it would have to be diesel.
1. New diesel cars not available in the U.S.
2. Diesel fuel is more expensive
it would have to be diesel.
Though to be fair, if you are trying to drive 7+ hours a day you want the most comfy seats in a vehicle. Something like a Cadillac Escalade (which comes in a diesel variant) would probably fit the bill nicely.1. New diesel cars not available in the U.S.
2. Diesel fuel is more expensive
I have no idea about the American car market so wasn't aware of the diesel situation there. As a fuel it is a few pence more expensive a litre here too, but the mpg is much better so it tends to work out better on cost. I have a 2.0L diesel car and get around 55mpg. You must be needing to stop and refuel on a 500+ mile trip in a petrol car though. It wouldn't really be an issue in an EV as you'd have to stop for breaks on a long trip anyway.1. New diesel cars not available in the U.S.
2. Diesel fuel is more expensive
So that would mean the argument about having to make recharging stops in an EV rather void too. If someone needs to stop to fill up a gass guzzling 20mpg petrol car, they might aswell re-charge an EV and take the comfort breaks they would need in any type of car on a 7-8 hour journey.After the VW fiasco I didn't think anyone sold new passenger cars with diesel engines in the US. Which would leave trucks that don't get good fuel mileage.
Unless they get a Prius (non-phev). Then they could drive for quite a while on a tank.So that would mean the argument about having to make recharging stops in an EV rather void too. If someone needs to stop to fill up a gass guzzling 20mpg petrol car, they might aswell re-charge an EV and take the comfort breaks they would need in any type of car on a 7-8 hour journey.
I could drive 600 miles in my diesel car, but I wouldn't be able to drive for that long without stopping for a break. That would be ample time to stop and charge an EV under similar circumstances. Considering we now have EV's that have 290+ mile ranges, the old cmplaint about range on longer journeys is becoming irrelavent unless the country hasn't invested in any form of infrastructure.Unless they get a Prius (non-phev). Then they could drive for quite a while on a tank.
When I drove 500 miles over the 3 day holiday on those long stretches of lonely road, I turned on my Ford BlueCruise which was amazing at reducing driver fatigue.....
Edit: and it has Supercruise so you can mostly relax on the road...
My buddy drives a Y and this month is full FSD Demo.
It’s pretty incredible. It drove us from his house to target perfectly and even parked into a space. I was floored.
I'm still on 12.3. Not sure when 12.3.3 will show up for me.I’ve had FSD just over a year now. 12 is a game changer. Handles NYC and Long Island amazingly well. I use it for most of my driving.
I just got 12.3.3 after having 12.1 for over a week. 12 is increasing its level of knowledge at an exponential rate. 12.3 improves on the slowness of 12.1.
There still are issues, but I glad I got FSD on both my 3 and Y.
Hey did you notice the tail lights on the cars in the monitor have changed shape and it picks up blinkers now. Lots of little aesthetic changes too. It seems to see traffic very far ahead.I’ve had FSD just over a year now. 12 is a game changer. Handles NYC and Long Island amazingly well. I use it for most of my driving.
I just got 12.3.3 after having 12.1 for over a week. 12 is increasing its level of knowledge at an exponential rate. 12.3 improves on the slowness of 12.1.
There still are issues, but I glad I got FSD on both my 3 and Y.
Hey did you notice the tail lights on the cars in the monitor have changed shape and it picks up blinkers now. Lots of little aesthetic changes too. It seems to see traffic very far ahead.
I didn’t notice a change in shape. But, blinkers have been showing as far as I remember. Were you part of FSDb before? Or only now with the free trial?
A lot of the visualizations were exclusive to FSDb, then slowly pushed to the non-FSDb visualizations after.
I’ve been in FSDb since I got my used TM3 January 2023, so I don’t know what non-FSDb visualizations looked like.
Also, FSDb always showed more of the surroundings vs non-FSDb including vehicles in the distance.
I don't know what it was called but it wasn't full self driving. And I've only been in this vehicle about a dozen times so anyone here is more of an expert.
Welcome to FSDS (Supervised, no longer beta).Haha I literally just got 12.3.3 offered to me.
Same with the Polestar, or should I say in Europe. No charger anxiety whatsoever.Makes sense. I am spoiled with Tesla. Map, routes, stops, charging times, and preconditioning is all automatically scheduled. Nothing to really think about, unless I go back roads, or want to lean on non-Tesla charging...which I never have done yet in 92K miles.
Actually, it is way more practical and saves you a lot of time. With the figures, you've shared, you seem to be in the territory of the charging curve where your vehicle is very slow. It is illogical to target that during a road trip. When you are overnight, or dining, or shopping, yes sure do that on a slow charger.Ideally you are correct.
Unfortunately when on a long distance road trip, it's not practical to run the batteries down and charge to 80%. I can do your strategy if I am at home/work where I know where all the chargers are located and my drives are short.
Not sure why you say that...We did a 4000 one across europe. Also targetted 500 per day, altough last days to get home we probably did more like 600 to 700. My wife and daughter wanted us to take the Polestar. It was absolutely fine...Then you wouldn’t be the target market for an electric car in the current climate. I wouldn’t even buy a petrol car for that sort of mileage, it would have to be diesel.
So that would mean the argument about having to make recharging stops in an EV rather void too. If someone needs to stop to fill up a gass guzzling 20mpg petrol car, they might aswell re-charge an EV and take the comfort breaks they would need in any type of car on a 7-8 hour journey.
They are indeed, but still worth looking at the charging curve. Unfortunately, not everything is at its seems and there are a few manufacturers that quote big fast numbers, but actually, they can't sustain that during the charging session.The newest EVs are getting really fast at charging now as well. You could stop to charge the thing, have something to eat and then be on your way.
The old platform was one of the best. The new is absolutely awesome. And dialled down slightly, the new Porsche Macan and Audi Q6 is also next level stuff. But also keep an eye out for the Geely models like the Zeekr 001 / Polestar 4 / Lotus Emerya, all very impressive as well. And even Kia/Huyndai old EGMP is showing it can still pull a punch.That newest Porsche Taycan (the update) is damn hard to argue with and its electrical tech will surely filter across to others in the same group of companies. I like the updated styling, but the interior is a bit too monochrome in style/looks. I'm not sure the top version is necessary, 0-100km/h in 2.2 seconds (from a stationary standing start, not a rollout) is pretty outrageous, but do we really need that?
he new Porsche Macan and Audi Q6
It will undoubtedly filter across to the other VAG EV lines pretty soon as it has to to keep up with the market. That sort of acceleration is unnecessary I agree, but will appeal to some as a bragging right I suppose. A friend of mine has a late 2023 Taycan and given the choice I would take the Audi e-tron GT over it in regards to what you get for the money. Porsche really maximise the optional extra line whilst giving very little away as standard, unlike Audi. The GT is a nicer looking car too IMO.The newest EVs are getting really fast at charging now as well. You could stop to charge the thing, have something to eat and then be on your way.
That newest Porsche Taycan (the update) is damn hard to argue with and its electrical tech will surely filter across to others in the same group of companies. I like the updated styling, but the interior is a bit too monochrome in style/looks. I'm not sure the top version is necessary, 0-100km/h in 2.2 seconds (from a stationary standing start, not a rollout) is pretty outrageous, but do we really need that?
The GT is a nicer looking car too IMO.