One of the main values of sodium-ion batteries - apart from being substantially cheaper than lithium-ion - is cold temperature efficiency.
VW have a China JV which is focused on this market - JAC Yiwei EV will be the first sodium-ion powered EV to go into mass production, happening Q1 2024
Until you need to do a road trip. I hated it. Non-Tesla charging networks are perpetually broken and few and far between in more rural areas. Going from MA to NH or VT was always nervewracking as they became just barely in reach in winter. I know it will get better (especially once everyone is on NACS), but it’s pretty tough out there now.
Hopefully this will just get better and better as charging networks improve, as batteries improve, and charging technology improves. We're already seeing some good steps in all these areas.
It depends A LOT on car, battery make, and temperature.
For temperatures above -10C (14F), a car with heat pump will typically have a range drop of 20-30%, where a car without heat pump will have a somewhat higher range drop, but when temperatures go below that, the heat pump becomes increasingly less efficient.
Some cars will back a backup PTC heater, where others, like (recent) Tesla Model 3/Y/S will run a motor to generate "waste" heat.
Some cars will also scavenge waste heat from the battery, while others cannot.
Some personal experiences in -15C (5F) is that Tesla Model Y LR loses about 25% range, where a VW ID.4 Pro loses closer to 40% range, despite having a heat pump. Ranges are measured on the same stretch including city driving and highway driving.
This is why a real hybrid car would be ideal. Front axle driven by ICE, and rear by electric motor and a battery with say 100 mile range. For 90% of the rides, the 100 mile electric drive train is enough, and you almost ride operational cost free if you also have solar panels and charge at home. There is no anxiety for extreme weather or those occasional long trips because the ICE got you covered. I don’t know if any car does this combination without breaking the bank.
Plug-in hybrids makes very little sense, compared to pure hybrids or battery-electric vehicles. You end up with a complex drive train and a lot of added weight. To me it makes more sense to just use a hybrid if range is an issue. You need quite a large battery to drive 100 miles, and in your example you end up with an engine that is only used 10% of the time, but costs quite a significant portion of the overall cost of the car. You also have the added maintenance costs, which are higher for plug-in hybrids due to much more complex drive train.
The reality is that for most people this is a non-issue. The biggest issues in temperatures that low is that your combustion engine won't start because your 12V battery has failed. All solvable, by just using a block heater. Which incidentally is the same way you can mitigate a lot of the range losses due to cold battery in EVs.
BMW makes an PHEV X5 with 40 miles of range and the normal straight 6 B58 motor. No small underwhelming I4 in a transverse FWD config. It’s between the Model X/Y in price.
I have a kayak/bike trailer I use in the warm months. For my daily 35 miles commute I could use electricity and still have the capabilty to do long drives with all my kayak or biking stuff plus all the kids stuff.
I’m a huge BMW fan but the Model X was freaking awesome. The Model Y felt like a Ford Pinto with the hardest suspension you could find.
>Front axle driven by ICE, and rear by electric motor and a battery
This makes no sense. Use the ICE to run a generator, and have full-electric propulsion; this way you can run the engine at the sweet spot for efficiency as needed.
This is exactly what diesel locomotives do; the diesel engine has no mechanical connection to the traction system, which is entirely electric.
Series hybrid drivetrains are worse efficiency at highway cruise speeds. The mechanical double conversion is much worse than a straight mechanical transmission. They only make sense in city stop go which is why nearly all hybrid cars are parallel and connect ICE to wheels at highway speeds.
Trains sacrifice drivetrain efficiency in order to get precise traction control to prevent wheel spin and to greatly simplify power routing to bogies. They make up for the efficiency loss with low rolling resistance steel wheels on steel track and really good aero due to long trains cars all drafting.
I saw a guy made one of them by chopping off the back then of an old cavalier, turning the front into a trailer and repurposing the engine as a generator. A more purpose built one of these you could solve the "can't use an EV for long trips" problem.
I think it's just not worth it. A Model Y takes about 18Kw to hold 70mph, a 20Kw diesel generator on a trailer is about 2000 lbs dry no fuel and $20,000.
I guess you could go with say 10Kw generator and run a deficit and double your range while having to both charge and fill up fuel then your looking at around 1000 lbs dry and $10,000.
As a resident of Queensland, Australia, why do people _choose_ to live in lands of ice and snow? So much of the world seems quite horrid to my sub-tropical habituated self.
their choices are not objective decisions. its what they know and where their friends, family, community, house, job, tombstones, effigies, entrepreneurial endeavors and partners are.
