Monday, September 28, 2009
Damn! No Juice On Monday Morning.
To be honest, I’m feeling a bit stupid.
You might have already guessed what happened, and it was one heck of a party!
I got home around 11pm, a few drinks throughout the evening but not too much, mostly just dog tired from a really busy Sunday beginning at 6am and ending at 11pm with a Charger win and bad food in the middle. I got home, closed the garage door, and went to bed.
This morning at 7:30 am I discovered I had forgotten to plug in #183. Now I’m lucky because I have no early meetings today and can afford to wait an hour or so until I get enough juice for my commute (this hour gives me the time to post this) If I had had an early meeting I would have been really screwed.
So flying doctors and electric car gods,
I know you can’t do anything for my headache, but it would be really nice if you could make an ipod app that allows us drivers to check our SOC and if we are plugged in or not anytime anywhere, especially right before we go to bed! I can't imagine that I am the only stupid tired and forgetful driver out there that would love an app like this.
I have an app for my solar P.V. System that allows me to check out my systems performance and I love that app. I check it out a few times a day.
picture of app here
If I had an app for my Mini-E, life would be grand, the car would be smart, I would still be stupid, and I could double check to make sure I plugged in, or what my current SOC is.
An app for the Mini-E and an aspirin for me, time to go to work.
I want two things for Christmas, one is an ipod app for the Mini-E , The other, well, if your smart you will have no problem guessing the other.
Yours forgetfully,
#183
Peder
Saturday, September 12, 2009
4500 Mile Update Mini E #183
Living in a home and driving a car powered only by sunshine is my today, not the future. If you live in one of the more temperate states, it’s fairly easy and inexpensive to do with a little thought and pre planning.
On the house side, solar energy is less expensive than the energy you purchase from your utility from the very first day. For the car, solar fuel is the equivalent to about 42 cents a gallon …forever fixed in price. I realize that the electric car purchase price is higher at the moment (remember when you rented the VCR along with the movies because to buy a VCR was $800) but that will soon dramatically change as dozens of manufactures begin producing electric cars.
The Mini-E has been flawless, it remains the most fun car I have ever had in my 31 years of driving. I now know why electric car drivers are so passionate about their rides and staunch promoters of electric cars. It’s hard to describe the feeling to a non ev driver but I’ll try anyway.
It’s the exact opposite feeling a driver gets when gas goes to $3.00 and $3.50, and $4.00 and $4.50 a gallon. A sinking feeling in your stomach seeing $40, $50, $60, $70 flying out of your wallet every 5 days as you fill up your tank, having no control of the situation and having to adjust your other spending and lifestyle expenses to accommodate the volatility in gas prices.
The sinking feeling of being dependent as a nation on foreign oil and contributing to that out of your own personal dependency for gas. It is my opinion that he spike in gas prices of a year ago precipitated the reduction of spending both from a what’s in your wallet today point of view as well as an uncertainty for the future so lets not spend mindset. It was a trigger for our economic collapse and it doesn’t feel good.
When you live and drive with energy produced by renewables, those feelings change to pride, excitement, independence and optimism for our future. The whole environmental piece is incalculable and I let others more experienced talk about that aspect.
That in my opinion is more valuable that a dollar equivalent savings.
We are a two car family. The Mini-E with a 100 mile range fits in beautifully with our lifestyle. In the three months of driving we have had only one time where we needed to use our other car, a 4 cylinder Ford Escape, and that was a 400 mile trip to Paso Robles. It really comes down to where you live, are you a one car or two car family, your commute, and other factors, but I am convinced that for a majority or at least a large number of American car buyers the 100% electric car will work just fine.
A great thing happens when you have the Mini-E in your garage. It is always your car of choice and it is always 100% charged and ready to take you where you need to go. Before with a two gas car family the decision of whose car to take comes down to who has the most gas in the tank, which car has less in the back seat, which car is cleaner? With the Mini-E it is always the preferred choice. Thus my mileage for “my” car has gone from 1000 miles a month to 1500 miles a month in the Mini-E. I actually drive the electric car 50% more miles that I did with my gas car.
