4000km clocked up now. (MG4 ev) I had thought 400ish would be the highway speed range. It is over 300 but not stretching to 400 at 110 or highway speeds. Melb - Ballarat return yesterday was about 280km. I had 25% left in the tank when I got back "Range of up to 435km (WLTP)‡" is possible at low speeds! AC was on.
Clearly not as advertised or my interpretation of "Range of up to 435km". The "‡" means come in spinner.
Two years till 'E' day in my thoughts. 'E' day for me will be:
- Sub 10 minute charge possible
- Tow capacity to 3.5 tonnes
- 'Real' range of 800 or so.
- Reliable
- Repairable
- The same very LOW Maintenace requirements of my current EV
Ok I want a lot![]()
WLTP is truly meaningless to be used to determine “range”. “Range” implies long distance driving and the WLTP doesn’t test for this.
For EV’s they really should also have a published range for cruising at 110kph.
So how many kWh do you use per 100km when doing 110kph?
Sounds like you are using around 17kWh/100km giving a range of up to 375km for country driving.
And you can forget about claiming MG published misleading range information. The High Court today ruled in favour of Mitsubishi in their appeal over the case that fuel consumption labels are misleading and deceptive.
This was the case where a Triton owner took Mitsubishi to court because his vehicle was using up to 36.8% more fuel than the official fuel consumption label. He won in VCAT, and then in the Victorian Supreme Court, but lost when Mitsubishi appealed to the High Court.
Basically gives car companies and dealers the right to continue to publish misleading and deceptive consumption figures.
Not stopping peoples from knowing who tells porkies and who is honest happily.
A EV diving record attempt was NOT by meUpcoming Lancia Ypsilon has made a splash, quite literally, as the electric hatchback was revealed undisguised… having plunged into a French river.
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other...dda0741d5&ei=9
The things they do for publicity.
And it didn’t self combust in the process…..![]()
Looking forward to seeing the full results from the real world fuel consumption and emissions testing program.
Real-World Testing delivering for motorists - Australian Automobile Association
This is the worst offender so far (but they haven’t tested the Mitsubishi Triton yet):
2022 Toyota RAV4 | Real-World Testing Program
The mistake the Triton owner made was going after a car company, and not the government for mandating unrealistic fuel consumption testing.
Only 13% more than the lab test. That is much better than I would have expected.
If that is the worst, then I don't know what we are worried about.
1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.
Certainly nothing to worry about. Just proves that the mandated testing is not what you can expect - no surprise there.
On the Urban Real-World cycle the RAV4 used 7.8l/100km against the combined cycle lab value of 6.0. Offical figures can mean very little in the real world if not used the same way as the lab test.
But they have only tested 9 cars so far out of a planned 200. A prior study on 30 cars showed the average difference was 23%. Similar to the complaints we read about EV range when used in the real world.
NavyDivers results with his MG4 shows about a 14% difference - but that is comparing country driving with most of the trip at 110kph against a WLTP test at an average of 46.5kph.
So will be interesting when they get to EVs.
Oh and as we have learnt from NavyDiver, the RAV4’s equivalent kWh/100km energy usage was more like 60kWh/100km of potential energy. What an energy waster! Just flipping the narrative.![]()
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