Question for 2017-2019 Owners

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msvphoto

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Joined
Nov 20, 2017
Messages
196
What is your real world range working out to be?

We love our 2015 so much I am considering a 2017-2019 in addition but curious how much range to expect above what we have now. For example, could I make from Santa Cruz to Mendocino with just one DC fast charge mid way (~225 miles with a couple of hills)?
 
msvphoto said:
What is your real world range working out to be?

We love our 2015 so much I am considering a 2017-2019 in addition but curious how much range to expect above what we have now. For example, could I make from Santa Cruz to Mendocino with just one DC fast charge mid way (~225 miles with a couple of hills)?

It's basically 50% more range; at 70 mph I think 125 miles (to empty) is realistic. I wouldn't feel comfortable going more than 100 miles before charging, so in your example I would plan on making a couple charging stops. If you're going up Hwy. 101 that would work out with the last available DCFC station in Windsor, just north of Santa Rosa and ~95 miles from the town of Mendocino.
 
I have been able to average 4.2 miles/kWh on highway 101 from Redwood City to Salinas (set cruise at 62 mph, minimal heat). So if I took the car down to 10% SOC, I think I could have driven about 120 miles. Since you have hills, I agree you should probably charge at about 100 miles or so of travel. I agree with the previous post. Have fun!
 
f1geek said:
I agree you should probably charge at about 100 miles or so of travel. I agree with the previous post. Have fun!

Don't forget that fast charging slows down after 80%, so this is another good reason it's better to stop to charge every 100 miles or so than try to stretch 110 or 120 out of a full battery.

Additionally, certain stations like NRG EVgo may have 30 minute limits. This is a real bummer because even at a 50 kW station, you'll have to return to the station and start a new session to get more than 25 kW pumped in to the battery. It's been driving the Bolt owners crazy.
 
msvphoto said:
What is your real world range working out to be?

We love our 2015 so much I am considering a 2017-2019 in addition but curious how much range to expect above what we have now. For example, could I make from Santa Cruz to Mendocino with just one DC fast charge mid way (~225 miles with a couple of hills)?

After owning for almost a year, I'm finding I get around 200km in the summer and closer to 170km in the winter, less if it gets below -15*C. This is driving with a relatively heavy foot in normal and B mode. With careful driving I could probably tweak out an extra 10km, maybe more? So I guess that means between 105miles to 124miles.

As an example, I have a hilly 200km trip I do several times a year. I once did the whole trip on a single charge with luggage and 3 other passengers, but it was a cool summer day and the last half was in eco+ mode and drafting behind a transport truck (I don't think he liked it much given his frowny face at the end!). By the end, the GOM was flashing 12km left and plug the damn car in!

hth,
Jon.
 
johnnylingo said:
Additionally, certain stations like NRG EVgo may have 30 minute limits. This is a real bummer because even at a 50 kW station, you'll have to return to the station and start a new session to get more than 25 kW pumped in to the battery. It's been driving the Bolt owners crazy.

EVgo now has 45 minute sessions, or 60 minute off peak (8pm-6am) with a membership ($9.99/month). With no session fee even the 45 minute limit isn't a big deal except in the case where the full 60 minutes is needed to go grab a bite nearby.
 
msvphoto said:
What is your real world range working out to be?

We love our 2015 so much I am considering a 2017-2019 in addition but curious how much range to expect above what we have now. For example, could I make from Santa Cruz to Mendocino with just one DC fast charge mid way (~225 miles with a couple of hills)?

I seriously doubt it. At typical freeway speeds, the efficiency really drops. During my bay area commute, I find myself averaging 4.4 miles/kWh at an average speed of 35-40 mph. However, at 70 mph, I'm seeing about 3.5 miles/kwh, which translates into a usable range of barely over 100 miles.
 
slk23 said:
EVgo now has 45 minute sessions, or 60 minute off peak (8pm-6am) with a membership ($9.99/month). With no session fee even the 45 minute limit isn't a big deal except in the case where the full 60 minutes is needed to go grab a bite nearby.