A typical day is about a thirty mile commute arriving back home around 6pm with a 65% SOC remaining. Hop out of the car, plug it in and enter the house for the evening. If we are going out in a few hours we unplug, have a 100% SOC and spend the evening out. If we are staying home, the next morning its 100% SOC ready to go for the day. Whatever the case it feels like the ground hog day over and over, 100% SOC and ready to go. It is a weird feeling driving by the gas stations and knowing one day in a decade or two, what we know as a gasoline station today, will not exist.
When I push the car hard with full on tire chirping acceleration or driving on the freeways at 80+mph, the Mini-E never fails to deliver at least 80 miles per charge with 95Ah per 100 miles. That’s my kind of driving. :)
An average day out and about 60% freeway 40% city just cruising normally the car returns 90 miles per charge with 75Ah per 100 miles. If I try to conserve and really watch my acceleration, keep it at 65 on the freeway, I can easily get 115 miles on a charge using 55Ah per 100 miles.
My collective total for 4500 miles is 73 Ah per 100 miles at 92 miles per charge. I will confess to being a bit of a heavy foot at times and hypermilers will have no problems averaging over 115 miles a charge.
We have found that for long trips 85 miles or more round trip, we try to be as efficient as possible avoiding the fast starts and high speeds. On one 90 mile trip we returned with 25 miles left on the range indicator. On shorter trips and if I’m in the mood, its slot car racing time!!
For me personally, at no time have I ever had range anxiety. The SOC meter is a really reliable guage which really surprised me. My 2007 Gem car it’s a bit of a guess on the SOC.
The charging system is effortless and takes just a second or two to plug in, just like your cell phone.
I don’t notice that much difference in the Mini-E compared to a gas car. I guess that is a heck of a compliment. It’s a normal everyday car. The throttle response is instantaneous, the regen is awesome, The acceleration is slot car like, I like the engine whine both under acceleration and regen, it gives you a very good feel of your rpms much like a normal car although much quieter and with no shifting. It’s both different and similar.
I love this car and look forward to the future production models with four seats and the battery located in the floor where the fuel tank, exhaust and transmission used to be.
The Mini-E is a great car.
Cheers
Peder
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Wine-ing about the Mini-E, Randy Travis and classic cars.




What a great August weekend in Mini-E #183.
It began Thursday with the Encinitas Classic Car Show produced by the Downtown Encinitas MainStreet Association. About 400 classic cars lined Historic Hwy 101, among those cars were four Mini-E’s and a Tesla.
Dr. Robert Wilder brought his “Sun Color” Tesla with the Solar powered plate frame, Liz brought her Mini-E with the plate “SANSGHG” I brought #183 with the plate “SUNGAS” and the city of Encinitas brought their two Mini-E’s. Dozens if not hundreds of folks stopped by to marvel and inquire about these cars and the meaning of their plates. It was a great night to talk about electric cars as well as share with fellow EV drivers our passion for changing the motive power world.
Friday Evening, my wife Julie, surprised me with an early birthday present. We drove #183 from Carlsbad to Valley Center to have dinner and then off to a Randy Travis Concert. 10th row right in the center, Randy was a great preformer and singer and it was a great concert. #183 drove 76 miles there and back, we arrived home with about 30 miles left on the odo.
Saturday we crushed grapes with friends and made a little grape juice!
Sunday we visited fellow winegrowers and friends in Ramona. The round trip was 83 miles, I assured Julie that the Mini-E could make it no problems, although I was a bit apprehensive because we would be climbing a few thousand feet on our way out there.
We stopped for breakfast in downtown Ramona and the Mini-E drew quite a crowd of folks as they waited for a table to open.
It was a great day with good friends as we walked the vineyards and discussed preparations for the upcoming harvest. We arrived safely back home with an astonishing 35 miles left on the odo and just over 30% on the range indicator.
Both trips were back country twisty roads mostly between 45mph and 60 mph. Perfect territory for the Mini-E!
Thursday, August 20, 2009
3000 mile service for #183
I have had 3000 of the most fun miles of my driving history. Still no ticket but I have another 10 months or so to go and I know it's coming.
just one little problem so far and that is the air conditioner. at around 2500 miles it degraded to about 10% of it's cooling. All in all, one of my most trouble free cars yet.
The Mini-E has replaced 98% of my trips, the exception is the once every two or three month drive to Paso Robles our points north and east. I would gladly rent a car for those few times a year when I vacation with the car.
