http://www.thegazette.com/subject/news/business/electric-cars-gaining-ground-in-iowa-20160327
Electric cars gaining ground in Iowa
Mar 27, 2016  George C. Ford

[image  
http://www.thegazette.com/storyimage/GA/20160327/ARTICLE/160329710/AR/0/AR-160329710.jpg&MaxH=1400&MaxW=1284
Jim Slosiarek/The Gazette  Electric-powered Nissan Leafs use the charging
station at Schneider Electric in southwest Cedar Rapids. Gary Scott, an
engineer at the company, has about 40,000 miles on his silver Nissan Leaf
(rear) that he bought in 2012
]

More charging stations as ownership increases

CEDAR RAPIDS — When Gary Scott arrives for work each morning at Schneider
Electric in Cedar Rapids, he plugs his 2012 Nissan Leaf into one of two
charging stations in the company’s parking lot.

“I live in Mount Vernon and I can charge at home and at work,” said Scott,
an engineer at Schneider Electric who helped design the control circuit
board in the company’s EV Link, a Level 2 electric vehicle charger. “One of
the reasons I bought the Nissan Leaf was to use our company’s product at
home and at work.”

Scott is one of a growing number of electric vehicle (EV) owners in Iowa.
From 41 “pure” electrics registered in Iowa in December 2012, ownership of
all-electric vehicles has grown to 164 registered in the state as of March
11, according to Andrew Lewis of the Iowa Department of Transportation.

“Most of those are Nissan Leafs,” Lewis said. “There’s also a few Teslas, a
couple of Mitsubishi i-MiEVs, a Ford Focus EV and a BMW i3.”

Scott picked up his Nissan Leaf in May 2012 at Dave Wright Nissan in
Hiawatha after putting down a $99 deposit in 2010.

“I felt that I had to do it because I believe electric cars are a way for us
to get away from fossil fuels,” said Scott, a member of the Iowa Renewable
Energy Association advisory board. “If you look at the cost of a
kilowatt-hour of electricity in constant dollars over the last 30 years, it
has stayed about the same.

“Gasoline would have to drop to about $1 per gallon for the price to be
comparable with electricity.”

If electricity is 12 cents per kilowatt-hour — the national average — it
will cost $2.40 to fill up the battery of an EV requiring 20 kilowatt-hours
to fully recharge.

Scott said the 2012 Nissan Leaf is his “everyday” vehicle. With a range of
roughly 60 miles on a full charge, he can drive the 15 miles each way to and
from work as well as take short trips around town.

Scott also owns a gasoline-powered Mini Cooper to take long out-of-town
trips.

“In four years, I’ve never been caught where I couldn’t get to a charging
station or get a charge at a friends’s house where I was visiting,” he said.
“As charging stations become more plentiful and they put in places where you
can hang out for a couple of hours, electric car sales will rise.”

The 2016 Nissan Leaf has a starting price of $29,010 before federal tax
credits. It has a range of between 84 and 107 miles. Cold temperatures and
highway driving speeds reduce the car’s range, according to Scott.

“Unlike a gasoline-powered vehicle, the electric motor in a Nissan Leaf does
not generate heat,” he said. “It has an electric heater and defroster that
runs off the battery. I tend to cycle the defroster when it gets really cold
in the winter months.”

One of the advantages of owning an EV is the low cost of maintenance. There
is no oil to change, and the motor is directly linked to the drive wheels,
eliminating the transmission and related fluid.

“I have needed to remind myself that the oil needs to be changed in the Mini
Cooper,” Scott said. “I’ve bought a set of winter tires for the Leaf because
I drive to and from work on Highway 30, but that’s just about all I’ve had
to buy over the last four years.”

While Scott uses electricity from Alliant Energy to recharge the lithium-ion
battery in his electric car, Marc Franke uses a source of renewable energy
to recharge his 2013 Nissan Leaf.

“I already had a solar array installation underway for my home, so I decided
to buy an electric car and make my own fuel,” said Franke, a retired
engineer who lives south of Cedar Rapids outside of Ely. “There’s a wire
that runs from my solar panels to my garage. I plug that cable into my car
and the electrons flow into the battery.

“If I need to charge at night, my house is connected to Alliant Energy’s
electric grid. I usually generate more electricity than I can consume during
the day, so the excess electrons flow into the grid and Alliant lets me
‘bank’ those kilowatt-hours. At night or on a gloomy day, I can draw out of
that bank.”