Ahhh...so it's the account, not the station. That makes sense. I just converted to the ChargeNow program as of December 31st and that has the 30 minute limit too. But it at least gets me to 80%.
 
Voltron said:
msvphoto said:
What is your real world range working out to be?

We love our 2015 so much I am considering a 2017-2019 in addition but curious how much range to expect above what we have now. For example, could I make from Santa Cruz to Mendocino with just one DC fast charge mid way (~225 miles with a couple of hills)?

I seriously doubt it. At typical freeway speeds, the efficiency really drops. During my bay area commute, I find myself averaging 4.4 miles/kWh at an average speed of 35-40 mph. However, at 70 mph, I'm seeing about 3.5 miles/kwh, which translates into a usable range of barely over 100 miles.

As I have stated, many many times before, here, the e-Golf was designed as an urban street city cruiser... not a freeway or an autobahn burner.

Keep it under 40 to 45 MPH and drive it less enthusiastically, as a utilitarian piece of transport equipment, for function, not for fun, and your range expands almost two fold. The Germans designed it for efficiency, not for best or fastest lap times, or racing, or for closed course competition. An e-Golf is not really designed as a driver enthusiast's car, that roll is for the Golf GTI or a Passat SEL with a 3.6 V6.
 
Unless it's really cold, rainy, or there's a headwind I see 4.0 mi/kWh at @ 70 mph in my 2017.

I say drive it as suits your needs within reasonable limits. If you have to charge a little more often than the next guy then so be it.
 
JoulesThief said:
Voltron said:
msvphoto said:
What is your real world range working out to be?

We love our 2015 so much I am considering a 2017-2019 in addition but curious how much range to expect above what we have now. For example, could I make from Santa Cruz to Mendocino with just one DC fast charge mid way (~225 miles with a couple of hills)?

I seriously doubt it. At typical freeway speeds, the efficiency really drops. During my bay area commute, I find myself averaging 4.4 miles/kWh at an average speed of 35-40 mph. However, at 70 mph, I'm seeing about 3.5 miles/kwh, which translates into a usable range of barely over 100 miles.

As I have stated, many many times before, here, the e-Golf was designed as an urban street city cruiser... not a freeway or an autobahn burner.

Keep it under 40 to 45 MPH and drive it less enthusiastically, as a utilitarian piece of transport equipment, for function, not for fun, and your range expands almost two fold. The Germans designed it for efficiency, not for best or fastest lap times, or racing, or for closed course competition. An e-Golf is not really designed as a driver enthusiast's car, that roll is for the Golf GTI or a Passat SEL with a 3.6 V6.

JT, I have read your opinion on this many times. While I somewhat agree, how do you know what was in the marketing and engineering minds at Volkswagen. None of their marketing material indicates the car is unsuitable for highway use. In fact, allowing the car to reach 85mph and adding DCFC as an option indicates they do intend the car to be used as a car which means highway capable.

All VW Golfs are designed as enthusiast cars. That is how VW has marketed them since the original Rabbit. As a hard core German car enthusiast (6 BMWs, 3 Porsches, and a dozen Audis owned to date) the e-Golf was my first VW and, as an enthusiast, I was immediately smitten. With the low COG, even on crap tires, the e-Golf is a pleasure to drive and handles exceptionally well. I don't hammer it or drive it like I stole it, but I do enjoy the car's capability. Much like I don't floor my 300hp V8 BMW station wagon every chance I get (the gas bill alone would be huge) I can enjoy use of the e-Golf's instant torque from time to time, even with partial "throttle" input.

Our e-Golf is primarily my wife's car. Even still, we are putting somewhere around 80-90% of our total fleet miles on it since we bought it a little over a year ago. (I have a short commute, but lately my wife is driving me to work a couple days a week). The three ICE cars are barely driven anymore and are for range extension and pleasure mostly now. Rethinking the fleet a little bit now.

I am still dreaming of my holy grail EV which would be attractive (and not scream EV) fun to drive from a German car enthusiast POV, have 250 mile range at 75-80 mph in all weather conditions, and cost under $40k new so I could get a 3-4 year old used one for under $20k. May not happen in my lifetime.

