The idea for this series of articles came one night while discussing
with Zach of CleanTechnica my trip to the Northeast of the USA to visit
relatives, at the time he asked me:
Z – So, are you going to rent an EV while you are there?
J - Yeah, i thought about it,
but it is really expensive, around twice as much as a regular Ford Focus
rental…
Z – Really? Let me see if I can help you with that…
And so he did, after pulling some strings and connecting to the right
people, Zach helped me to have not one, but two EV’s for my two week stay in
the US, a red Nissan Leaf 30 kWh for the first days, followed by a blue BMW i3
Rex with the new 33 kWh battery for the remainder of the journey.
But before I start, I want to signal my deepest appreciation to the
people of Nissan USA and BMW USA, for the dedication, professionalism and
sympathy in the vehicle delivery, assistance and pick up process, you rock!
Day 1 – Arrival to JFK airport
and heading to Newark, New Jersey
After a complicated arrival,
complete with border control hold ups (Apparently, I was mistaken by another
person with a criminal record in the US…), we got to the scheduled place with only three hours delay to pick up our
top of the range Nissan Leaf.Driving the Leaf was kind like meeting an old friend, you haven’t met him for a while, but you know how it all works, you know what to expect, including the annoying foot brake.
The big surprise (To me, at least, used to the 24kWh version) was the increased range of the thing, showing 101 miles in the guess-o-meter with 77% charge, equaling to some 130 miles/210 kms with a full charge.
210 kms! To have that kind of
range on the 24 kWh units, I would have to go downhill AND have tailwind
helping me out…
Day 2 – Running around Newark, NJ
Full day running around the
whereabouts of Newark, visiting friends and family, and shopping. Looots of
shopping! (Hey, it’s New Jersey, what else would you do?) I took the
opportunity to escape the Stores Via
Sacra and try out the local charging infrastructure.
And it was then that I realized
how fortunate we are in Portugal for having an ATM-like system of charging
cards, where you can have an “A” charging card, but regardless of that you can
use it in the “B” charging network, or “C”, or…whatever network that provides
electricity for your car.
After all, for the end buyer, what
you want is to charge your car, regardless of whoever does it, right?
Well, not in New Jersey. I had a
Chargepoint card, but turns out, the closest Fast Charging station belonged to
EVGo, which actually allowed for other customers to charge, as long as they had
a valid credit card (Check!) and a valid local telephone number (What?!?
Why?!?!).
I then understood the frustration
of my German friends, which carry a bunch of charging cards, one for each
company…
So, no deal there, which left me
no solution but to ask my temporary host to do an overnight charge at home, at
110 Volts.
One thing that struck me on the
first full day in the US, was that everything was super-sized regarding Europe.
A small drink in the US is a medium-sized
choice in Europe and the same thing happens regarding cars, with seemingly half
the houses in suburban Newark having a big pick-up truck and a seven-seater SUV
on the garage entry, my Nissan Leaf didn’t look like the family car it is
Europe, but something more…Compact.
Now I understand why the Leaf is
classified as “Compact Car” in the land of Uncle Sam.
Day 3 and 4 – Catching the subway
to New York
After the overnight charge, the
100% mark was achieved, just in time to commute to the subway station with a
full charge, with the guess-o-meter recording 130 miles (210 kms in metrical
speak), which meant I had made the same energy consumption that the car had
before coming to my hands, beating the EPA range in a sizeable manner, and I
wasn’t even hypermiling, no ECO mode, using (Occasionally) A/C in a city /
highway drive mix…Not bad. Not bad at all…
Sure, the 250 kms range (155
miles) announced by the NEDC were still a bit far off, but then again, I didn’t
had the pink unicorns that help out EV’s doing the European testings…
Or maybe I’m just being mean, if
you always run in ECO mode, never use Air Conditioner and drive like a nun,
maybe, just maybe, you can reach the announced 250 kms range.
And what about EV’s? Did you saw a lot of them running around? –
You may ask.
Actually I thought I would see
more, apart from the random Tesla (Mostly Model S), we really needed to have an
eagle eye to spot them, I saw a white BMW i3 (Being driven by an attractive
30-year old girl, BTW), one Second Generation Chevrolet Volt and…That’s it.
Except for Tesla, that has a
special aura that surpasses the fact that it is electric (Auto Pilot, fast
acceleration, etc), this area is not especially EV-friendly, including New
York, that also disappointed a bit when it came to spot EV’s.
I guess it will be up to the
Tesla Pick-Up Truck to finally win the Regular
Joe mindset into EV’s. Hurry up with that one, Tesla…
At the end of Day 4 and with the
delivery of the Nissan Leaf scheduled for the next day, it was time to do a
list of Likes and Dislikes of the Nissan model:
Likes
-
Range!
With over 100 miles range it was really easy to use it on urban environment,
with no sign of range anxiety, so I could drive it pretty much anywhere in the
NJ area without looking at the guess-o-meter every two minutes or monitoring my
driving style;
-
Ease of
use, maybe because I am most used to it, or because it is a straightforward
car to drive, the fact is that it was really intuitive to drive it, with easy
to use multimedia system and no major secrets. It just works how we want it,
and that’s a big plus for people new to electric vehicles;
-
Family friendly
vehicle. Space is not an issue in the car, be it in the front, at the rear
seat or in the trunk. And we really used it, after all, there was a time when we
were five in the car and the trunk had plenty of shopping bags…
Dislikes
-
Foot
Brake! It is sooo annoying and clunky, if there is one feature I would like
to change for the upcoming Leaf, is that Nissan finally ended the foot brake
nonsense and made a regular Parking button, like regular EV’s have. I mean, for
a car designed to look the 21st Century future, the foot brake seems
like a 19th Century relic!
-
Cable
storage. Sure, the trunk had no problems swallowing shopping bags, but
should we use the full capacity of the trunk, we would have to remove the cable
storage suitcase from the side and place it…Somewhere. This is not the ideal
solution, BMW solved it in the i3 by placing it in the small front trunk. I
think Nissan could have found a better place to store the cables. Maybe in the
next Leaf?
You have connections, but still, for anybody, it is really expensive to rent an EV...
ReplyDelete