https://www.staradvertiser.com/2019/06/30/travel/on-nevadas-electric-highway-a-wild-west-ethos-meets-a-techie-future/
On Nevada’s Electric Highway, a Wild West ethos meets a techie future
2019-06-30  Chris Erskine

[image  / TRIBUNE NEWS
https://www.staradvertiser.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/web1_ROADTRIPS-TESLA-NEVADA-2-LA.jpg
Los Angeles Times columnist Chris Erskine drove a Tesla Model 3 near
Hawthorne, Nev. Erskine was trying out the car on a road trip down Nevada’s
Electric Highway from Reno to Las Vegas
]

GOLDFIELD, Nev. >> We were taking a smarty-pants car through honky-tonky
country — Reno to Las Vegas. Our route: U.S. 95, Nevada’s Electric Highway,
a mostly two-lane road that has been peppered with charging stations to meet
the growing demand of electric vehicles, or EVs.

Although still a fraction of the market, EV sales are surging, particularly
in California, where sales increased 84% in 2018. Nevada, which has seen 40%
growth, embraced charging stations after determining the need for them
outside urban centers.

In many respects, this is a 440-mile road trip into the future. Yet it’s
also an escape into the past, through ghost towns and past ancient stores
and buckaroo saloons, even crumbling bordellos.

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Wyatt Earp once worked these ornery outposts, and the feisty ethos of the
American West still roams the gritty lunar landscape.

It’s a case of the New West meeting the Old West along a remote route that
reminds us of the travel pleasures that make us sing inside: open road,
silver vistas and plenty of room to zip around that lumbering RV.

“On a dark desert highway, cool wind in my hair … .”

With photographer Robert Gourley riding shotgun, I was in a pearl-white
Tesla Model 3, with a 325-mile range, dual motors and an autopilot feature
that redefines what it means to drive — cerebrally, physically and
spiritually.

Does tech drive us? Or do “we drive tech,” as one luxe car commercial likes
to brag?

We were about to find out. Buckle up and leave the driving to us — and the
cheeky automotive engineers who are messing with something sacred: the great
American road trip.

Man versus car

We picked up the new Model 3 in Reno. It’s a smaller version of the Model S
you’re accustomed to seeing — and far more affordable, starting at about
$35,000.

My 3-amp brain nearly exploded as I tried to absorb all the features,
including a leap-of-faith, driver-­assist system in which you turn over
steering and lane changes to the car’s software. Technically, it’s not a
self-driving car, but you can smell one from here.

Three hours later, we locked ourselves out of it.

OK, so there’s a learning curve. It’s a genius machine, no doubt, smarter
than all the smart people you know mashed together.

But suddenly, I was standing next to this brilliant little buggy, locked out
of it two hours (130 miles) into our trip, a pit stop we took earlier than
needed to sample the charging experience.

With a Tesla Model 3, you don’t have a key; you have a phone app that
controls the motors, the charging, the door locks.

And in the middle of nowhere, 10 miles from where God left his shoes, my
phone was locked inside this car.

I had a fallback, the little card the car rep gave me. I dug it out and
swiped. I was back inside the car, where the giant iPad-like screen said we
still had 45 minutes left to charge in the town of Hawthorne, near Walker
Lake.

The extended pit stop is an issue with electric vehicles. In a traditional
car, you could gas up, grab a burger and be gone in 20 minutes; with the EV,
a thorough recharging takes an hour or more.

That would seem a significant drawback.

In time, and 200 more miles of desert road, it would seem like something
else. First impressions are usually so wrong with me.

Because, initially, I loathed this confusing little car.

Charged future

The scenery, on the other hand, was pure tranquillity.

On our two-day journey, Gourley and I would pass only half a dozen towns of
much texture or consequence.

Nevada has company in its quest to place and subsidize charging stations on
rural routes like this. By 2020, it aims to expand the Electric Highway to
the entire state, joining other states on the forefront of the EV
revolution. California also aims to develop charging facilities like these
to handle an estimated 1.5 million vehicles by 2025. Arizona and Nevada have
joined six other states in a program called REV West, which is amplifying
the region’s EV charging grid.

The route along U.S. 95 is Nevada’s overture. Overlapping that is Tesla’s
proprietary system of charging stations.

The added pit stops relieve what is called “range anxiety” amid EV drivers.
A welcome byproduct is how it changes the pace of the trip itself.

“It’s a return to road-tripping the way it used to be,” said David Bobzien,
director of the Governor’s Office of Energy, which administers the Nevada
program.

That seemed an audacious claim as this superstar sedan steered us around
another bend, then braked for a slow-moving semi. No question this autopilot
took some getting used to.

But Bobzien’s point was spot on: The hour charging period slows travelers
enough that they can knock about roadside attractions, chat up the locals,
peek into old jails and elegant courthouses.

Midway between Reno and Vegas, we came upon quirky Tonopah Station, a
rambling casino-motel decorated with stuffed grizzlies and a 10-foot-tall
knockoff of the “Mona Lisa” painting.

The must-see stop came 27 miles farther south: the gutty little town of
Goldfield, which sports an ornate haunted hotel, a blast-from-the-past high
school (also haunted) and an ancient bordello made of fieldstone and naughty
lies.

Think of Goldfield as the Williamsburg of the Wild West, though hardly as
curated or as closely clipped as that Virginia town.

The founders of Goldfield, a bustling gold camp and Nevada’s richest city
from 1905 to 1910, built state-of-the-art public buildings, some still open
for view. Visitors can also collect gems on the edge of town, then weigh
them at a gift shop. (It’s the honor system.)

With reservations, you can search for ghosts in the Goldfield Hotel or the
old high school, both under renovation and worthy of attention.

We toured the school, built in 1907, and marveled at its architectural
touches, such as a stained-glass skylight and grand staircase.

For a couple of hours, park that horse you rode in on — your EV, gas guzzler
or mule — and kick around this dusty place where locals are quick to point
out the old bordello or explain the unusual collection of art cars,
including a double-decker houseboat car, in the center of town.

If it’s quirky, it’s here in Goldfield, an immersive monument to the lost
lifestyle of the West.

Joys of an EV

I have way too many passwords, most based on dead pets and failed high
school relationships. My life is already overrun with charging cords and
fussy little gadgets. So when it comes to driving, I just want to turn the
key and go.

Yet as the miles passed, I grew to enjoy this sophisticated computer/car,
which can be as high- or low-tech as the driver chooses. Tap this or wiggle
that, and it becomes a conventional car. Click down twice on the right wand,
and it pretty much drives itself.

I find in it a sense that the future isn’t something we jump into; we ease
the wheel a little at a time — this way, then that — until it begins to feel
comfortable.

I also found in this Wild West adventure a reminder of the joys of road
trips: the feel of the wheel and the buzz you get from goosing the
accelerator to slip around that weaving hay wagon ...
[© staradvertiser.com]
...
US-95 Reno to Las Vegas NV (map)
https://goo.gl/maps/Q7beeAgSYYpEABLH8
...
[dated]
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/First-US-95-Reno-NV-lt-gt-Las-Vegas-NV-448mi-EVSE-Highway-td4680495.html
First US 95 Reno-NV <> Las Vegas-NV 448mi EVSE Highway
Feb 15, 2016  
.
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=nv+Electric+Highway&days=0
 search evdl  NV Electric Highway
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=nevada+Electric+Highway&days=0




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