OK, my turn to throw down the gauntlet, but I don't recommend anybody doing this as it's too rough on the vehicle.
Took a San Francisco Bay Area round trip from Los Altos Hills to Brisbane and back. Temperature 65-70degF, wind negligible.
Started with a full charge and Range Remaining (RR) of 55 miles and went
71.6 miles EDIT: that was the car's odometer, my
GPS says
73.3 miles , roughly 90% of that on Interstate 280 - 380 - Hwy101, with significant climbs and descents.
Arrived home at the base of my driveway with
two bars and
RR of 7 miles with blinking warning indicator. The fuel gauge dropped down to 1 bar during the VERY steep climb up my long driveway where the last bar started blinking along with the warning indicator - I think turtle mode kicked in, but I made it to the top, ending up with one blinking bar and RR of 7 miles. Started recharging immediately.
Initial assessment: for most people, I think the practical upper limit for lightfoot Interstate driving is 50 miles.
Going 73.3 miles took some serious hypermiling (I know how, as my lifetime average in my Gen1 Honda Insight is 77.5mpg for over 80K miles). Now that I know its limits, I won't ever do that again to our poor
Mitsi.
I explored its limit, just as I did with all my other EVs - my driveway is an end-of-trip battery killer which has left me stranded halfway up at least once in every EV! I'm happy that I now know what the limit is and, as usual, I'll be opportunity-charging wherever possible.
OK, I fully recharged, putting in 15.29kWh, and giving me 16 bars and
Range Remaining of 94miles :!: Efficiency for this hypermiling trip thus was 15.29kWh/73.3miles = 0.209kWh/mi, or
4.79mi/kWh, not too shabby. This is a
measured wall-to-wheels number.
Here's a simple unadorned graph of the data from this trip:
EDIT: added the photo showing the sign I sported during this trial, hoping to ameliorate the wrath of other drivers. Not to worry, I ALWAYS stay in the right lane and adjust speed for conditions and other drivers. Still had not received the license plates.