mkhuffman
Well-Known Member
I have yet to live through a winter with my R1T, but I have experienced winter in a BEV and agree with most of the previous comments.
I will add that you should try to keep the truck plugged in as much as possible. Definitely find a way to plug in at your home, so it can use shore power to keep the battery warm overnight. (I am pretty sure the R1 will warm the battery if it gets too cold, and that will increase vampire drain unless you are connected to a EVSE.)
Highway range if you drive 75 mph or faster will be 80% of EPA range.
Take another 10-20% off when the weather is bad.
In really bad weather (cold and windy with snow or rain) you may see 60% of the EPA range. I agree 50% is probably worse than you will ever see, but speed kills range. If the weather is really bad and you are driving 80 mph, it could drop to 50%.
I love my R1T and I highly recommend you take the plunge. I second the recommendation to get the Max pack. Range anxiety is real, and the more battery you have the better your experience will be.
I will add that you should try to keep the truck plugged in as much as possible. Definitely find a way to plug in at your home, so it can use shore power to keep the battery warm overnight. (I am pretty sure the R1 will warm the battery if it gets too cold, and that will increase vampire drain unless you are connected to a EVSE.)
Highway range if you drive 75 mph or faster will be 80% of EPA range.
Take another 10-20% off when the weather is bad.
In really bad weather (cold and windy with snow or rain) you may see 60% of the EPA range. I agree 50% is probably worse than you will ever see, but speed kills range. If the weather is really bad and you are driving 80 mph, it could drop to 50%.
I love my R1T and I highly recommend you take the plunge. I second the recommendation to get the Max pack. Range anxiety is real, and the more battery you have the better your experience will be.
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