About five months out of 12, he said, “I don’t buy any electricity from
Alliant Energy because I either produce my own electricity or use what I’ve
banked. During the other months, I underproduce because the air-conditioning
is running.”

Charging stations
At the other end of the EV spectrum is the Tesla X, a seven-passenger
all-electric “crossover” that sells for between $80,000 and $132,000. With a
range of about 260 miles, Allen and Brigette Ingersoll ordered it two years
ago to accommodate their family.

“This car is a legitimate seven-passenger vehicle,” Adam Ingersoll said. “We
have four kids and we were looking for something that could carry all of us.
We’ve always been interested in cars that use little or no gasoline. We
owned a (Toyota) Prius in 2004 when they were fairly novel.

“At the rate that electric cars are becoming mainstream, I think by the time
our oldest daughter, Grace, is driving in five years, no one will be driving
gasoline-powered vehicles.”

The Ingersolls put down a large deposit on a Tesla X two and a half years
ago, believing they would be driving it in about a year. The
longer-than-expected wait ended on Jan. 13 when the vehicle arrived in
Coralville by trailer from the closest Tesla Motors dealership in Lombard,
Ill.

That brings up one of the drawbacks associated with Tesla ownership. The
closest Tesla dealerships are in suburban Chicago or Minneapolis.

When the vehicle’s distinctive gull-wing doors needed adjustment, Tesla sent
a Tesla loaner on a trailer to the Ingersoll home in Coralville, took the
Tesla X back to Lombard, Ill., for the repair, and returned it without
charge.

“It’s great for driving around town,” Brigette Ingersoll said. “We had hoped
to be able to take it on road trips, but with the range and the lack of a
Tesla Supercharger network, that’s not going to work just yet.”

Tesla Superchargers provide 170 miles of range in as little as 30 minutes at
no cost. The company has announced plans to build out its Supercharger
network this year with a station located roughly every 150 miles.

Until then, Tesla owners such as the Ingersolls can use their onboard
charger to convert alternating current from a wall charger to direct current
that’s stored in the battery. As the battery nears full charge, the car’s
onboard computer gradually reduces the current to the optimum level for
topping off cells.

The number of charging stations in the Corridor has grown in recent years as
more electric cars have been purchased. From a total of eight in Cedar
Rapids and Iowa City in December 2012, the number of charging stations has
expanded to 15.

Most of the charging stations are Level 2 units and the majority do not
charge drivers for electricity at the present time. Many EV owners such as
Gary Scott register, for free, on www.plugshare.com to offer fellow EV
owners a free charge at their home or business.

“I had a Tesla S owner who was driving from Chicago and knew he needed a
charge in order to get home,” Scott said. “He was able to stop by, we talked
while his car was getting a charge, and then he went on his way.”

PlugShare.com also lists public and privately owned charging stations by
location. Nissan Leafs and Teslas also are equipped with global positioning
system software that shows the driver the location of the closest charging
station.

Tesla is expected to unveil its much-anticipated Model 3 mass-market vehicle
in Los Angeles at the end of this month. With a projected base price of
$30,000 to $35,000, EV ownership will become more comparable to the purchase
of gas-electric hybrid such as the Toyota Prius ($24,200) or Chevrolet Volt
($33.200).

EV Chargers
Level I

• 120 volts AC standard outlet

• Delivers power from the wall to the vehicle’s on-board charger

• Time from fully depleted to fully charged: average 7-29+ hours

• Typically provided with electric vehicle

Level II
• 208-240 VOLTS AC installation

• Delivers AC power from the wall to the on-board charger

• Time from fully depleted to fully charged: average 2-10+ hours depending
on vehicle.

Level III
• 400-600 volts AC installation

• Delivers DC energy bypassing the on-board charger

• Time from fully depleted to fully charged: about 30 minutes

Source: AeroVironment Inc.

On the web
• Private and public charging locations:

Free, but registration required, at www.plugshare.com

• Pros, cons of electric vehicle ownership, click here [
http://plugin-magazine.com/guides/owning-an-electric-car-pros-and-cons/
]. 

• Rules of electric vehicle etiquette, click here [
http://evobsession.com/social-graces-for-charging-spots-mastering-of-pure-energy/
]. 

• Vehicle charging stations, click here [
http://www.afdc.energy.gov/fuels/electricity_locations.html
] .  [© thegazette.com]




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