We have found that when we are home, the Mini-E is always the option, before it was sometimes my car sometimes her car, now it's always the Mini-E . My previous miles per month was around 1000 and with the Mini-E it is 1500+.
So far so good, zero emissions driving on sunshine.
Cheers
#183
Peder
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
$0.45 cents a gallon of fuel.
Assuming you will be driving the next 25 years on electricity and that the car you are driving in gets 3 to 4 miles per KWH. the cost of solar fuel works out to an equivilant of $0.45 a gallon fixed over 25 years for most of North America. Sorry cold weater folks in the northern most states
To purchase a solar P.V. system to power an electric car cost the same as purchasing fuel for 3.5 to 5 years at $3.50 a gallon.
Any guesses on what gas will be in 25 years? my guess is in the $15 a gallon range, assuming the Chinese and the Indians get busy consuming.
We installed our fuel station last week to augment our existing home power plant. The result is a 7.5kw P.V. system that provides 12,000kwh annually.
The home uses 8000kwh, and the Gem-e4 and Mini-E use about 3700kwh to drive 12,000 miles on an annual basis. Daily that works out to 22kwh for the home and 10kwh for the car.
Sunpower has a neat app for the IPhone and our website to follow the production. I'm working with SDG&E to get their smart meter smarter so that I can also follow my consumption.
Click here to view the real time production of the system
Don't know what my next car will be after the Mini-E, but I know it will have a cord on it!
Operating cost can be just as expensive as purchashing cost.
Renewable clean energy + the electric car reduces operating cost and magnifies the enviromental strenths of the electric car.
Cheers
Peder
#183
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Future "Gas" Station
Pictured is Mini-E #183 “Sungas,” and 6 Sunpower 230W Solar Panels.
If we can still use the term "horsepower," we can still use the term “gas station,” although energy station would be a much better description.
I am very excited to be driving an electric car, what I am even more excited about is the potential in the future for many or most Americans to be able to generate their own “gas” at home via wind or solar.
Our future as a country is a zero emission energy source, zero emission homes and a zero emission transportation fleet, a clean energy future that is both wealth generating and less polluting than refined crude oil or natural gas.
Here’s what that future looks like.
These six Sunpower solar panels provide the energy required to drive my electric car 12,000 miles a year.
These six solar panels will replace 12,000 gallons of gas during the next 25 years of driving, and will continue producing energy beyond the 25 year warranty period.
These six panels will provide a total fixed cost of “Gas” of 50 cents a gallon for the next 25 years with no escalation in price.
These six panels cost the same as 3.5 years of purchasing gas for your car.
These six panels produce no emissions generating electricity, those 12,000 gallons of refined crude oil, generate emissions from the extraction, transport, refining and delivery of the gas.
These six panels sitting on an existing roof, silently manufacture and convey electricity to the car in the garage 50 feet away.
Those 12,000 gallons of refined crude oil, from the ground are conveyed from thousands of miles away, the pipeline to carry it to the port, to carry it to the tanker, to carry it across oceans to the refinery, to carry it to the fuel truck, to carry it to the station, to carry it to the pump, to carry it to a car. A conveyance system of several thousand miles, a conveyance system of our planet to our next generation that is more polluted, more toxic and more barren of natural resources.
After 2500 miles of driving Mini-E #183, 70% freeway, 30% city, the car is averaging 3.5 miles per kwh. My annual driving is approximately 12,000 miles which will require 3425Kwh of energy.
These six panels total a 1.38 kw solar p.v. system. This size system generates 2200 kwh of energy per year. This generation during the peak period (32cents kwh) would equal the cost for the 4400kw off peak charging (16cents kwh) greatly exceeding the annual usage of the electric car.
Solar charging provides the additional benefits of generation at peak times, thus reducing the need of costly peaker plants, and charging in the middle of the night when electricity is still being generated in existing power plants, but is wasted because it is not used or stored.
Imagine if “Sun Gas” could be the fuel of the future for our homes and cars. It can be, it is and it’s great.
Living and driving on sunshine.
Cheers
Peder
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
“Put a Plug in it“
They could have and should have done a legislative piece about balancing and changing the CARB rules without throwing BMW and the Mini-E under the bus.
