This is my second time renting an EV. First time wasn’t too bad. We stayed local and only had to charge once.

This Thanksgiving we had to drive from Chicago to Omaha to Minneapolis and back to Chicago. It was approximately 1400 miles total. $289 in electric charges. (that feels a lot more expensive than gas). We had to stop every 2 hours to charge for an hour so it extended our trips by 50%. This was quite challenging when we were in a caravan of cars and the ICE ones beat us by several hours. A 6 hour drive turned into 10 hours. I shaved off a few hours by always running the car down to the last couple miles and charging it to 100%. One time was not by choice as we almost ran out due to a dead zone. We were then charged $50 to fill up 3/4 tank at an EA in the middle of Minnesota. That was kind of our breaking point.

Some positives are it was a smooth ride and felt great in the snow.

We wanted to buy an EV but wanted to see how they fair on road trips in the midwest. This experience may scare us away for a while as it was exhausting stressful and expensive. Wondering what we did wrong since so many enjoy EV.

  • Sufficient-Athlete-4@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    You got a big pig of a luxury ev, with a huge battery and poor range and bad efficiency, then took it on distance road trips. EVs are not great for long distance tripping vehicles, yet. An efficient EV can get about 150 miles on 30 mins charge, which is not really that bad, and tolerable for tripping. A hybrid would have served you better. You bought lemons and expected lemonade.

    As others have said, the charge time/efficiency is best between 10 and 70%. Look at efficiency as well, the benz is ideally getting 2 miles per kWh, horrible efficiency. A polestar should be getting double that, and can get 300 miles on a smaller battery, which charges faster as well…

  • ScuffedBalata@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    The EQB is a short-range car with slow charging compared to something like a Tesla or the new Kia.

    Chargers for the Mercedes are half as available as they are for a Tesla Model S and the range is barely half and it charges at half the speed. Overall, you’d have had a much more pleasant experience in a Tesla.

    Then you chose to charge to 100% (which means almost 1 hour charging stops, yikes).

    The “cannonball run” across the US is won by a Model S, which drives down to 5% and then charges up to about 60%. Above that, it slows down a lot.

    That makes for 15-20 minute charging stops.

    At least you didn’t end up in a Mazda or a Chevy Bolt, they’re far worse for road trips than the Mercedes, but the Mercedes is a decidedly bad road trip EV.

    • wo01f@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      The EQB is a short-range car with slow charging compared to something like a Tesla or the new Kia.

      Also compared to dedicated Mercedes BEVs like EQS and EQE. The EQB was always an afterthought.

  • EaglesPDX@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I shaved off a few hours by always running the car down to the last couple miles and charging it to 100%

    You may have made your trip longer. Most recommend not running battery to below 10% and not charging above 80% as your charges will be faster. Last 20% can take as long as first 80%.

    With just 232 in range, figure 150 in winter cold so you are going to charge frequently on a long trip in that vehicle.

    Did you try and use https://abetterrouteplanner.com/ It says your charging should have bee about two hours total and Chicago to Omaha a 10 your trip with no stop longer than 20 minutes.

  • sorospaidmetosaythis@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I can run a Bolt EV on a road trip in 40% more time than would take an ICE vehicle.

    Your charging strategy was not optimal for the EQB.

  • gtg465x2@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    You had a bunch of things going against you:

    1. EQB is a fairly low range EV.
    2. EQB only has mediocre charging speed.
    3. You charged to 100%. Charging slows down drastically above 80% in pretty much all EVs, so the fastest way to road trip is to drain the battery down to 10% and only charge to 60-80%, making more frequent, but much shorter stops. It requires a different mindset than filling up your gas car completely, but it works.
    4. It was probably very cold, which is the worst case for EV efficiency.

    If you were in a longer range EV with faster charging and didn’t charge so high, charging probably would have only added an hour to your 6 hour trip in cold weather, and maybe 30-40 minutes in warmer weather, which can be offset by eating and using the restroom during those charging breaks.

  • bhauertso@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    We wanted to buy an EV but wanted to see how they fair on road trips in the midwest.

