Trundling-ashamed+nervous-inexperience chose to ice-drive back home

% Writers should never take a trip until they are experienced drivers: do
not select L2-only EVs for unplanned long trips (though there was plenty of
public EVSE to stop-n-use), do not use an automaker's on-board EVSE-nav
system, use plugshare.com or afdc.energy.gov , drive a constant-60mph on the
1st trip to overcome self-imposed fears (mentally plan trip in-advance),
etc. %

http://www.washingtonpost.com/cars/on-wheels-the-2014-ford-focus-electric-taking-you-only-so-far/2014/10/16/3648cb2e-5321-11e4-892e-602188e70e9c_story.html
On Wheels: The 2014 Ford Focus Electric, taking you only so far
By Warren Brown Columnist October 17 2014

[image  
http://img.washingtonpost.com/rf/image_1484w/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2014/10/16/Production/Sunday/SunBiz/Images/15FocusElectric_EV_M_W6_F_RGB.jpg
The Ford Focus Electric is intended for around-town use. (Ford Motor Co. / )
]

ROSEDALE, Md. — I drove here on a dare — 6.8 miles northeast of Baltimore,
51.4 miles north of my home in Arlington, Va., according to my MapsGalaxy
app.

A precise knowledge of driving distance was essential, as was made clear by
a question on the MyFord Touch screen of the 2014 Ford Focus Electric: “Will
you recharge at destination?” It was a polite version of: “Don’t try to
drive back home without first recharging this car’s lithium-ion battery
pack. You won’t make it.”

Therein was the essence of the dare, and one of the major impediments to
public acceptance of all-electric cars. It’s called “range anxiety.”

The dare was put to me jokingly by an employee of the car-delivery company,
Event Solutions International, whose East Coast offices are in Rosedale. The
company was holding an open house. “So I guess you’ll drive the Focus to the
party?” the delivery man asked mischievously upon parking another vehicle in
my Arlington driveway.

I immediately said, “No!” Drive a little electric car along Interstate 95
heading north in midday traffic? “Are you nuts?”

He smiled at my hypocrisy. I am a longtime proponent of electric vehicles.
They reduce fossil-fuel consumption and air pollution. Yet, faced with a
50-mile drive on a high-speed highway, I was backing out. And didn’t the man
who brought me the car make the same drive south to my home on the same
interstate under the same conditions?

I felt ashamed. I plugged the Focus Electric into my 120-volt “slow-charge”
home charging station. “Slow” means 20 hours to get the battery pack up to
full capacity, a 91-mile range on the car’s charge meter. But I couldn’t
tell whether that reading was a sly promotion built in by Ford’s marketing
people. The Environmental Protection Agency says the Focus Electric has a
76-mile driving range fully charged. A “quick-charge” 240-volt home charging
station offered by AeroVironment would yield the EPA’s full-charge range in
three to four hours.

With 91 miles showing on the charge meter, I set out for Rosedale. I was
cautious— I drove with no radio, no air conditioning, nothing that would
drain battery life. The Focus Electric is engineered to run at a top speed
of 84 mph. But the faster you go, the more battery juice you use. And the
car is equipped with regenerative braking, a system that uses braking energy
to support the battery charge. Still, I decided to religiously adhere to a
65-mph speed limit.

That wasn’t easy. I-95 is a playground for speed scofflaws and law
enforcement officials alike. The scofflaws enjoy exceeding posted speed
limits by at least 10 mph. Police enjoy snagging the really egregious
speeders, or those speeding in cars whose exterior designs are so
outrageously flamboyant they practically beg to be ticketed.

Trundling along at 65 gets you no love from the police and no respect from
the speeders. You’re in everybody’s way, gumming up the catch-me-if-you-can
game, which both sides seem to enjoy.

I slowpoked in the right and middle lanes, keeping a keen eye on the charge
meter, which had dropped to 40 miles remaining by the time I got to
Baltimore. The mathematics didn’t make sense. I had figured I’d have at
least 60 miles left at that point. But there it was — 40 miles and dropping
rapidly.

I grew nervous, hoping the onboard navigation system was on target as it
guided me into the Baltimore suburb of Rosedale. My anxiousness was
increased by the growing choppiness of the car’s acceleration. The battery
pack made handling was less than desirable, too.

But the navigation worked perfectly. I arrived at ESI with 30 miles left on
the charge meter. I thought myself the hero until I was let in on the real
joke: I had been set up. My ego overrode my common sense, and I fell for the
ploy.

“Warren,” said my ESI delivery man, “you do know that the Focus Electric is
just a neighborhood car, don’t you?” As in not really meant for highways
such as I-95, as in does well in acutely local travel, as in I could run
around Arlington endlessly — driving by day and charging by night — without
burning an ounce of gasoline.

