http://planetsave.com/2015/12/06/town-trip-nissan-leaf-no-problem/
Out-Of-Town Trip In The Nissan LEAF — No Problem
December 6th, 2015  Cynthia Shahan

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My first out-of-town trip in the Nissan LEAF — to St. Petersburg — provided
the comfortable experience that has me thinking, why not take a few days and
do a longer trip to Miami? Any range anxiety I had about driving to St.
Petersburg, to Tampa, or south to Venice or Englewood is gone.

The LEAF made it easily to St. Petersburg with plenty of range to spare (~50
miles). On the way up over the Sunshine Skyway Bridge, I followed faster
drivers in a quickly moving stream of traffic that made it impossible to go
at a slower pace without upsetting the flow of other cars.

The LEAF’s range over the bridge ate up 10 miles quickly. At that point, I
stayed on the faster-flowing interstate through south St. Petersburg and
lost more miles until I got off the fast road in town. Driving through
moderate traffic changed everything. By the time I got to my destination, I
had regenerated half the range I had lost on the interstate. Keep in mind
that, in general, your car probably uses about twice as much energy at 65
mph vs. 25 mph, or 75 mph vs. 35 mph.

Along with many LEAF joys, what makes LEAF drivers happy are the trees
building on the dash. The trees started to grow from more efficient driving.
The eco-friendly mode and driving slower uses less energy/range, and slowing
stimulates regeneration. Braking regenerates even more. The small trees grew
and multiplied on my left dash, showing me I was building range once more.

After finishing a client treatment, I charged at a public spot while in St.
Petersburg and drove home again, over the Skyway bridge — which is a long,
tall bridge between Bradenton and St. Petersburg. I again arrived home with
plenty of range to spare. I felt silly that I ever had a concern about the
trip. St. Petersburg, which has plenty of chargers.

Miami, where I’d also like to take a trip, is another story. Both coasts of
Florida are full of chargers, for the most part. However, crossing Florida
is different. In central South Florida, the most direct way is driving
what’s called “Alligator Alley” — a route still slim one EV chargers. It
actually has only one gas station in the middle of ~100 miles of Everglades
National Park and Big Cypress National Preserve, and that one gas station
has a 110-v outlet for charging (which would mean trickle charging). The
most direct route from West Central Florida crosses the northern part of
Everglades. I will have to plan an alternate route to avoid the possibility
of problems the long way.

Until Florida installs a few more EV chargers, to avoid range issues and to
avoid towing, it is less stressful (I hope) in a Nissan LEAF to take a
longer but more complicated route to Miami.

Many of our readers, and writer Kyle Field, have also noted what becomes
automatic once driving the LEAF. Thanks to sault (and the other
commentators) in the comment section of an earlier post on range, here are
some of these tips/habits: “Anticipate lights. The most efficient way to
handle a red light (or anything that requires you to slow down) is to coast
towards it (without blocking up traffic too much) and hope it turns green
before you get to it. If you need to slow down faster, use simulated “engine
braking” by just taking your foot off the accelerator altogether.”

And remember to check tire pressure.

Gas2 has the fix for my Miami trips (eventually) regardless of chargers on
Alligator Alley, a 200-miles LEAF, and Steve Hanley share, “The credit goes
to scientists at the Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory.
They started working back in 2011 on a new battery cathode made from an
allow of nickel, manganese and cobalt that permits significantly higher
energy flow and higher voltages. The new cathode makes it possible to more
than double battery power and slash recharging times in half.”

Even a 130-mile or 150-mile Nissan LEAF should be plenty fine for that trip.
[© planetsave.com]




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