https://www.greencarreports.com/news/1116900_reader-report-spending-a-year-with-two-chevy-bolt-evs
Reader Report: Spending a year with two Chevy Bolt EVs
May 25, 2018  Brands

[images  
https://images.hgmsites.net/med/2017-chevrolet-bolt-ev-electric-car-photo-patrick-reid_100605961_m.jpg
2017 Chevrolet Bolt EV electric cars outside dealership /photo: Patrick Reid

https://images.hgmsites.net/med/patrick-reid-chevrolet-bolt-ev-showing-4-3-miles-per-kwh_100653093_m.jpg
Patrick Reid Chevrolet Bolt EV showing 4.3-miles per kwh

https://images.hgmsites.net/med/patrick-reid-300-mi-range-on-chevrolet-bolt-ev_100653090_m.jpg
Patrick Reid 300-mi range on Chevrolet Bolt EV

https://images.hgmsites.net/med/patrick-reid-white-chevrolet-bolt-ev-charging-in-driveway_100653091_m.jpg
Patrick Reid white Chevrolet Bolt EV charging in driveway
]

Many Green Car Reports readers have electric cars. Fewer own two, and have
removed gasoline cars from their family fleet altogether. 

Reader Patrick Reid bought two Chevy Bolt EVs last year (one in January and
another in April.)

Last year, he wrote us about his experiences, why he likes the Bolts and
what he doesn't, and how the cars have worked for him on a couple of longer
road trips.

He wrote to us again this week to share his experience living with just his
two Bolt EVs to get around for a year. He's seeing impressive savings on
fuel costs and especially efficient miles since he uses maximum regen mode
for most of his driving. He has seen more than 300 miles of range in the
summer, despite the Bolt EV's 238-mile EPA range rating.

Real-world experiences by actual owners are often popular among readers,
shoppers, and those considering whether a car that plugs in could really
make sense for them. What follow are his words, lightly edited by Green Car
Reports for clarity, style, and length.

[image]  Patrick Reid Chevrolet Bolt EV charing in garage

As I reflect (and calculate) our findings from living with our pair of Chevy
Bolt EVs for more than a year, they have given us of freedom from the gas
pump—and unchained us from giving money to the fossil fuel industry. We have
enjoyed being a small part of the oil companies' worst nightmare (no
gasoline, no diesel, no motor oil, no transmission oil, no filters, no power
steering fluid—no dirty fossil fuel industry products needed), and allowed
us to live a much greener lifestyle.

We are looking forward to never driving (or at least never owning) an
internal combustion vehicle again.

Since acquiring our first Bolt EV in January 2017, and the second one in
mid-April of the same year, our experience has been very positive.

[image]  First 2017 Chevrolet Bolt EV electric car [photo: Patrick Reid]

Both my wife and I have been amazed at the performance, range, versatility,
build quality, money saved in fuel costs, and freedom from the pump over
this past year.

The fuel cost savings are significant. Our 2017 Bolt EVs replaced a 2002 GMC
Yukon (a 13- to 15-mpg vehicle) and a 2007 Chevrolet Impala (about a 20- to
24-mpg vehicle). We put about 15,000 miles a year on each vehicle with our
fuel bills totaling approximately $4,700 per year when gas costs $2.70 per
gallon. Contrast this $390 per month fuel cost with our new costs of less
than $85 per month for electricity. (See our electric "fuel" math on the
next page.) It has saved us at least $300 in fuel costs each month. 

Here is the breakdown of our Bolt EV electric "fuel" costs (in miles per
kilowatt-hour instead of miles per gallon.)

We drove a combined total of 30,400 miles on our Bolts by the one-year mark
(15,000 on my LT and 15,400 on my wife’s Premier) at an average of at least
4.0 miles per kwh, resulting in a total of 7,600 kwh used (30,400/4 =
7,600). 

