Update on that "evPulse" program that's meant to encourage charging at utility-friendly times. It's apparently still learning our habits and hasn't taken over the automated smart charging yet, but it does give me some reports.
According to its math, we have spent $7.19 on 50 kWh of electricity in the past week and driven 152 miles. The 30 day report obviously got some bad data as we were coming online three weeks ago, as the numbers don't line up so I'll ignore them.
74% of our charging is during "smart times" - basically, not in the afternoon. Interestingly, they're showing different electricity costs for different charging times when we don't have tiered billing here yet although I know it's coming. The 6-7 pm window is 2.8x as much as the post-7 pm window. Given that our solar array produces more power than we use, the actual cost is mostly just academic.
If you do the math, at $4.12/gallon (the current price for midgrade in town), that's about equivalent to 87 mpg. It also puts our average consumption at 304 Wh/mi. The EPA rating is 290 Wh/mi, and the difference is likely explained by fairly heavy AC use. Since there's no separate meter on the charging line, the utility is likely reporting the actual amount of energy received by the car and not reporting charging losses. Still, we're within less than 5% on a fairly small sample size.
I also pulled up some charging data from the Tesla app just for interest. Over the past 12 months, 90% of our charging (by kWh) has been at home. 9% was Supercharging on a couple of trips to Denver, and 1% was a destination charger at a hotel on one of those trips - we arrived at the hotel with an almost-full battery due to a food stop, so that was a pretty minimal top-up.
Looks like Tesla has reactivated their referral program, so if anyone here is looking to buy a new Model 3 or Y let me know and I'll give you a link that will give you $500 off and three months of FSD (no comment).
Otherwise, it's still just a car :) It's our go-to for any use because it's just easy and it has amazing AC and we don't always want the drama of a dramatic car. But at this time of year, it's that amazing AC that really matters.