It may be that a PHEV like an Audi A3 e-tron makes more sense. The EV only range is enough to get me to work and back and road trip fuel economy is excellent. The problem is, the A3 e-tron is holding resale value way too well to get a deal on a used one. At this rate a used BMW 330e will be less expensive in a year or two (and I am primarily an Audi guy). That was what got me to thinking a 2017-2019 e-Golf used might be a good idea. I think even then I would need an ICE range extender. Maybe an older SUV or pickup I could haul and tow stuff (like a trailerable sailboat) with. The 2000 BMW 540iT wagon fits that bill pretty well, but needs a trailer hitch.

Anyway, thanks to all who replied to this. Sounds like we could make the trip to our friend's ranch we travel to several times a year with two charging stops, one longer AC charge combined with a DC charge. Keep the speed around Hwy 101 speed limit of 65 on cruise control and it might just work. Portland is also becoming a common destination, but Southwest round trip for ~$140 sort of negates the thought of driving there.
 
msvphoto said:
JoulesThief said:
As I have stated, many many times before, here, the e-Golf was designed as an urban street city cruiser... not a freeway or an autobahn burner.

Keep it under 40 to 45 MPH and drive it less enthusiastically, as a utilitarian piece of transport equipment, for function, not for fun, and your range expands almost two fold. The Germans designed it for efficiency, not for best or fastest lap times, or racing, or for closed course competition. An e-Golf is not really designed as a driver enthusiast's car, that roll is for the Golf GTI or a Passat SEL with a 3.6 V6.

JT, I have read your opinion on this many times. While I somewhat agree, how do you know what was in the marketing and engineering minds at Volkswagen. None of their marketing material indicates the car is unsuitable for highway use. In fact, allowing the car to reach 85mph and adding DCFC as an option indicates they do intend the car to be used as a car which means highway capable.

All VW Golfs are designed as enthusiast cars. That is how VW has marketed them since the original Rabbit. As a hard core German car enthusiast (6 BMWs, 3 Porsches, and a dozen Audis owned to date) the e-Golf was my first VW and, as an enthusiast, I was immediately smitten. With the low COG, even on crap tires, the e-Golf is a pleasure to drive and handles exceptionally well. I don't hammer it or drive it like I stole it, but I do enjoy the car's capability. Much like I don't floor my 300hp V8 BMW station wagon every chance I get (the gas bill alone would be huge) I can enjoy use of the e-Golf's instant torque from time to time, even with partial "throttle" input.

Our e-Golf is primarily my wife's car. Even still, we are putting somewhere around 80-90% of our total fleet miles on it since we bought it a little over a year ago. (I have a short commute, but lately my wife is driving me to work a couple days a week). The three ICE cars are barely driven anymore and are for range extension and pleasure mostly now. Rethinking the fleet a little bit now.

I am still dreaming of my holy grail EV which would be attractive (and not scream EV) fun to drive from a German car enthusiast POV, have 250 mile range at 75-80 mph in all weather conditions, and cost under $40k new so I could get a 3-4 year old used one for under $20k. May not happen in my lifetime.

It may be that a PHEV like an Audi A3 e-tron makes more sense. The EV only range is enough to get me to work and back and road trip fuel economy is excellent. The problem is, the A3 e-tron is holding resale value way too well to get a deal on a used one. At this rate a used BMW 330e will be less expensive in a year or two (and I am primarily an Audi guy). That was what got me to thinking a 2017-2019 e-Golf used might be a good idea. I think even then I would need an ICE range extender. Maybe an older SUV or pickup I could haul and tow stuff (like a trailerable sailboat) with. The 2000 BMW 540iT wagon fits that bill pretty well, but needs a trailer hitch.

Anyway, thanks to all who replied to this. Sounds like we could make the trip to our friend's ranch we travel to several times a year with two charging stops, one longer AC charge combined with a DC charge. Keep the speed around Hwy 101 speed limit of 65 on cruise control and it might just work. Portland is also becoming a common destination, but Southwest round trip for ~$140 sort of negates the thought of driving there.

