An EV is probably going to be good for this as long as you can plug it in so that it can trickle charge / sustain the battery. If you have to leave it at an off-grid location, a small solar panel set-up would work.Okay, so here’s my issue, or should I say reservation, about EVs. I have a summer residence and a winter residence and wherever my Scout might go, it will stay permanently. Therefore, when I am not at that residence it will sit unattended for around six (6) months or possibly longer every year. What are the downsides to leaving an EV, even a hybrid, undriven for such a long period of time? Any snowbirds or others with experience out there who are in the same situation?
I had a 2019 Model 3 Performance that I didnt drive 5-6 months out of the year (for 4 years) - eg in winter because it had summer performance tires on it and I have other vehicles. I left it on the charger all winter set to 50%. Car had degraded 6% in the 4 years / 30k miles. Assuming Scout has a good BMS / Batteries - which I have no reason to believe they wouldnt, I think you'd be good to go.Okay, so here’s my issue, or should I say reservation, about EVs. I have a summer residence and a winter residence and wherever my Scout might go, it will stay permanently. Therefore, when I am not at that residence it will sit unattended for around six (6) months or possibly longer every year. What are the downsides to leaving an EV, even a hybrid, undriven for such a long period of time? Any snowbirds or others with experience out there who are in the same situation?
Does the Tesla not adjust the 100% charge target based on either temperature or driving history?Have a 2018 Tesla model 3 - new 100% charge battery range was 310 miles. November 2024 battery range at 100% charge is 275 miles. Not happy about the range loss but still loving the EV. The only thing I've replaced is the small start battery for $130. Can't beat the cost to own.
I have a 2013 Nissan Leaf that I still drive. It was a lease return with about 15k miles when I bought it in March of 2015. The battery pack was replaced under warranty in October of 2017. It still shows all capacity bars on the Guage, so it is still above 85% capacity. I only charge to 100% on days where I drive across the valley, otherwise it is just 80% charged.Sooo, I'm the type of guy that likes to keep cars. If I buy car that I really like and I have room for it, I'll keep it for a loooong time (I have high expectations for the Scout). Does anyone own an EV thats over 10 years old and or has over 100,000 miles? If so, please tell me about your experience and the current condition of your car.
I don't really know how Tesla presents their estimated range at a given percent. I do leave it plugged in all the time at 80% charge capacity. Also only have 24k miles. I do a trip from AZ to CA twice a year of 495 miles and that's the only time I charge to 100%. Temps are about 80's when I do the trip. I have done the charge to 100% and drive down to below 10% to try and reset the miles, but no real gain.Does the Tesla not adjust the 100% charge target based on either temperature or driving history?
At least with Ford, it's an entirely unreliable metric to assess degradation as the difference between 80 degrees and 50 degrees is significant...and if you have a lead foot it will show lower.
The best way we test is by doing it at the same temp as initially recorded, then do a driving history reset. Mine's actually higher now than it was 3 years ago, presumably because Ford provisioned the battery capacity from 88 useable to 91 kwh.