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Journalists’ Electric Truck Nightmare: Battery Completely Depleted

The Nightmare of Running Out of Battery in‍ an Electric Vehicle

The prospect of losing battery power while driving an electric vehicle haunts all EV owners. No doubt readers, whether‌ EV owners or ⁤not, imagine the situation as a hassle-filled nightmare.

According to ⁤Scott Evans, editor at Motor Trend ‌magazine, the imagined nightmare became⁣ reality.

In a story published on Friday, ⁢ Evans described what unfolded when he and his colleagues deliberately drained the ⁣battery on a 2022 Rivian R1T, the first mass-produced electric pickup truck.

Fortunately, most⁢ people‍ do not drain an EV’s battery on purpose. Evans and his colleagues, however, wanted to see what ‌would happen.

Things ⁣did not go well.

“If ⁢you read nothing else, read this: Don’t do it,” Evans wrote.

The Evans team’s odyssey began⁣ north of Los Angeles in the rural Santa Clarita River Valley. ‌They wanted to ensure that‍ they would run ⁤out ⁣of power in a safe location away from heavy traffic. Of ⁢course, this also meant that the region had fewer⁢ wall chargers available to charge the⁤ truck.

On the positive ‌side, it took a long time to lose power. The truck flashed every imaginable warning light and even preserved enough battery that the⁤ team ⁣had to coast around a residential area before finally coming to a stop. The team⁢ also had ⁤a good⁤ experience with ⁣Rivian Roadside Assistance.

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Otherwise, everything ‍went wrong.

When the truck’s large battery ⁢died, for ‌instance, nothing remained to power its two‌ smaller 12-volt batteries. This posed ⁣a serious problem⁤ because the 12-volt batteries⁤ powered everything else in the vehicle. Thus, when the ​tow truck arrived 90 ⁣minutes later, the Evans team could not ⁤even release the parking⁣ brake.

Next, the Evans team discovered that they could not recharge the 12-volt batteries using​ a portable charger. With the batteries dead, the charge port ⁤door would not‌ open. On advice from the ​user’s manual, ‍which ⁢they found through the ⁤Rivian phone app, they pulled a ‌manual-release cable. The port door still did not⁣ open.

Meanwhile, Louis Cejo, the⁤ tow-truck driver, arrived ‌and managed to get the electric truck onto ⁤his flatbed. “Cejo said he tows⁢ at least two EVs a ‍week,” Evans wrote.

Cejo towed the electric truck to a charging station 21 miles away. Naturally, ⁢a long line of motorists waited to ⁣charge their own vehicles. By the time ⁣the Evans team reached the front of the line, the wall‍ charger had‌ failed.

Now, they had the truck towed to a ⁢Rivian Service Center 62 miles away. After⁤ charging for more than an hour at the service center, the electric​ truck’s battery had 1 percent power.

In short, when‌ the Evans team ⁤pulled ⁣the⁣ manual-release cable as instructed by the online‍ user manual, they damaged the charging port’s‍ locking mechanism, in ‌which case the ⁢truck would not accept a fast charge.

To fix the problem, technicians had to remove the truck’s​ front motors. One ‌technician described it as⁣ a 22-hour job.

Evans concluded ​by praising both‍ the⁢ truck’s safety features and the roadside assistance⁢ service. Still, he reiterated the fundamental point. “Like we said right ‍up ‍front, ⁤don’t do ⁢this,” he wrote.

The entire ordeal reminds readers that electric vehicles, whatever ‍their future, ⁤have not yet arrived.

If‍ consumers could simply weigh the vehicles’ net benefits as they do with other products, then the market would decide the product’s future.

Unfortunately, fear-mongering climate-change fanatics have already determined ​that EVs should ‌replace traditional ‍gasoline-powered vehicles.

Thus, the EV’s place in the climate lunatics’ agenda ⁣ reinforces hesitancy. These days, millions of Americans react with understandable skepticism to ‌anything the nation’s climate-obsessed elites say or⁤ do.

Stories of‍ EV-related problems, therefore, tend to confirm skeptical ‍Americans’ well-founded suspicions.

The post Journalists Go Through⁣ Electric Truck ‌Nightmare When They Completely Run Out ​of Battery appeared first on The Western Journal.



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