Tell you what... go down to your local VW dealership, and sit down in every different golf model on their show floor that is not an electric car. Tell me what the max speed is,shown on the speedometer, on all those gas and or diesel Golf. Sit in a GTI, sit in an R-32 too if you can find one.

VW does not design cars for the American market, at all, with the exception of the Passats made in Chatanooga, TN, available in North America only. We are an afterthought. VW doesn't give a rat's ass about diamond lanes or HOV's on freeways. They sell the most of these models in the Netherlands and Norway, socialist governments. The car works in the Netherlands because the country is so damn small, that it's citizens forever have been riding bicycles as alternatives to cars. Same with Denmark. Obviously, if you live in a state like California, it's a helluva lot larger than the Netherlands. And it's travel infrastructure is completely different from that of European countries. 85 mph is a suggestion. I know my passat TDI will do 125 mph, and my Touareg TDI will do a buck thirty. Been there, done that, in NV, once, each, in both cars.

Really don't care if you believe me or not, urban city crawler with use of braking regeneration in stop and go is what the e-Golf was designed for and does best. That's hardly enthusiastic driving, in city traffic. They threw an electric motor in a basic car petrol powered platform to build a compromise compliance car. That's exactly what it is, nothing more, nothing less. It's NOT a fully electric integrated, designed from scratch white paper vehicle. It's highly compromised, and adapted, to make the government happy, not you.

The rabbit was not an enthusiasts car.... The Rabbit GTI was. If you ever drove a diesel Rabbit built in Pennsylvania, circa 1979 -1982, you'd know what a dog it was. I owned a 1981 Jetta coupe diesel. It was enthusiastic, only when going down hill, with the help of gravity.
 
JoulesThief said:
msvphoto said:
JoulesThief said:
urban city crawler with use of braking regeneration in stop and go is what the e-Golf was designed for and does best. That's hardly enthusiastic driving, in city traffic. They threw an electric motor in a basic car petrol powered platform to build a compromise compliance car. That's exactly what it is, nothing more, nothing less. It's NOT a fully electric integrated, designed from scratch white paper vehicle. It's highly compromised, and adapted, to make the government happy, not you.

I'll agree with you that the e-Golf is best used as an urban commuter, but I absolutely disagree with calling it "highly compromised".

As Snoopy says on another thread, the e-Golf is the best car I've ever owned (leased), despite an electric battery being retrofitted onto an ICE chassis. It's all the fun of a Golf without the maintenance worries.

Really the only fault I find with the 2016 SE is the range, which back in 2016 was reasonable compared to other electric cars on the market but now is paltry. I seriously thought about buying out the lease but decided instead to put the money towards an upgrade.
 
I have had stoplight drag races with 911s and crotch rockets because this car has so much torque off the line. I don’t care about driving fast on the highway because there is always traffic. I do care about being able to squirt around at low speeds and get out of the way of people driving 25 mph in a 45 zone. The e-Golf corners really well because it has such a low center of gravity and probably would be good at auto cross. The e-Golf’s MQB architecture was designed for diesel, petrol, hybrid, and electric, so this is not an adapted drivetrain stuffed into a gas car.
 
cctop said:
As Snoopy says on another thread, the e-Golf is the best car I've ever owned (leased), despite an electric battery being retrofitted onto an ICE chassis. It's all the fun of a Golf without the maintenance worries.

Depends on how many imports you've owned from Germany, and your level of experience in owning and driving them. if it's the first German car you've leased or owned, compared to other cars, then yes, it's probably an upgrade. If all you've owned is VW's/Audi's in various models and platforms, since 1977, almost continuously, Bugs, Transporters, Squarebacks, Jetta's, 5000td's Passat TDI's, and Touareg TDI's in various persuasions, and this is your first electric, it's clear where the DNA genetics came from in the Mk VII Golf, even if it is electric.
 
Just to reiterate, the e-Golf does not have an electric battery being retrofitted onto an ICE chassis.

You can read about the MQB platform here:

https://www.topgear.com/car-news/insider/explained-vw-groups-mqb-platform

I'm sure you can read about it other places, too, to discover that the e-Golf was not an afterthought by VW.

