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Taxpayers' Leaf: Four Recharging Stops Needed to Go 180 Miles
National Legal & Policy Center ^ | January 3, 2012 | Paul Chesser

Posted on 01/03/2012 11:21:53 AM PST by jazusamo

Nissan Leaf photo

Consumer Reports has painted an ugly picture of the Nissan Leaf, as did an early enthusiast based in Los Angeles, who described his frustrations with the heavily subsidized, all-electric car in a recent column.

Now comes what must be the definitive example of the Leaf’s impracticality – this time from a (still) hard-core advocate, whose 180-mile Tennessee trek to visit family over the holidays required four lengthy stops to keep the vehicle moving.

Stephen Smith, executive director of the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, set out from Knoxville on Monday with his wife and son, headed for the Nashville area. His plan (appropriately) was to follow Interstate 40 West, where a series of Cracker Barrel restaurants – equipped with so-called “fast” vehicle chargers (if you want to call 30 minutes or more “fast”) along the route – would provide an electricity security blanket as the Leaf’s charge diminished.

Only problem was, the Leaf’s charge dropped more rapidly than promised. In what has to be a public relations disaster for Nissan, Smith’s EV was unable to travel no farther than 55 miles on any leg of the trip – and for the most part, much less. The company, and its government backers, proclaimed the Leaf was “built to go 100 miles on a charge” (large print), with a footnoted disclaimer (small print) that it travels shorter distances (like, 70 miles) if the air conditioning or the heater is used. Turns out even that was an exaggeration.

It was about 35 degrees in the Volunteer State when Smith departed Knoxville on Monday, and Mrs. Smith and his five-year-old son apparently were not willing to forgo heat in order to make the EV cause look good. A trip that should take – according to map Web sites – less than three hours, ended up lasting six hours for the Smiths because of all the stops they had to make. The approximate intervals where they paused for recharging were as follows:

Hence the Smiths required four recharges in order to travel approximately 180 miles. According to the account in The Tennessean, they experienced their first “hair-raiser” range anxiety before they even reached Harriman.

“The display on the dashboard of their Nissan LEAF showed a drop in available range from 100 miles to about 50, when they had only traveled about 40 miles,” reported the Gannett-owned newspaper, which also owns USA Today, a cheerleader of all “clean” energy projects regardless of viability.

If the specs promised by Nissan and Leaf advocates were to be believed, the Smiths should have been able to travel about 25-30 miles past Harriman (where it took 20 minutes to boost the battery to 80 percent) before they’d need a recharge, even when using the car heater. But because of the limited availability of so-called “fast chargers” (440 volts, 30 minutes), the intermediate stop was necessary in order to climb the upcoming Cumberland Plateau and reach the next Cracker Barrel “fast charger” in Crossville. The chargers (which, by the way, don’t work for the Chevy Volt and won’t for many future EVs planned for release) are sparse because they cost $40,000 each, and companies like Ecotality apparently can only do so much with the $115 million Department of Energy grant it received to deploy the equipment.

At Crossville, according to The Tennessean , the Smiths’ battery gauge failed them again. The reading at Harriman said they could go another 70 miles, but after 31 miles, the gauge indicated they only had 20 miles of range remaining. Obviously that wasn’t to be trusted.

“It was a little nerve wracking,” Stephen Smith told the Nashville-based newspaper. “I’m finding the range is not 100 percent accurate.”

But heading west from Crossville, according to Smith, would not be as taxing on the Leaf: “Cookeville will be about the same distance but it will be flat or downhill.” It turned out his battery gauge maintained accuracy on that leg of the trip, but when he reached Lebanon (50 miles), he found that the Ecotality “Blink” fast-charger at the Cracker Barrel was, uh, on the blink (he should have known that was possible, if not likely). So instead he had to plug in to another slower charger at the restaurant, which took an hour to boost the battery enough (they hoped) to travel the remaining 22 miles to their destination.

The Smiths arrived at their destination in Antioch with what the Leaf told them was six miles of range remaining. All that after an anxiety-filled six-hour trip that was more than twice as long as it would take in a gasoline vehicle, which could probably have been accomplished with a single stop for a bathroom break.

The Smiths’ experience echoed that of a Consumer Reportsreviewer and Los Angeles columnist Rob Eshman, who called his Leaf his “2011 Nissan Solyndra.” Eshman, editor-in-chief of The Jewish Journal, experienced the same gauge inaccuracies and range anxiety that came from traversing hills and mountains and the use of his air conditioning in hot, smoggy L.A.