You could say that about any decision about anything, so it's pretty meaningless. I live in northern Ontario. It's below 0F all this week, and that's on the warm side for this time of year. We usually get a week or two of -20F, and -30 is cold but not remarkable. And believe if or not, people _do_ choose to live in these climates, regardless of the ties you listed above.
I love winter. I love the stillness, I love being cozy inside, I love the feeling of braving the elements outside. Maybe it's a bit trite, but knowing that just being outside can literally kill you if you're not prepared for it tends to make you feel pretty alive. I love how everything dies or hibernates in the winter, and I love the renewal and rejuvenation that comes with spring.
And like a sibling comment pointed out, you can always put on more clothes to be comfortable, but you can only take off so many. I hate heat and humidity. I bike to work five days a week year-round and run outdoors all winter. Late summer when it's so hot and miserable to be outside is when I stop running.
It's not a stillness from lack of people. I live in a city of 120k. It's the way snow dampens sound. Also, I know that lots of people don't want to live here, that's obvious. I'm saying that there are also many people who do want to live here.
Someone asked the question of why people want to live in climates like this. I'm answering the question from the (subjective) perspective of someone who does. You are needlessly confrontational in trying to impose your logic on other people's decisions.
Land of ice and snow dweller here. Various reasons, but small perk being that the cold basically ends most things that want to kill you, at least until spring. We have only two species of venomous spiders here, both of which are very shy. And one species of venomous snake, that's actually quite polite in that he'll rattle his tail to warn you off first before attempting to stab you with his fangs.
I can answer a bit more seriously later if you are actually curious.
As a South Aussie, I was quite shocked at the humidity over there in Brisbane. But definitely not on the extreme end of the temps as the lands of ice and snow.
I love winter. I love summer too but I don't think I would appreciate summer without a cold winter.
Fresh snow makes gives my city a clean soft look, hiding the dormant brown of fall. It quiets and slows the cars. People out walking become friendlier. Snow's reflectiveness can make the darker days of the year so bright. You can walk anywhere on frozen ground and roll around on snow without getting muddy. You can ski, sled, or just walk and enjoy it. A breath of cold air wakes you up instantly.
Unfortunately my region, the Great Lakes, has been rapidly warming and trending towards rainy near-freezing winters instead of snow. But I do appreciate every snow we get. It probably helps I live in a city and don't need to drive.
Well if EVs can only do a 1200km journey from Saskatoon to Kelowna in -30F weather at $30 dollars* less cost than fuel for an ICE, then there's no way they're ready for the mass market.
Looking at the map, Saskatoon to Kelowna is a 1200km trip that takes 13 hours.
The article says “it takes 3x longer” because of charging, so that would make it… 26 hours of charging alone? Maybe they shouldnt be writing zero-effort news articles based on some random tweets.
Bjorn Nyland on YouTube has plenty of reviews where he charges in cold weather, all you need is to make sure the battery is preheated (I believe Teslas do it automatically once you add a charging stop to the gps route) and then charging happens at normal speeds.
I know. But when you're driving you need to navigate. Which is drawback compared to cars where you can just have a button to tell it to start preconditioning regardless.
I suppose having a manual override is better than not having it - especially for non-Tesla chargers - but for most long journeys I’m setting up the sat nav anyway for traffic and it’s aware of each supercharger stop to the destination.
Plugging the details in to ABRP, it seems that this journey would be 14 hours and 40 minutes of pure driving. In a Tesla Model Y LR you would need to stop every hour or two for about 15 minutes to top up and the total charging time would be under 2 hours. Not sure if this is taking into account extreme low temperatures so let’s assume not.
Maybe he meant that it would be 3x longer with the extreme temperatures for charging only? So 6 hours instead?
But I agree, it’s a total trash article. No actual quotes from owners, only third parties. No comparison on how ICE vehicles fare under similar conditions.
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[ 1.3 ms ] story [ 126 ms ] threadVW have a China JV which is focused on this market - JAC Yiwei EV will be the first sodium-ion powered EV to go into mass production, happening Q1 2024
If you drive less than 200-300 miles per day, you plug in at night and never worry.
Took me a full year to stop worrying about it. Was always doing the range math in my head.
Ive seen people complain in eastern eu about 50% drop
For temperatures above -10C (14F), a car with heat pump will typically have a range drop of 20-30%, where a car without heat pump will have a somewhat higher range drop, but when temperatures go below that, the heat pump becomes increasingly less efficient.
Some cars will back a backup PTC heater, where others, like (recent) Tesla Model 3/Y/S will run a motor to generate "waste" heat.
Some cars will also scavenge waste heat from the battery, while others cannot.
Some personal experiences in -15C (5F) is that Tesla Model Y LR loses about 25% range, where a VW ID.4 Pro loses closer to 40% range, despite having a heat pump. Ranges are measured on the same stretch including city driving and highway driving.
