heikospallek said:
You are all quite the engineers here: Thanks for sharing your insights! Today, it is about 60F here in Pittsburgh and the car is 100% charged and the display tells me a range of 60 miles in E mode (in the past this turns out to be an accurate estimate when I drive very carefully avoiding quick accelerations). So far, I drove a total of about 1,200 miles. How does these numbers figure into your 35,000 miles versus 110,000 miles discussion? I did not do the math, but it looks like faster degrading than suggested by the calculations here. Or, do I miss something?
In the EV community, we tend to refer to that "range" on your dash as the Guess-O-Meter, or "GOM".
The GOM reflects the economy of previous drives, plus temperature, and whatever else the programmers wanted to include to arrive at a guess as to how far you'll go.
The bad part is what you drove yesterday has no connection to what you'll do in the future. I'm not sure what you're referring to on the 35k to 100k miles issue. That doesn't apply to your issue.
Anyhoo, the bottom line is that we can't determine range or battery condition through the GOM. End of issue (at least for me). You guys are welcome to debate it.
Only Tesla uses a logical range figure that makes sense for determining both how much range and how much battery energy remains. Tesla uses "Rated Range" which is directly related to the amount of battery energy indexed to the EPA range.
Therefore, a full charge doesn't even need to show 100%, since it will show 265 miles. As the battery degrades over time, the fully charged car will show less rated range.
RANGE AUTONOMY FORMULA
Range autonomy in any thing that moves over land, through the sea, or in the air is always a product of autonomous stored energy (gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, nuclear “stuff”, rocket fuel, or electricity) multiplied by the consumption rate (economy) of that stored energy (miles per gallon, km per liter, tons per hour, or miles / km per kWh consumed).
So, the range of your Mercedes is always:
(Usable kWh stored) * (miles / km per kWh consumption rate) = (range in miles / km)
We know how much the battery holds from a "normal" charge; 28kWh
The only variable missing is what the predicted consumption rate will be to determine your future range.