fooljoe said:
This shows that about 7.9 kWh, or about 1.6 kWh per 1000', were used (or gained - surprisingly the same for this trip) for the elevation change. This fits pretty well with
Tony's range chart, which suggests assuming 2 kWh extra consumption for each 1000' increase and 1 kWh recapture for each 1000' decrease.
Yes, if you reset both the consumption meter and trip miles meter at the beginning of the trip, the actual kWh burned will be EXACTLY the product of:
Miles driven / consumption rate = BMS reported kWh burned
142 / 3.4 = 41.8kWh burned
Toyota / Tesla doesn't manipulate this data.
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Climb energy required:
One kilowatt hour = 2,655,224 pound feet of energy.
Driving your 4000 pound electric vehicle (like an empty RAV4 EV) up a 1000 foot elevation requires 4000 * 1000 = 4,000,000 foot pounds of energy divided by 2,655,224 equals 1.5kWh of energy to lift the car. So, very likely 1.6kWh for a lightly loaded RAV4 EV.
The "Rated Range" (at the default 3.5 miles per kWh) would be:
3.5 * 1.6kWh =
5.6 miles lost per 1000 feet elevation gain
At a higher, and more typical consumption rate of 3.0:
3.0 * 1.6kWh = 4.8 miles lost
Nissan LEAF
1.5kWh of energy at an economy of 4 miles per kWh (250 watts per mile) =
6 miles of range used to drive up 1000 feet for a Nissan LEAF type car.
For a 5000 pound Tesla Model S (just two occupants) equals 5 million foot pounds to go up 1000 feet.
TESLA Model S
5 million divided by 2,655,224 equals 1.883kWh of energy to lift the car.
1.833kWh of energy at an economy of 3 miles per kWh (333 watts per mile) =
5.5 miles of range used to raise the car 1000 feet.
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