What does your trip reading say? The reading since last charge includes phantom drain for locking, unlocking starting up and shutting down. It is not good a good number if the car has been sitting or running errands. It is only good for a drive immediately after charging.No bad weather. No hard driving.
Why do I avg 2.9-3.0 miles per KWH??
I was at 85% charge when I started and 126 miles in I am down to 41%. Based on my last month, I’m lucky to get 200mi before down to about 10-15%.
Should I address with lucid?
Wheel size? Pressure on go pedal? Speeding?
Is this mostly city driving?
Weather please, are you using AC or heat?, what regen? And how much time sitting around using up energy while not driving?
“Since last charge” tracks all usage including battery drain while parked.
What does your trip reading say? The reading since last charge includes phantom drain for locking, unlocking starting up and shutting down. It is not good a good number if the car has been sitting or running errands. It is only good for a drive immediately after charging.
This is a recent pic of my Touring. I usually reset A when I want to track efficiency. My Trip B is all time driving. See how trip A is slightly better than “since last charge” due to Phantom energy use.
Yes, it does. But on the 126 miles that Michael used as the example, phantom energy use could be a significant drag on efficiency.But I mean since last charge is the real accurate image right? Phantom drain still costs you money at the end of the day
It is energy that you pay for but it is not energy that decreases road trip range, nor is it a good metric when comparing efficiency with other Lucid owners.But I mean since last charge is the real accurate image right? Phantom drain still costs you money at the end of the day
holy smokes! thats a lot of energy usage.well, I figured it out
Driving around with the A/C on uses about 30% more juice. I normally don’t turn it off here in LA, so it’s just running in the background. This trip was a mixture of highway and traffic, and I averaged 4.5mi/kwh. Big jump!! Who would have thought.
You guys are all great with your suggestions , so thank you.
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Also, how heavy your foot is off the line matters to move a car that heavy! On my GT 21", I get 2.8-2.9 if I drive in Swift and accelerate off the line at stops like I'm a race car driver around the Valley. If I drive conservatively on Comfort with mixed highway and city like on a roundtrip LA-SD with my creature comforts (A/C, music, massage seats, phone charging) I average 3.2-3.5 as long as I keep my speed under 80 with HA. So, you can drive the car for fun or efficiency.Wow. this is great info.
I run the heat/air as normal but only have it set at 69 degrees. Tires are the larger aero wheels with inserts in. Not a lot of sitting around with car on.
It's a 14 mile commute to work (each way) so that's the majority of it. Weather has been 55-69 degrees as a norm. Speeds on the freeway range from 10mph to 65mph, but nothing too fast.
They say with my wheels I should expect 380mi on a full charge so I would expect that 300mi on 85% would be reasonable with normal driving. Looks like it's more like 200-220 the way it's going.
Are finding the A/C saps 20-30% more??Also, how heavy your foot is off the line matters to move a car that heavy! On my GT 21", I get 2.8-2.9 if I drive in Swift and accelerate off the line at stops like I'm a race car driver around the Valley. If I drive conservatively on Comfort with mixed highway and city like on a roundtrip LA-SD with my creature comforts (A/C, music, massage seats, phone charging) I average 3.2-3.5 as long as I keep my speed under 80 with HA. So, you can drive the car for fun or efficiency.
On my commute to and from work I average 3.5 m/kWhr in the winter and 3.2 m/kWhr in the summer. This is Phoenix with two thirds of the drive on freeway at 70-75 mph (speed of traffic). So that works out to about 10% for AC.Are finding the A/C saps 20-30% more??