I had another great EV adventure last weekend. In the Pacific Northwest, there are two types of DC fast chargers that are common, Blink and AeroVironment, which were both free to use when they first became available. Blink started charging $5/session a while back, but since most of them are in the city I rarely need to use them anyway. AeroVironment announced that they will start charging for usage on April 1, and these are the ones that are critical for long distance travel on the interstate. There are a few free ones popping up at Nissan dealers, but they have limited hours and access, so they can't be relied on. I took this as a kick in the ass to take a drive I've been wanting to take, possibly the last time I'll ever be able to go on a long road trip without paying for fuel.
As a side note, I did the same thing trying to road trip with free waste vegetable oil in a diesel Suburban in the past. The experience taught me that even if the fuel itself is free it was certainly not free to make it consumable. Filters, barrels, pumps, etc. added to the time it takes to acquire and filter the fuel made for something that wasn't free in the end. As you can see, free or nearly free road trips are kind of a holy grail for me.
Anyway, the trip report. We drove 720 miles in a little over two days. I've really wanted to make the drive up to Leavenworth, WA as I grew up nearby and I really love driving through the mountains there. We had set the whole weekend aside for just taking it easy, no specific requirements or timelines besides EV adventuring and being home by Sunday night. The end result was something like this:
Friday: Leave Portland around 3, just in time for a traffic jam heading out of Portland. I had a full charge courtesy of the free charging we get at work. We had great weather so the drive was nice and it was easy to get great mileage with no heater or air conditioner required. Continue north with stops in Castle Rock, Tumwater, Burien, dinner at my uncle's restaurant in Silver Lake, and end up at my aunt and uncle's house in Mukilteo for the night. Every charge stop was at a free DCFC, charge to 80%. The chargers were almost perfectly spaced at 55 miles, enough to get from point to point with 80% and arriving at each stop with a small buffer. About 210 miles for the day, about 2 hours spent charging, and 4 hours driving.
Saturday: Great homemade breakfast to start the day off and our overnight level 1 charger had us starting with a full charge. This was a pretty easy day for driving. One stop to charge in Skykomish and a couple stops at tourist traps before arriving at our destination in Leavenworth. Plugged in and charged to 100% while walking around the shops downtown and having lunch, then checked into the hotel. Made some new friends while having some great German beer and sausages. About 110 miles for the day, about 30 minutes spent charging, and about 2.5 hours driving.
Sunday: Up fairly early and a light breakfast before starting off our big driving day. Starting with a full charge from the previous day, we had charging stops in Skykomish, Sultan, Puyallup, Centralia, and Castle Rock. We took a detour to Orting to go visit the place where Jessica and I met nearly 10 years ago. The backroads were a lot more enjoyable as well, much prettier than the interstate. We also had lunch in Centralia. We were taking the backroads from Castle Rock towards Portland and it looked like we'd have a nice sunset. On a whim, Jessica said we should drive to the beach for the sunset...so we did, which put us on a detour adding about 100 extra miles to the plan. Arrived in Astoria with the last few minutes of sun unfortunately obscured by clouds in the distance. Over to the Fort George Brewery/restaurant for some tasters and a snack while the car charged before hitting the road again for the last leg towards home. About 400 miles for the day, about 3 hours spent charging, and 9 hours driving.
For those interested in the specific route I took, this is what it looks like on Google Maps:
http://goo.gl/wPl9SK
As usual, we had interesting conversations with locals, other EV drivers on their own adventures, or people driving by just stopping to ask us about EV ownership at almost every charge stop. Rarely a dull moment while waiting to charge! We also got to see some pretty countryside and some family that I haven't seen for years, and the weather absolutely could not have been better for mid-March in the Northwest, with clear skies and in the high 60s every day! All in all, a successful and enjoyable 720 mile road trip over a couple of days and we didn't have to pay a penny for fuel over the entire trip. That's a feather in my cap that I doubt I'll be able to top for a long, long while.
Bryce