http://www.spokesman.com/blogs/brandons-blog-cars/2013/mar/15/one-week-ford-focus-electric/
[image] Brandon's Blog on Cars - One week with a Ford Focus Electric
by Brandon  Mar 15 2013

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EVE OF CAR DELIVERY

Upon further inspection, my turn of the century apartment complex does not
feature exterior electrical outlets.  The review will have to be moved
twenty miles east of Seattle to the city of Kirkland… at my parents’ house. 

The commute thickens.    

DAY 1

9:00 a.m.

A Ford rep shows up with the Focus electric.  He cautions that with a full
charge the car has a real-world range of about sixty miles.  “Basically you
have to get comfortable with being almost out of gas all the time,” he says.

10:00 a.m.

My high school bedroom overlooks the driveway.  Surrounded by bobble head
figurines, I stare skeptically down at the Focus through half-shuttered
blinds.  Plugged directly into a 120-volt wall outlet in the garage, the
Focus could take up to 20 hours to reach full charge.  With a 240-volt Level
2 charging port (about $1,500 including installation), full charge is
possible in 3-4 hours. 

3:00 p.m.

Having arrived at half-charge, the Focus is now almost juiced to the max and
ready for our maiden voyage.  The range display reads 56 miles; turning the
heat to high shaves off nearly ten miles.  Set to low, the range settles at
52 miles.  

3:15 p.m.

Our family neighborhood sits atop a giant hill, which is both good and bad
news for the Focus’ range.  A display in the dash grades drivers on the
efficiency of their braking, acceleration and cruising.  Travelling down the
hill, I’m cautious to brake gradually, milking as much juice from the
regenerative braking as possible to send charge back to the batteries.  On a
half-hour drive, making trips up and down the hill, I achieve a perfect
score in every category.  Back at the house the Focus shows it only used one
mile of range. 

These are the sorts of victories that vindicate EV owners, and in extreme
cases, lead them to name their Golden Retriever “Jonathan”.     

DAY 3

11:00 a.m.

A retired neighbor spots the Focus electric in our driveway.  He enjoys
golfing regularly and leases a new sports car every year or so.  Glaring at
the Focus, his expression says both “pfff” and “hmfff.”

Of the colorful examples he sites of why an electric car wouldn’t support
his lifestyle, most revolve around being stuck in rural traffic, sweating
bullets and clamoring desperately to locate the nearest charge station.  He
isn’t an early adopter, and in reality the Focus EV certainly wouldn’t be
able to accommodate the range his day-to day activities demand.

None the less, he agrees to go for a ride around the neighborhood.  As a car
guy he can’t help but be impressed by the Focus’ instant torque and
straight-line acceleration.

“It’s quicker than a four-cylinder” he says.     

DAY 5

10:00 a.m.

Feeling cocky and looking like a disheveled coffeehouse rat, I schedule a
haircut in Seattle, nearly twenty miles away.  This is going to take
planning.  The website Plug Share proves to be a comprehensive source for
locating electric car charge stations.  Apparently Seattle is teeming with
Level 2 quick chargers, most of which are located in parking garages where I
would have left the Focus anyhow.

A few bad apples have uploaded “bootleg” charge stations to the website,
most of which really aren’t charge stations at all, but non-public
electrical outlets used primarily by maintenance workers.  One of my fellow
West Seattle residents went so far as to post a picture of their Chevrolet
Volt charging from a wall outlet at our neighborhood Safeway.   

“Snug up against the wall and score a few clicks of juice while shopping,”
he writes.

12:00 p.m.

On the trip to Seattle it becomes apparent highway miles don’t last as long
as city miles in the Focus EV, especially if you fail to adamantly obey the
speed limit, or in other words, drive as you normally would.  Inside the
city, the range display shows we used about thirty miles for a twenty mile
trip.  Luckily the parking garage I selected is equipped with Level 2 quick
charge stations.  Better still, the chargers are located at the very front
of the garage, next to the entryway, as if by driving an electric car I’m
entitled to bump disabled persons down to the sub-levels.   

The Focus charges while I go for a trim.

12:50 p.m.

Less than an hour of quick charging brings the Focus’ range close to 50
miles.  Total cost for the charge is less than $3 – not bad for a 40mile
round trip.   

1:30 p.m.

On the drive home I’m inspired to drive aggressively by a thermos of coffee
and a “rock block” on the radio.  Back at the house the Focus’ range meter
is sapped to less than 15miles.  Despite the relatively close call I was
able to enjoy the electric giddyup worry free; before leaving Seattle I
mapped out the trip on the Focus’ navigation system.  Even with a happy
throttle foot and frostless windows the car knew it would have enough charge
to get us home.

DAY 7

9:00 a.m.

A press car representative arrives and hums away with the Focus.  Relieved,
my Subaru wagon looks comfortingly expensive, dirty and archaic.  She can
barely manage 20mpg on the highway, but gas stations throughout the country
will be happy to gouge my credit card whenever I'd like to avoid being
stranded. 

Culture shock aside, I didn’t take a trip all week in the Focus Electric
that caused me any inconvenience or stress beyond having to plan a route
beforehand.  If I had access to a Level 2 quick charge station, or even an
exterior electrical outlet at my home, the Focus Electric could easily serve
as my day-to driver in Seattle. 

If only my apartment complex hadn’t been built in 1922… Then again, that
Safeway where the Volt likes to go is just down the street.
[© 2013 The Spokesman-Review]




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