Not 100 miles, but enough to do quite well for daily errands.
The reality is that for most people this is a non-issue. The biggest issues in temperatures that low is that your combustion engine won't start because your 12V battery has failed. All solvable, by just using a block heater. Which incidentally is the same way you can mitigate a lot of the range losses due to cold battery in EVs.
I have a kayak/bike trailer I use in the warm months. For my daily 35 miles commute I could use electricity and still have the capabilty to do long drives with all my kayak or biking stuff plus all the kids stuff.
I’m a huge BMW fan but the Model X was freaking awesome. The Model Y felt like a Ford Pinto with the hardest suspension you could find.
This makes no sense. Use the ICE to run a generator, and have full-electric propulsion; this way you can run the engine at the sweet spot for efficiency as needed.
This is exactly what diesel locomotives do; the diesel engine has no mechanical connection to the traction system, which is entirely electric.
Trains sacrifice drivetrain efficiency in order to get precise traction control to prevent wheel spin and to greatly simplify power routing to bogies. They make up for the efficiency loss with low rolling resistance steel wheels on steel track and really good aero due to long trains cars all drafting.
I guess you could go with say 10Kw generator and run a deficit and double your range while having to both charge and fill up fuel then your looking at around 1000 lbs dry and $10,000.
You could say that about any decision about anything, so it's pretty meaningless. I live in northern Ontario. It's below 0F all this week, and that's on the warm side for this time of year. We usually get a week or two of -20F, and -30 is cold but not remarkable. And believe if or not, people _do_ choose to live in these climates, regardless of the ties you listed above.
I love winter. I love the stillness, I love being cozy inside, I love the feeling of braving the elements outside. Maybe it's a bit trite, but knowing that just being outside can literally kill you if you're not prepared for it tends to make you feel pretty alive. I love how everything dies or hibernates in the winter, and I love the renewal and rejuvenation that comes with spring.
And like a sibling comment pointed out, you can always put on more clothes to be comfortable, but you can only take off so many. I hate heat and humidity. I bike to work five days a week year-round and run outdoors all winter. Late summer when it's so hot and miserable to be outside is when I stop running.
otherwise it would be a dense high cost of living area already
you are perfectly aware of the contrarian nature of your choice
Someone asked the question of why people want to live in climates like this. I'm answering the question from the (subjective) perspective of someone who does. You are needlessly confrontational in trying to impose your logic on other people's decisions.
OK I'll say it.
I accept the meaninglessness of why most people are where they are to begin with, because most of the time
>>their choices are not objective decisions.
I can answer a bit more seriously later if you are actually curious.
Rattlesnakes and black widow spiders are about it. The scorpions are the annoying but not lethal kind by me.
No deep freeze required... and there's no disease-spreading mosquitoes or tics to speak of any time of year.
Fresh snow makes gives my city a clean soft look, hiding the dormant brown of fall. It quiets and slows the cars. People out walking become friendlier. Snow's reflectiveness can make the darker days of the year so bright. You can walk anywhere on frozen ground and roll around on snow without getting muddy. You can ski, sled, or just walk and enjoy it. A breath of cold air wakes you up instantly.
Unfortunately my region, the Great Lakes, has been rapidly warming and trending towards rainy near-freezing winters instead of snow. But I do appreciate every snow we get. It probably helps I live in a city and don't need to drive.
($60 dollars less if those are canadian dollars)
* https://www.travelmath.com/cost-of-driving/from/Saskatoon,+C...
The article says “it takes 3x longer” because of charging, so that would make it… 26 hours of charging alone? Maybe they shouldnt be writing zero-effort news articles based on some random tweets.
Bjorn Nyland on YouTube has plenty of reviews where he charges in cold weather, all you need is to make sure the battery is preheated (I believe Teslas do it automatically once you add a charging stop to the gps route) and then charging happens at normal speeds.
A lot of EVs (really; a lot) don't even have preheating, or you cannot start it manually (like Tesla).
If you navigate to a supercharger it will precondition the battery as you approach.
Maybe he meant that it would be 3x longer with the extreme temperatures for charging only? So 6 hours instead?
But I agree, it’s a total trash article. No actual quotes from owners, only third parties. No comparison on how ICE vehicles fare under similar conditions.
And using AI to annotate pictures:
> Beautiful view of a man connecting a charging cable
Here are some actual owners: https://www.reddit.com/r/Calgary/comments/194yg8x/how_are_yo...
> My partner’s gas car wouldn’t start last night so we took the EV. That’s how it’s going
Ironically the solution is essentially the same — keeping your car plugged in to keep warm.