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Nissan Leaf a comfortable, fun car to drive (For 50 Miles - Then it Dies!)
San Antonio Express News ^ | 02/13/2011 | G. Chambers Williams III

Posted on 02/14/2011 8:28:45 AM PST by Responsibility2nd

The all-electric Nissan Leaf is now officially on sale, advertised as the first mass-market battery-operated car on the market.

It uses no gasoline — and has no tailpipe emissions, because it has no tailpipe.

And even though it's battery powered, like a golf cart, it's a real car, fun to drive, with comfortable seating for up to five people and styling that's mainstream, not quirky like some of the hybrids and earlier electric cars.

For many, this even will be a practical car, one that can meet their everyday transportation needs — especially if they live, work and shop within a small area that doesn't require a lot of driving.

It's well-equipped, too, with standard features such as a navigation system, Bluetooth phone connection and automatic climate control — amenities once found only on luxury cars.

Some might argue, though, that its price qualifies it as a premium vehicle. It lists for $32,780 (plus $850 freight), before a $7,500 federal tax rebate and varying state tax incentives that can lower the price in some areas to the low $20,000s.

Nissan is making plans to build 150,000 of the Leaf annually at its assembly plant in Tennessee, beginning in late 2012, a number that certainly would qualify the car as a mass-market vehicle if all of those could be sold.

For now, the cars are built in Oppama, Japan, and the plant's capacity — 48,000 Leafs a year — is so limited that the cars so far are only trickling into the United States. Since it went on sale in December, only about 100 have been delivered to the more than 8,000 U.S. customers with firm orders.

But the key question remains: Will the Leaf ever be accepted by enough consumers to earn status as a mass-market vehicle?

Only time will tell, but after a week of attempting to use the Leaf as my daily driver, as a suburban commuter car, I have my doubts.

Range anxiety? It's no myth. This is the term used to describe the uneasy feeling one might get while driving a car that won't budge after its battery runs down, which in the case of the Leaf is supposed to be up to 100 miles after a full charge.

To help you gauge how much time you have left before the battery goes dead, there is a digital miles-to-empty readout on the Leaf's dashboard.

Only once during my test, though, did that meter ever read as much as “100 miles.” That was the morning after I received the vehicle from Nissan, and after I had kept it plugged in all night to a 110-volt power outlet in my garage. If you actually buy or lease a Leaf, you're expected to fork over about $2,000 for a 220-volt charger, which supposedly can recharge a completely depleted battery in about eight hours.

But in the absence of the higher-voltage charger, the Leaf's battery must be topped off using the 110-volt charger, with a cord about 18 feet long, which comes with every Leaf. There is also an indicator on the dash about how long it will take to recharge your Leaf at 110 or 220 volts, depending on the current state of the battery.

Also coming later on is a network of commercial 440-volt fast chargers, to be installed at places such as Cracker Barrel, Walmart, Costco and convenience stores, to top the battery off in about 30 minutes. None of those chargers are available yet, however.

When my tester was almost out of juice, the dash meter showed it would take 20 hours to reach full charge at 110 volts, or eight hours at 220 volts.

Leaving my driveway the first morning, with 100 miles until empty showing on the dash, I thought I was well prepared for my 26.4-mile commute to work and felt that I also would be able to get back home in the evening without having to do any charging while at work.

Wrong.

Here's the real scoop: By the time I got to the interstate highway that leads to my downtown office — the entrance ramp is about 2.5 miles from my house — the miles-to-empty readout had dropped from 100 to 81, indicating that I already had used 19 miles of the battery's power.

By the time I got to work, the meter read “51 miles” left, indicating I had used almost twice the actual miles I'd driven. Luckily, I'd had the foresight to bring the charging cord with me; I'd almost left it at home, believing at that time that I would have plenty of juice to get to work and back, and maybe even take the Leaf out somewhere nice for lunch.

At work, I found a 110-volt outlet attached to the building, in a company parking lot, and plugged in the Leaf. And when I came out nine hours later to drive home, the dash meter showed 77 miles left to go.

I went straight home, and when I got there, the meter was all the way down to 27 miles — 50 miles lopped off for the 26.4-mile commute.

OK, I thought the next morning, let's try this again. But wait — after charging all night in my garage, again at only 110 volts, the meter showed just 67 miles until empty. With more than a little trepidation, I set off for work again.

Surely, I reasoned, I'll have enough power to get home again if I keep the Leaf hooked up to power at work all day.

When I got to work, though, the meter had dipped all the way down to 16 miles, and bells, lights and a warning voice all told me I was low on battery power as I drove into the parking lot.

