irfan
Well-Known Member
I don’t intend to ever take a long trip in our cars. We are fully electric. Anything over 3 hours we just fly. If we took long drives we definitely would have kept a gas car.
Sponsored
Here's a good site for calculating cost of ownership (via fuels). I used it when trying to justify buying my R1T and ditching my F-150. Tool told me that after 3 years I would be saving money.Now that I've observed the vehicle on longer trips I'm realizing that there isn't much difference in cost per mile vs our V8 powered 2007 Lexus GX470 here in CA.
GX: $5 per gal / 20mpg= .25 per mile
R1S: $.50 per kw dcfc / 2 mi per kwh = .25 per mile
What's everyone else seeing? Home charging costs about half as much so it's like a 40mpg SUV in that case. Although it's classified as 75mpge, you have to fill it with $8-$16 per gal "gas."
I agree that public charging has gotten more expensive, but I don't think your calculations are accurate.Now that I've observed the vehicle on longer trips I'm realizing that there isn't much difference in cost per mile vs our V8 powered 2007 Lexus GX470 here in CA.
GX: $5 per gal / 20mpg= .25 per mile
R1S: $.50 per kw dcfc / 2 mi per kwh = .25 per mile
What's everyone else seeing? Home charging costs about half as much so it's like a 40mpg SUV in that case. Although it's classified as 75mpge, you have to fill it with $8-$16 per gal "gas."
My total charging cost for my current long trip towing a 7500 Airstream is $0.15/mi. That at twice the consumption (and worse in freezing windy conditions).Now that I've observed the vehicle on longer trips I'm realizing that there isn't much difference in cost per mile vs our V8 powered 2007 Lexus GX470 here in CA.
GX: $5 per gal / 20mpg= .25 per mile
R1S: $.50 per kw dcfc / 2 mi per kwh = .25 per mile
What's everyone else seeing? Home charging costs about half as much so it's like a 40mpg SUV in that case. Although it's classified as 75mpge, you have to fill it with $8-$16 per gal "gas."
The OP bought a Rivian to save money on travel costs. Huh? Would doubt that’s a motivation for many of us buyers. Though going all electric and investing in PV with net metering on my roof I can cover 100% of my energy needs even here in Maine! With no bill.
Similar set up (with a 12.95 kw system), but not near $0 bill, especially in winter. How are you doing it? Do you charge at a slower rate? Not drive much?The OP bought a Rivian to save money on travel costs. Huh? Would doubt that’s a motivation for many of us buyers. Though going all electric and investing in PV with net metering on my roof I can cover 100% of my energy needs even here in Maine! With no bill.
Exactly! I’ve never paid more than $.36 per KWH on a long road trip.This is a little misleading; prices for electricity vary more drastically than gasoline. Many of the DCFC are $.36 per kWh , and home charging for many is $.14 or less per kWh.
I am responding to your comment that the R1T is so much more comfortable than your Subaru. We have an R1T reservation and are thinking of ordering. We currently have a Tesla Model 3, which I love but it is getting harder to get in and out of--I am 77. And we want the heated and ventilated seats.@HaveBlue, that is the same for me in the Bay Area paying PG&E rates, but my prior vehicle was a Subaru Impreza versus an R1T. The R1T is just so much more comfortable.
My home PG&E bill has gone up by the same amount my gasoline bill went down. I also no longer have oil and filter changes for the Impreza.