A couple of days ago I was a panelist in a local public discussion forum about Electric Vehicles. The main presenter made the case for Solar + EV. The Tesla owner raved about it's performance. The relatively-new RAV4EV lady owner pointed out the usual EV attributes and allowed as it's good for 100 mies on one charge. The Leaf owners did the usual with emphasis on QuickCharge ability. The FordFocusEV owner loved its looks, but said little else about it and recounted his experience of arriving at SFO and finding zero available EVSEs.
After pointing out that it was a normal car with all the modern features and over-80mph top speed, I gushed over the i-MiEV's practicality: huge flat-floor cargo capacity, the small outside dimensions, our super-tight turning radius, etc.
What really caused the the crowd to gasp is when I tackled the issue of range: "Even without a QuickCharge port, my i-MiEV easily goes 150-200 miles per day". Thought I'd share the example I used, based on living in Los Altos, CA. For us, I'm including the fuel gauge status as well -
Overnight - fully charge the iMiEV using Level 1 (120vac)
0630 - Starting with 16 bars - take neighbor to airport (40 miles round trip).
0730 - Arrived home with seven bars. 4.4 miles/bar. Plugged into L2.
(No problem with rush-hour traffic as iMiEV qualifies for single-occupant HOV lane use)
1030 - Starting with 16 bars, but not fully charged, drove 45 miles to San Francisco to watch the America's Cup racing.
1130 - Arrived with 6 bars. 4.5 miles/bar. Plugged into L2 EVSE at Crissy Field (the world's most beautiful EV charging station location)
1430 - Starting with 15 bars, drove the 45 miles home.
1530 - Arrived home with 4 bars. 4.1 miles/bar. Plugged into L2.
1800 - Starting with 12 bars. Drove 40 miles to Capitola (by the ocean) over the Santa Cruz mountains for dinner with friends in rush-hour traffic.
1900 - Arrived with 4 bars. 5 miles/bar. Net altitude reduction of 600ft. I love the see the fuel gauge go UP on that long downhill!
(Plugged into friends' dryer outlet in their garage - they're now used to me doing this, although there's a free public EVSE less than a block from their house).
2200 - Starting with 13 bars, drove 40 miles home. Minimal hypermiling.
2300 - Arrived with two bars. 3.6 miles/bar. Plugged into EVSEUpgraded L1 for 120vac 12A overnight charge.
Total mileage: 210 miles
Of course we'd like to have larger battery packs, but it would be nice to have a pack size vs. cost alternative when buying the car (e.g., like Tesla). In my case, anything much over 50 miles one-way results in my taking the Gen1 Insight hybrid anyway, so a 100-mile range car wouldn't change my driving habits at all. Sure, I'd use a 150-mile range car a bit more, but still wouldn't drive it 400 miles to Los Angeles. I think Tesla has the long-range EV market sewn up for years to come...
As an aside, I drove my Gen1 Insight for the first time in a while up to SF yesterday to watch the America's Cup (only because I was given a non-EVSE reserved parking spot). Have to agree with alohart: we've become so used to the silence and wonderful instant torque of our EVs, that any ICE vehicle (even one as superb as the Gen1 Insight) now seems ancient in comparison. In addition to the iMiEV, I've been driving my Sparrow which I recently converted to Lithium - shedding 450lbs; need to take it to a dragstrip to quantify, as I had to remove a battery pack to reduce the voltage from 190v to 145v just so it would now be manageable (barely) - I won't let anyone else drive it. :twisted: