Grim
Active Member
- First Name
- Kuba
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2023
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- 1
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- 29
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- Location
- Scotland
- Vehicles
- Taycan CT 4S

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- #1
Have just been browsing through Apple News+ and came upon a Car review of an ID7 …
Not that interesting in itself but it quoted a range of 384 miles from its 77kWh battery which seemed a lot for a car that weighs 2,172kg per the article. This is equivalent of 5 miles per kWh! Initially I thought they had misquoted the numbers but the same info can be found on the VW website …
https://www.volkswagen.co.uk/en/electric-and-hybrid/electric-cars/id7.html
Any idea how this could be possible when a RWD Taycan with a 71kWh usable battery can only officially manage 276 miles or 3.9 miles per kWh with a lower Cd of 0.22 (compared to ID7’s 0.23), smaller front surface area as well as 5% lower weight (2,050kg)?
We know from experience that those quoted Porsche efficiency stats are very hard to hit (I’ve managed around 2.5 miles per kWh since August in a CT 4S and around a third of my driving is on a stretch of road with 60mph average speed cameras and it is a bit colder in Scotland so I have had the heater on and do pre-condition ahead of some fast DC charging) unless you are driving in nose to tail traffic at 40mph.
So are VW figures real or total pie in the sky? Am I comparing apples and oranges in terms of the bases used for ranges being quoted? A Tesla Model 3 claims to deliver up to 5.5 miles per kWh but it does weigh 400kgs less than the ID7 … and it’s not like Tesla hasn’t come under criticism for its quoted ranges either.
How far from a miss-selling scandal are we as far as advertised ranges for electric cars are concerned? Or have the manufacturers caveated things enough to get away with it?
A lot of questions, I know and mostly rhetorical - more food for thought than anything else.
Not that interesting in itself but it quoted a range of 384 miles from its 77kWh battery which seemed a lot for a car that weighs 2,172kg per the article. This is equivalent of 5 miles per kWh! Initially I thought they had misquoted the numbers but the same info can be found on the VW website …
https://www.volkswagen.co.uk/en/electric-and-hybrid/electric-cars/id7.html
Any idea how this could be possible when a RWD Taycan with a 71kWh usable battery can only officially manage 276 miles or 3.9 miles per kWh with a lower Cd of 0.22 (compared to ID7’s 0.23), smaller front surface area as well as 5% lower weight (2,050kg)?
We know from experience that those quoted Porsche efficiency stats are very hard to hit (I’ve managed around 2.5 miles per kWh since August in a CT 4S and around a third of my driving is on a stretch of road with 60mph average speed cameras and it is a bit colder in Scotland so I have had the heater on and do pre-condition ahead of some fast DC charging) unless you are driving in nose to tail traffic at 40mph.
So are VW figures real or total pie in the sky? Am I comparing apples and oranges in terms of the bases used for ranges being quoted? A Tesla Model 3 claims to deliver up to 5.5 miles per kWh but it does weigh 400kgs less than the ID7 … and it’s not like Tesla hasn’t come under criticism for its quoted ranges either.
How far from a miss-selling scandal are we as far as advertised ranges for electric cars are concerned? Or have the manufacturers caveated things enough to get away with it?
A lot of questions, I know and mostly rhetorical - more food for thought than anything else.