At least 80 percent of those miles came from electricity in our own garage
(at a cost of 11 cents per kwh and sourced from wind and solar from Arcadia
Power and my local utility). The other 20 percent of those miles came from
commercial Level 2 chargers or Level 3 fast chargers during road trips.
These rates vary from roughly 12 to 30 cents per kwh. We’ll average the
overall rate at 21 cents per kwh for these miles.

Calculation for cost of the miles driven using our residential power:

30,400 miles x 80% = 24,320 miles 

24,320 miles divided by 4.0 miles/kwh = 6,080 kwh of energy used

6,080 kwh x $0.11/kwh = $669

Calculation for cost of the miles driven using commercial Level 2 and/or
Level 3 chargers:

30,400 miles x 20% = 6,080 miles

6,080 miles divided by 4.0 miles/kwh = 1,520 kwh of energy used

1,520KW x $0.21/kwh = $320

$669 + $320 = $989 in total electricity yearly.  $4,700 - $989 = $3,711

Putting this $3,700 saved per year toward something other than fuel, such as
the vacation fund, the kids’ college fund, the Bolt payment, etc, is really
a beautiful thing.

The only current downside to these fuel cost savings is the availability of
commercial Level 3 fast chargers on longer road trips (trips of over 230
miles in one day). 

With a little prior planning using a few apps (PlugShare, ChargePoint, and
the Chevrolet App), however, we've found enough Level 3 chargers available
along most routes to make these types of road trips viable without too much
hassle. Of course, more Level 3 fast chargers will need to be added to the
nation’s charging network as more drivers switch to EVs. (Electrify America
fast charging installations should help greatly in this regard). 

I always plan charging stops (usually at the 170-210 mile range mark) and
have at least one back-up charger within 20 miles of the primary one I
intend to use. This allows for a charger that is unexpectedly out of order
or one blocked by another vehicle. I think that most existing gas stations
along highway and freeway corridors should have at least one CCS fast
charger (probably CHAdEMO also.) Hopefully Tesla and all other
electric-carmakers can come to some kind of payment agreement to allow CCS
to Tesla adapters (and vice versa) to help the expansion even further.

There is no downside to everyday trips in our Bolts—driving to and from
work, running errands, and taking the kids to and from school, etc.—since
their range easily accommodates these trips with ample miles to spare.  

Everyday charging is easy with just a 120-volt outlet in the garage. We each
typically drive less than 50 miles a day on each and can easily put 30 to 50
miles back when plugged in for at least 8 hours overnight. 

Most of the time, both vehicles are plugged in and the charge limit is set
to 8 amps for each car via the touchscreen or remotely via smartphone on the
Chevrolet App. The 20-amp garage circuit has no issues handling the combined
16-amp load. If one vehicle needs more of a charge than the other, that Bolt
will be set to the 12 amp setting which puts in 5 to 6 miles per hour
charging or 50 to 60 miles in a 10-hour period, and the other will get
topped off in the driveway the next day or the following evening in the
garage.

I would definitely install a 240 volt (Level 2) charger if we typically
drove well over 50 miles per day, but we don’t and the 120-volt charging
works just fine.

The range in both cars will be as high as 300 miles during the warmer
weather months (with 65- to 75-degree temps on the southern Oregon coast)
and as low as 210 miles during the cold months (at 35- to 45-degree average
temps with rain and occasional days of snow or freezing rain.)

Both Bolts have the same ride quality today as they did when we first drove
them off the lot. No squeaks or rattles have developed; excellent build
quality.  We are very happy with both our Bolt EVs.
[© ]


+
https://www.drivespark.com/four-wheelers/2018/car-charging-station-3-km-apart-cities-india-electric-vehicles-government-proposal-025730.html
Electric Car Charging Stations To Be Set Up Every Three Kilometres ...
May 19, 2018  The Government has proposed setting up electric charging
stations for electric vehicles in India. According to Economic Times, cities
will have EV charging ...




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