“My life now revolves around a near-constant calculation of how far I can drive before I’ll have to walk,” Eshman wrote. “The Nissan Leaf, I can report, is perfect if you don’t have enough anxiety in your life.”

Of course, you won’t hear words like that from the lips of passionate “Green” energy advocate Smith, who chalked up the experience to being an “early adopter” and a pioneer.

“It’s good knowing we didn’t use a drop of oil getting down here,” he said. He must have had a similar fuzzy feeling on his return trip , which "only" took five hours, since the Lebanon charger was working later in the week.

As for the heavily coal-generated electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority that powered his trip, well, let’s not go there. Let’s just pretend that windmills and solar panels could have just as easily done the trick, if the EPA and Department of Energy would just do their jobs and eliminate all coal power plants and “invest” billions more taxpayer dollars in “renewables” deployment.

As for “why Tennessee” as part of this EV system rollout, you might ask? Thanks be to taxpayers there, also, as Nissan has in its back pocket a $1.4 billion federal loan to retrofit a plant in Smyrna – just outside Nashville – to mass-produce the Leaf. As company CEO Carlos Ghosn has said publicly, Nissan will produce EVs wherever government will produce the financial incentives.

And that’s what it takes in order for the “Green” energy industry swindle to survive.

Paul Chesser is an associate fellow for the National Legal and Policy Center.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government
KEYWORDS: charging; efv; electricvehicles; energy; greenenergy; leaf; nissanleaf; nlpc; subsidies; taxcredit
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To: jazusamo

An article is a bit stupid.
All-electric vehicles makes perfect sence as a city cars to drive to work during a week and make shopping on weekends.
It is just plain stupid to drive 1000 miles with that.
If you are a green nut about fuel economy on the highway push for turbodiesel. In Europe they have 50 mpg fullsize turbodiesel cars for decades.


81 posted on 01/04/2012 12:24:30 AM PST by cunning_fish
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To: Army Air Corps; ApplegateRanch; Berlin_Freeper; SolitaryMan; golux; SteamShovel; Bockscar; ...
Thanx for the ping Army Air Corps !

 


Beam me to Planet Gore !

82 posted on 01/04/2012 3:56:40 AM PST by steelyourfaith (If it's "green" ... it's crap !!!)
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To: jazusamo

Didn’t use a drop of oil getting down there?! The Leaf doesn’t use any lube? Have four tires?


83 posted on 01/04/2012 4:27:20 AM PST by mewzilla (Santelli 2012)
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To: mamelukesabre
If you are a steam turbine, you can consider a boiler a power plant.

The rest of us use coal power plants to generate electricity. Items like the steam turbine, condenser, generator, scrubbers, feeders, pumps and the boiler are all part of the power plant and all of their efficiencies are required to supply the product.

Line losses should be limited to only the part on the electrical line, not include things like the steam turbine and condenser. Line losses should be the same regardless of the source of generation.

84 posted on 01/04/2012 5:21:45 AM PST by thackney (life is fragile, handle with prayer)
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To: jazusamo
When you run out of gas, you can walk or hitch a ride to the nearest gas station and buy a gallon or two and hike back.

When your Leaf runs out of juice, you only have to worry about pushing it one way to the nearest electrical outlet, charge up and drive off,........I don't see a problem. /humor

85 posted on 01/04/2012 5:30:27 AM PST by Hot Tabasco (If only the democrats could fragment their party like conservatives are doing.......)
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To: Adder; jazusamo

180 miles, six hours.

W
O
W

Shoulda brought the soap box derby car along as a back up.


I could do that riding (it it still ran) the old 1972 2-cycle Foxy moped (35-40 mph top speed; was a ‘good’ climber) on one tank full.
Rode it several times from Riverside, CA to Long Beach & back.


86 posted on 01/04/2012 2:55:36 PM PST by ApplegateRanch (Made in America, by proud American citizens, in 1946.)
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To: Eye of Unk
They should have used their brains and either installed a rooftop mounted generator ...

How about a rooftop-mounted windmill to charge the battery?

Yeah, it's sarcasm.

87 posted on 01/05/2012 7:01:49 AM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: IamConservative
In case anyone was wondering whether he is as stupid as we all think he is.

He's probably also opposed to hunting, thinking people should get their meat at grocery stores, where no animals are harmed.

88 posted on 01/05/2012 7:05:48 AM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: mamelukesabre
..the conversion from BTUs to KWh ...

1 KWh is roughly 3500 BTUs.

89 posted on 01/05/2012 7:12:22 AM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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