Here is their press release. http://action.pluginamerica.org/pressRelease.jsp?key=497&t=
Judge for yourself.
Advocacy for plug in cars is something I whole heartedly support, ripping into one of the very few (two) car companies that has a Li freeway legal plug in Electric car on the road today is not.
It is my sincere hope that the Board of Directors of Plug in America do not allow board members or advisory board members who have family working for rival companies to launch into an ill informed hit piece against any company, especially a company who has 500 plug in vehicles on the road and a division dedicated to advancing plug in electric drive technologies.
The majority of the press release was sourced form two individuals and their issues with BMW. I note with significance that that their issues were not with the car or the performance of the car in general, but rather the company, during the deployment and with about a third of the cars going to fleets at near zero rates.
What the press release was not about, is BMW putting 500 plug in electric cars on the road, the large majority of them in private drivers hands and the complexities of that deployment. It was not about BMW Mini-E promoting excitement and media across the world for plug in cars. It was not about BMW waiving a months lease to show good faith to their drivers while dealing with some delays, It was not about how the Mini-E is part of the development process “BMW Project I” working towards a BMW city car coming in 2011-12 . It was not about the overwhelming satisfaction and emission free driving that the vast majority of drivers are getting from the Mini-E.
It was not about the fact that I, and hundreds of other Mini-E drivers, and thousands of others who ride in the car, and tens of thousand who see the car on the raod doing 85 on the freeways are now convinced that plug ins and electric vehicles are the future that we need (is that not a goal of Plug in America?)
None of these pro plug in facts were even touched on by Plug in America. Shame on them!
Plug In America advisory board member Chelsea Sexton said: "This is turning out to be a half-baked, poorly executed program by BMW, who is acting solely for the sake of regulatory compliance.
I disagree with vigor. What the program consist of is putting 500 plug-in BEV Mini-Es with Li batteries on the road. There has been straight talk from BMW from the beginning that this is a one year development field test program with no expectations that you will be able to buy the car. I reject 100% the argument that we are done with development and testing phase, that we should complain that this is just another test as opposed to a mass market retail product. The key component to the opening of the electric car world to the masses is the energy density of the Li batteries and that needs to be tested rigorously in all driving climates and conditions which is exactly what GM and several other car makers are doing…. Testing, just like BMW for their future BMW City Car
The press release further states
In contrast to BMW's lease plan, Nissan has announced a late 2010 delivery of 5,000 all-electric vehicles designed from the ground up and offered for sale for between $25,000 and $33,000, before federal tax credits. The Japanese auto company, recently awarded a $1.6-billion loan from the U.S. Dept. of Energy to build a battery plant and modify its existing Tennessee facilities, has also announced that it will deliver hundreds of thousands of electric vehicles in 2012.
There is an axiom that says “half a truth is worse than a lie.”
The Plug in America press release told half a truth and chastises BMW for the high cost of the Mine-E lease. It Ignores that a leased of financed Tesla can cost $2000 a month, and scolds BMW Mini-E that it will cast a negative impression on folks that Plug ins are expensive, while praising Nissan for offering for sale a market rate between $25,000 and $33,000, before federal tax credits car.”
That’s a half truth and they as plug in advocates know it, Nissan is going to sell you the car and then lease you the batteries. “Ghosn aims for Nissan's electric cars, minus the battery, to cost as much as a standard car. Consumers will lease the battery at a cost that, including charging, will match what they would have paid for gasoline. “
Any car company can make an electric car without the batteries for the same price as a car with a traditional gas drivetrain. The cost is in the batteries and the fact that Nissan is leasing the battery packs is a convenient omission by Plug in America to fit their “ BMW is the bad guy” story line.
Plug in America, you blew it. You gave a platform and the benefit of the doubt with the weight of the story to one disgruntled individual (who BMW has graciously agreed to be released from his lease obligations) and an ev entusiast who was cut from the program thus a bit of an axe to grind. Those voices while important, were not balanced by the hundreds of very satisfied Mini-E Drivers and the goals and accomplishments of the program.
The weight and credibility of Plug in America via this press release was then used by major media including the La Times to trash BMW in other stories.
It certainly tarnishes Plug in America in this plug in drivers mind.
That is regrettable.
Cheers
Peder