I forgot about that one!I’ll have to rely on COdogman for the video but my first thought was “Lisa in this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!”
Dental planI’ll have to rely on COdogman for the video but my first thought was “Lisa in this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!”
Second Law of ThermodynamicsIf you have two EVs which are both capable of towing, could you theoretically switch off flat towing between the two and drive across the US without stopping to charge?
Ingoing assumptions:
- You'll lose about 50% range when towing with an EV
- Flat towing EVs have, in some cases, resulted in charging speeds equivalent to a DC fast charger when using regenerative braking as a charging method
If both of those assumptions are true, then you could flat tow one vehicle for 150 miles while the other one charges using its regenerative brakes (which shouldn't take more than 40-50 miles at 70 mph), then switch off.
This seems like something a Youtuber would have done by now if it were possible, so I think I'm missing some part of the equation. Can anyone think of a reason why this wouldn't work?
Of course not, will be part of next software update.If you have two EVs which are both capable of towing, could you theoretically switch off flat towing between the two and drive across the US without stopping to charge?
Ingoing assumptions:
- You'll lose about 50% range when towing with an EV
- Flat towing EVs have, in some cases, resulted in charging speeds equivalent to a DC fast charger when using regenerative braking as a charging method
If both of those assumptions are true, then you could flat tow one vehicle for 150 miles while the other one charges using its regenerative brakes (which shouldn't take more than 40-50 miles at 70 mph), then switch off.
This seems like something a Youtuber would have done by now if it were possible, so I think I'm missing some part of the equation. Can anyone think of a reason why this wouldn't work?