Like a dummy, though, I decided to take the car with me to lunch, driving it about 10 miles and interrupting the daylong charge.

So there I was, at 6 p.m., ready to drive home with an electric car that was showing 35 miles to empty, with a 26.4-mile trip ahead of me.

Add to that these conditions: It was dark; snow was falling; and the outside temperature was in the mid-20s.

When I turned on the Leaf's heater/defroster, just as I drove onto the interstate near work, the dash meter immediately dropped from 34 miles to just 29 — with 26 miles of driving ahead of me. Using electric heat, which is necessary because there is no gasoline engine in the Leaf to provide heat from the radiator, severely compromised the range of the car.

I turned the heater off. There was nothing I could do about the headlights or windshield wipers, but I figured I could live without heat for the next half-hour or so.

But with 20-plus miles still to go, the meter was already down to 26 miles to empty, and I began thinking about how to conserve energy so I could make it home. If I couldn't make it, the only alternative would have been a tow truck because AAA can't come out and recharge electric cars, at least for now.

Once the traffic cleared and the freeway began flowing freely, I moved to the far right lane and set the Leaf's cruise control on 55 mph instead of my usual 70.

With just two exits to go, about nine miles from home, the meter had dropped to 14 miles to empty, and the car once again was telling me that I needed to recharge. I dropped the speed to 50 and watched in the rearview mirror as more frustrated motorists came up close behind before pulling around.

With just six miles until home, the meter had dropped to eight miles to empty, and I began getting really nervous. Is this what they call “range anxiety”?

The car was getting even more worried about how much juice its battery had left.

Then, finally, I was coming off my exit, heading down the road toward my home, now just two miles away. The miles-to-empty display had flat lined by this time — no miles showing — and the navigation system asked me if I wanted to find “the nearest recharging station.”

I answered “yes” on the touch screen, and it showed me my own address as the closest charging point, “1.9 miles” away.

Now down to 30 mph, my feet, legs and hands starting to freeze. I began coaxing the Leaf along.

“Come on, you can do it, come on.”

I limped into the driveway, plugged the Leaf up in my garage and went into my house to warm up.

Conclusion: The Leaf isn't for everyone, as Nissan Chairman and CEO Carlos Ghosn already had told me during an interview a few months earlier. And it's certainly not the car for me, with a 53-mile daily roundtrip commute and the need to drive sometimes during the day while at work.


 


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: leaf; nissanleaf
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To: ArrogantBustard
they're plumes of condensed water vapor.

which is not water vapor at all but tiny spherical liquid water droplets that refract all wavelengths of light including infrared, very different than invisible water vapor. Water vapor has a net warming effect, most clouds a net cooling effect. That's a big difference.

Satellite Confirms Urban Heat Islands Increase Rainfall: mean monthly rainfall rates within 30-60 kilometers (18 to 36 miles) downwind of the cities were, on average, about 28 percent greater than the upwind region. In some cities, the downwind area exhibited increases as high as 51 percent.

101 posted on 02/14/2011 11:08:45 AM PST by Reeses
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To: ArrogantBustard
Fixed link: Satellite Confirms Urban Heat Islands Increase Rainfall
102 posted on 02/14/2011 11:12:53 AM PST by Reeses
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To: Responsibility2nd
I think most of the problems with the Leaf would be solved if they would call it a "Type R," slap some stickers on it and put a speaker in the back to make that fart pipe sound.
103 posted on 02/14/2011 11:17:08 AM PST by Clay Moore (The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of a fool to the left. Ecclesiastes 10:2)
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To: Reeses
water droplets that refract all wavelengths

If you wish to have credibility discussing this topic, please learn the difference between refraction and reflection.

Satellite Confirms Urban Heat Islands Increase Rainfall:

Interesting effect, but what has it to do with power plant exhaust gases?

104 posted on 02/14/2011 11:30:48 AM PST by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: Responsibility2nd

Try using the defroster, heater, windshield wipers, air conditioner or even the radio and watch the mileage drop even faster. Imagine the range when temperatures get below freezing. If your commute is on a day with temperatures just above freezing with wet snow necessitating use of the defroster, heater and windshield wipers, better be prepared to take the bus.


105 posted on 02/14/2011 11:38:19 AM PST by The Great RJ (The Bill of Rights: Another bill members of Congress haven't read.)
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To: mmanager
I think I'll stick with my good 'ole American Muscle. Gas mileage sucks, emissions will choke a horse but when I hit the go peddle is sucks up leaf's with over 800 rwhp.

I hear the Corvette will even let you run the heater in freezing temperatures and not reduce your chances of making it home as a cost of warming your toes.

