We just got back from our trip, and I'm happy to report that it was
more or less without drama.
We stopped at Kettleman City on the way out, where two of the ten stations were inoperative, and five of the remaining eight were occupied by Chevy Bolts. And there was a line of five cars. So there was a 45 minute wait. We charged again at Santa Clarita -- more from paranoia than anything else -- where there was no wait.
On the way back (413 miles, from Cerritos, via Pomona, for complicated reasons), we stopped only once in Kettleman City. Once again, two stations were broken (one looked OK, but wouldn't register a plug in), and only one was occupied by a Bolt. Very short wait time.
My observations:
- The official 384 range on my AT is just a number. Back-calculating from the average efficiency I got (3.5 kW per mile), that translates to only about 300. I had cruise set to 79, but there was too much slow traffic to do anywhere near that. Can't say I'm surprised.
- If EA had their s**t together, there would be several lower power stations in addition to the "hyper fast" ones, so that both slow and fast charging cars can be accommodated efficiently.
- About "hyper fast" -- I have never seen anywhere near the 300 kW charging rate that our cars are supposedly capable of. Starting from 18%, the best I saw on a 350 kW station was 180 kW, for a very short period. Car said "charging rate limited by station".
- I wish Lucid displayed predicted, rather than theoretical, range. My Audi e-tron GT does that, and is very accurate (and the range of that car is in reality not that much worse than my Air Touring).
Truthfully, the state of EA stations is laughably bad. Given that all of us (and every VW Group car, and possibly many others) are charging for free, I don't think they have any incentive to make the service any better. I used to think that they'd get better once there were more VW/Audi/Porsches on the road, but the EA-VW connection appears to be tenuous or non-existent. VW has complied with the
letter of the law (of the Dieselgate settlement) but the state of the network warrants a class-action lawsuit, IMO.