Not sure what you're looking for, but I've posted this before, but today, I've got yesterday's 284 rated mile dot all the way in the lower right corner:
As I've written before, that's one year's worth of data I pulled from Stats. Early January to early January. The estimated Rated Range is in blue; and the Temperature data is in red. I've added moving average lines to show the trends. Notice how well the moving averages correlate between temp and the estimated Rated Range.
Also notice, I have a blue dot at 284 miles, from yesterday. The car was frozen as the temp was about 16F and the wind was howling. My car sits outside. The Tesla app, showed a snowflake. Also notice last winter on the left, I also had 5 days with estimated Rated Range below 293 miles. I didn't know enough back then to check for snowflakes, but presumably my battery was frozen.
Below, is yesterday's Stats image showing my Rated Range is 284 miles, circled in red. The Battery SOC is showing at 62%, but that's not right. The car is showing 57%, and has a snowflake, meaning that even less is available.
Here, you can see both the Tesla app and Stats app. Stats is showing 62%, and the Tesla app is showing 57% with a blue snowflake.
And here's the Stats app showing the 284 mile dot:
What I conclude is that 3rd-party apps like Stats are pulling an API that is showing a number different than what the car itself is using. When I look at the car's app, and divide the odometer figure by the SOC%, I get between 308 miles and 312 miles, every day. Today was 312 miles. Stats and other 3rd-party apps are pulling a different SOC number. One that is higher than the one the car is using. That's why Stats is showing 284 miles in the above chart.
If you look at the next-to-last image where Stats shows Rated Range of 176 miles, divide that by SOC% of 62, and you get 284 miles. That's what it thinks is the Rated Range and it puts a dot there in my chart. BUT, if you use the SOC% that the car shows, 57%, and divide that into 176 miles, then I get 309 miles. Normal.
Someone told me once that there are two SOC API numbers. It seems that the car and the Tesla app are using a different SOC API number than 3rd party apps like Stats. This inevitably leads to confusion. My rated range is not 284 miles. It's between 308 and 312 miles, but because of this SOC API difference, I get these outliers on very cold days. Today, while the car says my Rated Range is 312 miles, Stats is showing 307 miles. And, if you look at the SOC number they are using, it's different by 1%, Stats shows 59% and the Tesla app is showing 58%. That's what usually is showing, a 1% mismatch. Today, the temps were better, about 32F. When it's colder, the mismatch can be higher, obviously yesterday it was mismatched by 5%.