TheGuardian.com - It is well known that EVs lose some of their travel range in the cold, especially in subzero temperatures like those that hit the nation’s mid-section this week. Studies found that range loss varies from 10% to 36%. EVs also do not charge as quickly in extreme cold. Some Tesla owners near Chicago told reporters their cars would not charge at all.
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Because batteries use chemical reactions to produce electricity. When the cold sets in the chemical reactions go so much slower to downright stopping. Any person that took any chemistry class learns that in the first lecture.
ReplyDeleteSame with physics, cold slows down the movement of atoms and molecules, heat makes them move around more.
Ha Ha, on the people that thought nerds were not worth the time to get to know. You are really saving the planet now dumb asses.
Heltau