So I made a trip across the state yesterday to go see Front 242 in my old hometown of St. Pete. Show was awesome. Thanks for asking.
Efficiency on the way over was better than predicted by the on-board navigatoestimatobot. I averaged 3.6 mi/kwh, but this was likely bolstered somewhat by a LOT of slow traffic on I-4. For reference, my wife average 4.1 mi/kwh in her Ioniq 5 and probably 70% of her driving is freeway too and from work. I think the main difference we're seeing here is the 2wd Hyundai vs the AWD Chevy being slightly less efficient due to additional driveline drag.
First stop once I got to St. Pete was the old mall I used to hang out at which now has feral parrots living in all the trees and light poles in the parking lot.
Like so many things in St. Pete, even the mall got more awesome after I left. Thanks guys.
Anyway, my main purpose in going to Tyrone Square was the Electrify America charging station. I have accounts with all the major charge networks, but we use EA most frequently because we get two years of free EA charging from Hyundai, and a screaming good rate whenever we just use EA to buy power. There was actually a line for the five working electro-pumps (out of 6 total) when I got there, but I only had to wait a few minutes to get into a spot.
I put in 50kwh in a little over 40 minutes (charging from 47% to 97%) and at the EA price of $.56/kwh plus tac the total ws $28.16. But with our EA/Hyundai discount the total was $6.65, which was pretty awesome.
You've probably already done the math, but a gas car getting 30mpg would have cost about $16 to make the same 170 mile drive. That same 50kwh charge at home would have cost about $5. So, yeah, public charging is not much of a deal unless you have some sort of discount program or free juice.
When I was finishing up my charge the owner of the Equinox EV next to me came back as well and I got to chat her up about her new ride.
The Equinox was not Megan's first EV—she'd previously driven a Bolt—but she fell in love with the Equinox as soon as she drove one. She does a lot of mid-distance driving, and the biggest upgrade for her was the adaptive cruise and lanekeeping, which she attributed to helping her become a more confident highway driver. And that's kind of interesting because I frequently talk to folks who are nervous highway drivers who actually get even more worked up when the nannies start nannying. Nice to see that for this driver at least, Chevy has nailed the right amount of assistance without intrusion.
I have driving impressions, and Super Cruise impressions (boy do I have Super Cruise impressions), but those will have to wait until tomorrow because it's late and I'm tired.