Yeah, I knew that — which is why I chose a gasoline-fueled 2015 Jeep Compass
to drive back home.

Nuts & Bolts
2014 Ford Focus Electric

Bottom line: All-electric models such as the Focus and the Nissan Leaf are
primarily neighborhood cars, meant to deliver good gasoline-free service
within 40 to 90 miles, the average daily driving range for most of us. An
exception is the full-size Tesla S, which has a 265-mile range fully
charged. But acceptance of these cars is hampered by price: They tend to
cost considerably more than their fossil-fuel counterparts.

Ride, acceleration and handling: Ride is labored on the highway, where you
are constantly mindful of the weight of that battery pack. It’s better in
town, where lower speeds seem to mitigate, or work better with, weight.
Acceleration and handling are mediocre on the highway, much improved in
town.

Head-turning quotient: The Focus Electric looks like any other Focus —
pleasantly conservative, the kind of car you’ll find in a church or school
parking lot.

Body style/layout: The 2014 Focus Electric remains unchanged from the model
introduced in 2013. It is a compact, four-door, all-electric sedan with a
liquid-cooled lithium-ion battery pack located near the rear. It has
front-wheel drive.

Power system: The lithium-ion battery pack yields the gasoline-engine
equivalent of 143 horsepower. Power is transmitted to the front wheels via a
one-speed direct-drive transmission.

Capacities: Seating is for five people. Cargo capacity with all seats in
place is 14.5 cubic feet; it is 44.8 cubic feet with all seats folded.

Mileage: Ford’s marketers define “fully charged” for the Focus Electric as a
range of 91 to 98 miles. The Environmental Protection Agency puts it at 76
miles.

Safety: Standard equipment includes four-wheel disc brakes (ventilated
front, solid rear); four-wheel anti-lock brake protection; emergency braking
assistance; electronic brake-force distribution; stability and traction
control; xenon high-intensity-discharge headlamps; and side and head air
bags.

Prices: Ford lowered the price on the Focus Electric by about $4,000 from
2013 to 2014 — it now starts at $35,170. Pricing may be mitigated by
available tax rebates. Check with your tax consultant. Financially,
gasoline-fueled Focus models are still a much better deal.
[© washingtonpost.com]
...
http://www.omantribune.com/index.php?page=leisure_details&id=12987&heading=Special%20Features%20in%20Details
Neighbourhood amigo
Warren Brown  Washington Post-Bloomberg
...
http://www.afdc.energy.gov/locator/stations/results?utf8=%E2%9C%93&location=laurel%2C+md&filtered=true&fuel=ELEC&owner=all&payment=all&ev_level2=true&radius=true&radius_miles=10
Plenty of public L2 6kW EVSE between Arlington, VA and Baltimore, MD




For EVLN posts use:
http://www.evdl.org/archive/index.html#nabble+template%2FNamlServlet.jtp%3Fmacro%3Dsearch_page%26node%3D413529%26query%3Devln+-re%26sort%3Ddate

http://www.dailytech.com/Report+2015+Ford+Focus+Electric+MSRP+Slashed+by+6000+Will+Retail+for+29995/article36739.htm
2015 Ford Focus Electric MSRP Slashed by $6k, Will Retail for $30k
...
http://www.worldcarfans.com/114102183150/2015-ford-focus-electric-gets-a-6000-price-cut
http://cleantechnica.com/2014/10/23/ford-focus-electric-2015-price/
http://www.standard.net/Auto/2014/10/24/Ford-Focus-Electric-is-friendly-to-the-environment-if-not-the-road-tripper.html
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102117280#.
Ford aims to charge up sales with electric car price cut

http://www.triplepundit.com/2014/10/ford-edges-closer-growing-car-parts/
Coconut-Fiber in Focus EV, Bio-based Parts Save$ as Oil Prices Rise

http://www.autospies.com/news/Ford-Worries-3-Gas-Will-Kill-EV-Market-Isn-t-That-EXACTLY-What-OPEC-Wants-83253/
Ford Worries $3 Gas Will Kill EV Market - Isn't That EXACTLY What OPEC
Wants?

http://www.sfgate.com/business/article/Ford-goes-zero-emissions-with-a-Pedego-electric-5845653.php
Ford goes zero-emissions with a Pedego electric bike

http://www.technologytell.com/in-car-tech/10514/ford-demonstrates-phevs-talk-power-company/
Ford prefers pih to EVSE-talk to Utilities controlling the recharge
+
EVLN: Ford sez 'We could make a Tesla EV' ... Yeah, that's the ticket!


{brucedp.150m.com}



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