RMK!
Active Member
Your must be getting biased anti BEV information from your information sources. As a 5 year owner of multiple Tesla's the range is much better than 80% of projected unless you live somewhere with very cold weather and even then, 80% would be a worst case scenario.I laugh and get irritated at the same time when I still see people posting max range when we all know that is not attainable. EVERYTHING we read about all EVs is the 80% charge point. Meaning at 350 max for the Scout, then the realistic daily chargeable distance is only 280 miles. So lets talk about real world terms. I find the 80% myth ridiculous! I charge my iPhone overnight to 100% and it works just fine the next day. And I do this EVWRY single night, so why not in an EV?
It's very similar to ICE in that a very heavy right foot or climbing mountains costs you range mileage. If you drive near the speed limit in town and on the highways Tesla's deliver on their mileage claims. As for battery degradation, my 2018 Model X with 56K miles still delivers 90% + of the original battery capacity and most of that range loss was in the first 30K miles.
Many owners Report 90% useable battery capacity at well over 100K miles. I have a friend who has 220,000 mile's on his 2013 Tesla Model S and he still getting 88% of the original battery capacity. Considering that the battery chemistry and software management keeps getting better, the future looks very bright for BEV's.