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227 miles at 70 mph from 100% to 0% indicated. Eco driving mode with auto climate.
Temps ranged from 52F at start and dropped to 39F during the drive
Pretty much what I expected. The Ioniq 5 is not the most aerodynamic, or efficient, vehicle at highway speeds.
True, folks don‘t drive far on average, but for whatever reason range is the thing that people without an EV point to being a problem (that and charging speed).Average miles driven per day by Americans: 27.
These stress tests are a curiosity to see the various cars’ maximum capabilities. Actual range in day-to-day usage will be higher than this test indicates, because you don’t drive 70 MPH for 200+ miles every day. EVs have regenerative braking, so city efficiency is much higher. I’d like to see another 100% to 0% test, but done a couple different ways. Drive 55mph on highways… how much range do you save? Do a typical routine for a week: drive to/from work, make stops for errands, etc. and see what kind of range you get.
My EV charges slow and only gets 100 mile range (probably 80 or less if I drove it 70 MPH everywhere). But I drive less than the 27 mile average per day, so it’s perfect for me. Others with longer commutes might need something with 200 miles range. I believe anything over 200 miles is kind of a luxury; it means you might not have to take a train/flight or rent a car for road trips.True, folks don‘t drive far on average, but for whatever reason range is the thing that people without an EV point to being a problem (that and charging speed).![]()
227 miles at 70 mph from 100% to 0% indicated. Eco driving mode with auto climate.
Temps ranged from 52F at start and dropped to 39F during the drive
Pretty much what I expected. The Ioniq 5 is not the most aerodynamic, or efficient, vehicle at highway speeds.
I have no competence in the topic, but this seems to make sense to me.That isn’t bad. I think at some point we will probably see EVs switch from a single reduction gear to 2 speed reduction gears. Battery tech is improving, but not fast enough to keep up with the range requirements people are wanting. Having a multi speed transmission seems like a quick way to get more range.
You're correct about it, but I can tell you as an early EV adopter in a single-car household is that range shouldn't matter ifAverage miles driven per day by Americans: 27.
These stress tests are a curiosity to see the various cars’ maximum capabilities. Actual range in day-to-day usage will be higher than this test indicates, because you don’t drive 70 MPH for 200+ miles every day. EVs have regenerative braking, so city efficiency is much higher. I’d like to see another 100% to 0% test, but done a couple different ways. Drive 55mph on highways… how much range do you save? Do a typical routine for a week: drive to/from work, make stops for errands, etc. and see what kind of range you get.
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