Again, the e-Golf is NOT a retrofit. The MQB platform was designed with the e-Golf in mind.

Also, if you want to lose your driver's license by speeding at 85 mph, the e-Golf is more than capable of helping you achieve that goal.
 
JoulesThief said:
As I have stated, many many times before, here, the e-Golf was designed as an urban street city cruiser... not a freeway or an autobahn burner.
.

The e-Golf drives like a dream on freeways, even at "California Freeway Speeds". The battery will just drain faster, much like an ICE will use more fuel at higher speeds. It's just that ICEs have such baseline inefficiency that they are overall more efficient on the open road than in a city. EVs are inherently efficient so it becomes obvious just how much extra energy is needed to move fast.

Volkswagen says literally nothing about the e-Golf being design as a boulevard cruiser, as JoulesThief has also previously described it. It's clearly not expected to make trips from SF to LA or anything like that, but it is WONDERFUL on the freeway, so long as you're traveling within its range.

The comment about the max speed on the speedometer is ridiculous, by the way. The speedometer in cars never actually gives you real information about how fast the car should be driven. The speedo in my old Honda Fit went up to 130mph. Does that mean Honda believes I should be driving the Fit at 100mph between cities?

There is an upper limit to how much energy that they can pull out of the battery continuously before it will heat up too much for the air cooling to handle. Running constantly at 100mph would drain the battery in lightning speed and would generate too much heat. My e-Golf easily gets up to the 80mph speed threshold but then is software limited to protect the battery. It's not putting undue stress on the system to be driving 65mph on the freeway. Electric motors are far more forgiving than combustion engines. Given how few freeways are at or above 80mph I think it's reasonable to suggest that the e-Golf handles freeways just fine.

My 2016 can make it San Jose to Sacramento with a single DCFC half way, though its definitely pushing the limit of what it can do without trying to chain-DCFC which I'm not comfortable doing.

I regularly head up 280 into San Fransisco from San Jose and the e-Golf keeps up with all the other traffic up the hills and all. Could I make a return trip off a single charge if I took El Camino Real the entire way? Yes, I did it once to see if it was possible. It's not worth it though. It's quicker to just take the freeway and charge in Daly City for 20 minutes, and end up with enough to get home via freeway later.

I feel like JoulesThief's priority is to use the minimal amount of electricity (and by extension spend as little money on fuel) as possible. This would align cleverly with the name JoulesThief. I think if this is the priority then absolutely it would make sense to stay off the freeway. For someone who just wants a car that drives like a car then the e-Golf handles wonderfully and all it takes is a little trip planning. Driving on the freeway isn't really exclusive to "enthusiast" cars like the GTI...
 
Very much this ^^^^^

The whole notion of an EV not being built for freeway speeds is malarkey...especially in the US, how do you think most people get to work?

The other day I took my eGolf to a training class 40 miles away, all but 5 by freeway. I could have taken a work car, but it would have been a government-spec crap-mobile, and I would have had to come in the night before, on my day off, to pick it up from the motor pool because it won't be open at 6 AM when I need to start driving to the class. I wouldn't be back until after the motor pool closes, so again I'd have to come back on my day off to return it. So I opted to take my eGolf instead, and enjoyed the comforts of a low-mileage car with a satellite radio subscription that nobody's smoked inside of. Had this class been scheduled before Jan 1, I could have taken advantage of the carpool lane and left as much as an hour later.
 
Not to beat a dead horse, but totally agree with the last couple messages. The e-Golf clearly loses a lot of range at highway speeds, but it still performs admirably when doing so. I live in North Bay (north of SF for those of you not in this area), and we use my car on weekends for everything within a 50 miles radius, give or take. We love the quietness, quickness, and not burning gas/creating emissions, all of which apply regardless of highway vs. city driving.

Last week I even had to drive down to Foster City, 71 miles away and mostly highway, and I made it there on about 40-45% of battery meter (so well over half remaining). Love my e-Golf!
 
I’ve taken mine from San Jose to Sacramento and back. Going to head up to Santa Rosa pretty soon. This car drives like such a dream that I’d rather stop to DCFC charge than drive an ICE even if it takes longer.
 
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