    You rented one of the worst road-tripping EVs made; don’t allow that to turn you off from EVs in general. The EQB 300 is a low-efficiency first-generation EV from a company that is only recently getting into EV production. And it uses a charging network renowned for its poor reliability. And the icing on the cake is doing 0-to-100% charging, which is hurting your overall driving time tremendously. But I am sure the on-board route planner wasn’t really helping matters since Mercedes’ software is so poor.

  • theotherharper@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    You need to try it again with a Tesla. CCS is in a deplorable state right now.

    I shaved off a few hours by always running the car down to the last couple miles and charging it to 100%

    That actually made things much worse. Batteries are most efficient charging in the 10-80% range. I would only push it to 100% if I had a BIG frontier to get across, like Rawlins-Evanston Wyoming.

    • wo01f@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      You need to try it again with a Tesla. CCS is in a deplorable state right now. Where Tesla is today… is closer to where CCS will be when the rest of the industry finds their pants.

      This user had not a single issue with CCS. His problems were coming from choosing a inadequate BEV for his usecase. Would have not run into this problems with a EQE or EQS SUV.

  • TheBowerbird@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Pro tip: You can greatly reduce your cost of charging by paying for the dumb EA membership for $4 (IIRC). You’ll get it back in the first charge.

  • trsmith83@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Sorry to pile on but charging to 100% on DCFC is far from ideal.

    EQB’s charging speed drops a bit around 50% and then significantly at 85%: https://insideevs.com/news/492300/mercedes-eqv-dc-fast-charging-analysis/ So you’re wasting a lot of time to get that last little bit of charge.

    You really wouldn’t add many more stops if you charged only to 80% or so. And then when you’re staying somewhere for the night – hotel, house, etc. – that’s when you go fully to 100%, because you’ve got the time and Level 2 charging (well, Level 1 too) doesn’t slow down at the top of the battery.

    EQB also isn’t great at fast charging but you can make it work. I have a Kona and it’s even worse at fast charging, but it doesn’t bother me. We’ve never needed more than one DCFC per direction on a trip anyway.

    • Phil517@alien.topOPB
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      10 months ago

      Unfortunately at the hotel we stayed, cars were parked near the only outlets available. We had to use public chargers the entire trip. We now know about not charging to full.

    • Phil517@alien.topOPB
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      10 months ago

      Unfortunately at the hotel we stayed, cars were parked near the only outlets available. We had to use public chargers the entire trip. We now know about not charging to full.

  • Altruistic_Rush_2112@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I am sorry to hear this. The main problem was you picked a vehicle that is well below average for road trips. If you went with a model 3 instead your range could have been 50 miles greater, Charging would be over 50% faster and the number of places to stop would have doubles or more. If an Ioniq 6 you would have had the long range and even faster charging but less chargers to choose from for now.

    Kind of like renting a van when you needed a 3/4 truck. Wrong vehicle for the job.

  • Mysterious_Mouse_388@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I shaved off a few hours by always running the car down to the last couple miles and charging it to 100%.

    I think you may have added a few hours!

    • wo01f@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Never knew a Tesla Model 3 is able to drive at 266 mph…

      • The actual trip in an EQE would be 23:45h of which are 3:52h spent charging ( 8 stops)
      • In the Model 3 LR this would be 21:56h of which are 2:23h spent charging (8 stops also)

      Not really night and day, is it?

  • The_Demosthenes_1@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I am blown away by people who want to buy a car by its NYC to LA performance numbers. If you’re gonna drive across the country you rent a Van. No sedan, SUV is a comfy as a fully loaded Odyssey or a loaded AWD Sienna. But do you really want to drive a van 24/7? I wouldn’t mind but many people don’t want minivans.

    • SunDriver408@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      We have a Tesla M3P and a Sienna AWD. While the Tesla is much better at long distance than the subject of this thread, the Sienna is the ultimate cruiser in comfort, especially with kids. I enjoy driving it on trips!

      • The_Demosthenes_1@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        I completely agree. It amazes me that regular sedan limos are still a thing. If you’re going to be driven in luxury it should be in party bus or a super decked out luxury sprinter van.