles. The Tesla takes to the hills with vigor.
The route is well travelled with EVs, and well supported by the Tesla app. Our dashboard screen shows all the Tesla chargers en route and recommends a charger for us in Baker. We accept. How impressive. Our navigated trip begins.
But then we began to notice the charge level dropping faster than it should… and it made us a bit nervous. We were supposed to have 15% of our charge remaining when we got to Baker, and this began dropping… to 5%. For my gal that likes to refuel when the gas meter gets to a quarter tank, the 5% reserve was nerve-wracking.
And there we were, out in the wide open expanses of the California desert with miles to go. Lots of good music, and… one’s mind wanders. What if we run out of charge? Then we whiz by a huge and brand new Tesla charging station in Barstow, and wonder if we’ll regret passing it by. It’s a long way from Barstow to Baker with huge expanses.
Baker was the plan and its where we recharge. Read, it’s how far we make it before needing a charge. Warning. We think that the Model Y’s actual range is more like 250 miles. The car may well get 330 when gently driving around one’s neighborhood. But for our trip, the conditions were highway driving, a four-thousand foot elevation gain, and moderate air conditioning.
In Baker, we pull up to a major charing operation, complete with solar carports and 60 Tesla chargers. There are only six other cars there, lots of space for us. We see drivers milling about as they charge.
It was a bit unnerving when our charger did not work. We panicked a bit as our dashboard presented an error message. I asked a nearby driver who readily told me that he’d seen another car try our charger. Relieved, we followed suit and the next one was just fine.
We recharge with what is stated to be 100 miles of range, about 25 kilowatt hours. It takes about 15 minutes. The nominal charging price is 37 cents per kWh. No charge for us as we’re burning down Terry’s 10,000 miles of free charging.
I chat with an attendant taking away the trash. He tells me that another 40 chargers are going in and that I should see this place on weekends. Every spot is full with a line of cars waiting impatiently. Thank God that It’s Tuesday. We charge long enough to stroll over to the general store.
We arrive in Vegas with very little battery capacity remaining, 3% this time, really too close for comfort for us out-of-range newbies. We breathe a sigh of relief as we make it, and then again as the Wynn’s valet nonchalantly offers to charge the car for us. Nice.
On the way home we re-fuel in Barstow at an odd set of aging chargers in the back of a sketchy shopping mall. The rate there is 38 cents per kilowatt hour. We make a note for next time to stop at the bank of new chargers at the Barstow outlets.
Overall, we had a great time with our first EV road trip. We gained confidence and we are impressed at how do-able such a trip is, so much so that we have discussed letting go of our hybrid that we’ve been keeping for longer trips. Now longer trips seem possible, even exciting, in the EV and we’re thinking of a summer EV and camping adventure to Yellowstone and perhaps even Banff in the Canadian Rockies.
As this edition of EcoNet News will tell, the charging networks are opening up. We are on the path to ubiquitous EV charging throughout the country.