http://www.popsci.com/why-you-shouldnt-fear-electric-car
Why You Shouldn’t Fear the Electric Car
By Mac Irvine  [20140113]

[image] (Leaf EV Illustration)  
A more accurate range calculator ensures your battery won't die in the
middle of a trip

In the quest to get drivers to swap their gas-guzzlers for electric vehicles
(EV), the greatest barrier is not the cost. It’s range anxiety: the fear
that a battery-powered EV might go kaput mid-trip. Some of that skittishness
stems from a lack of clarity into how EVs work. But manufacturers are to
blame too. 

Existing range-estimation systems are, actually, somewhat unreliable, since
they depend on limited data sets. To remedy the problem, engineers at North
Carolina State University developed an algorithm that’s up to 20 percent
more accurate at calculating range. It uses driving habits, weather,
terrain, and the battery’s age and condition. Now they’re hoping car
companies come knocking: The more drivers know, the more alluring EVs will
seem.

200,000: Number of EVs registered in the U.S. More than one-third of those
are found in California.

How Driving Scenarios Affect Range
The average American drives less than 40 miles a day, and EVs like the
Nissan Leaf (above) go twice that far on a single charge. The 265-mile range
of the Tesla Model S is the industry’s gold standard.

Highway Commute
  In an EV, the higher the speed, the more energy it requires. Highway
ranges are typically about 20 percent less than city ones, which is the
opposite of gas-powered vehicles.

  Batteries produce weaker current in cold, wintery weather. According to
the American Automobile Association, an EV’s range at 20 degrees Fahrenheit
is about 60 percent less than it would be at 75 F.

Urban Gridlock
  Stop-and-go traffic translates to wasted gas, but EVs use very little
power while idling (and even recoup some with regenerative braking). City
driving can actually improve an EV’s range by up to 25 percent.

  As a battery ages, its capacity wanes. For cars in heavy use—such as a New
York City taxi, which travels five times as much as the average American
vehicle—the range will drop more quickly over time.

Mountain Passes
  Combustion vehicles use excess engine heat to warm a car’s interior on a
chilly day. But any heat in an EV—and in fact all accessories including
audio and built-in navigation—draws down the battery, reducing the range.

  Like their gas-powered counterparts, EVs operate more efficiently on
smooth, flat surfaces, so steep, mountainous terrain and dirt roads limit
range as well.

“Few buyers want a first-generation anything, but drivers are more willing
to adopt second or third generation EVs.”

—Tom Turrentine, Director of the Plug-In Hybrid and Electric Vehicle
Research Center at the University of California, Davis

This article was originally published in the February 2015 issue of Popular
Science [
http://www.popsci.com/issue-alert-have-we-found-alien-life
Issue Alert: Have We Found Alien Life? 
], under the title "Why You Shouldn’t Fear the Electric Car."
[© popsci.com]




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