Ain't these new technological innovations grand?

106 posted on 02/14/2011 11:47:55 AM PST by Charles Martel (Endeavor to persevere...)
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To: mmanager
Forged 402 with an 8 rib supercharger (15#’s of boost), Trickflow heads, Fast 92 intake, methanol injection, 80# injectors and headers. 237/249 114+2, 622-.628 lift cam.

URH! URH! URH! PM me pics of the beauty bits !!
107 posted on 02/14/2011 11:52:39 AM PST by stompk
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To: ArrogantBustard
please learn the difference between refraction and reflection.

Reflect is what clouds do, refract is how they do it. My goal was to point out you cannot see actual water vapor, a global warming gas, only clouds, a global cooling liquid.

108 posted on 02/14/2011 11:53:50 AM PST by Reeses
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To: The Great RJ
Try using the defroster, heater, windshield wipers, air conditioner or even the radio and watch the mileage drop even faster.

Wait till the younger gen finds out what subs and amps do to it.
109 posted on 02/14/2011 11:55:03 AM PST by stompk
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To: Reeses

OK ... would you like to address the connection (if any) between increased rainfall downwind of an urban “heat island” and power plant effluent?


110 posted on 02/14/2011 12:01:31 PM PST by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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To: ArrogantBustard
I'll give you a hint, though: that plume looks like water vapor, to me.

But... don't you know that water vapor is a greenhouse gas? It's way worse than CO2, by orders of magnitudes! That just can't be good for the environment!

111 posted on 02/14/2011 12:06:24 PM PST by zeugma (Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam)
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To: Responsibility2nd
especially if they live, work and shop within a small area that doesn't require a lot of driving.
It's well-equipped, too, with standard features such as a navigation system, Bluetooth phone connection and automatic climate control

This doofus doesn't realize that those are contradictory statements. Short drives ---small area --- in my book is twenty miles or less.

and what idiot would need GPS and automatic climate control to commute 20 miles.
Anyone who would buy this car in snow country is about 5 cans short of a six-pack.

112 posted on 02/14/2011 12:32:51 PM PST by Publius6961 ("In 1964 the War on Poverty Began --- Poverty won.")
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To: from occupied ga

Decisions, Decisions.....


113 posted on 02/14/2011 12:43:43 PM PST by mowowie
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To: FrdmLvr
Yeah, it’s fun until someone hits you. Then, KABOOM! Those batteries in those cars are highly explosive. I wouldn’t want to be any where near an electric car when it gets hit.

I'm surprised it took 37 posts for the moonbats to come out of the rockpile.

Oh yeah. You forgot that the battery weighs 600 pounds, when you sell it you need to pay $20k toxic waste fee, the mine that produces the battery is a wasteland and you get acne while driving it.

Hilarious!

Name just one credible, documented case of an electric car exploding (any worse than a regular gas powered car would under similar circumstances.)

114 posted on 02/14/2011 12:43:50 PM PST by Publius6961 ("In 1964 the War on Poverty Began --- Poverty won.")
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To: from occupied ga

Decisions, Decisions.....


115 posted on 02/14/2011 12:44:08 PM PST by mowowie
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To: ArrogantBustard

Every watt of power eventually ends up as waste heat. Waste heat absorbed by water ends up as additional rain. Some of the waste heat is carried off by water at the power plant, some at the cities where most of the power is used. Power plant waste heat plus water has to increase rainfall.


116 posted on 02/14/2011 12:52:44 PM PST by Reeses
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To: Cheburashka
"Wait until there are four employees driving Leafs to work and only one outlet available for recharging"
117 posted on 02/14/2011 12:53:35 PM PST by mowowie
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To: All

electric cars make sense as a second/third vehicle but most people can’t afford the cost of owning two-three cars.
I could see using it to go to the store twice a week and drive the kids around town but nothing that will be longer than a ten miles each way.

It’s an awful lot of money and maintainence for a status symbol.


118 posted on 02/14/2011 12:58:50 PM PST by newnhdad (The longest of journeys begins with one step.)
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To: Reeses
My goal was to point out you cannot see actual water vapor, a global warming gas

Only if you belong to Gore's Universal Church of Global Warming...

119 posted on 02/14/2011 1:00:03 PM PST by Publius6961 ("In 1964 the War on Poverty Began --- Poverty won.")
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To: Reeses
I see ... you really don't have any science to back it up; it's just a hypothesis on your part.

That's fine if you don't claim otherwise.

120 posted on 02/14/2011 1:04:48 PM PST by ArrogantBustard (Western Civilization is Aborting, Buggering, and Contracepting itself out of existence.)
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