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Blog Tesla Model 3 Road Trip to San Diego

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This post is for those who are learning about EVs, and those wondering how an EV will fit into their lives.

This post was written when we’d had our Model 3 for seven months and the odometer was at 11,000 miles.

Most of our mileage comes from the daily work commute, but we’ve also taken a few trips in our region: to San Francisco for work, to Montgomery Woods State Reserve to see Redwood trees, to Lassen Volcanic National Park for camping, and to the Mammoth Lakes area to take in the scenery.

In November 2018 we expanded our horizons a bit more by combining work and pleasure. Instead of flying to a conference we attend every year, we drove there in the Model 3 since the conference was in San Diego, about 600 miles away. We often bring our children to conferences since Grandma does not live in California. Yet. (You reading this Grandma?) So this was a 1,400 mile (2250 km) family road trip.

The Trip

I’d been wanting to make this journey for quite some time and the scenery did not disappoint. I especially enjoyed seeing the farmland and agriculture operations in the Central Valley and the mountains along our route. On the trip down to San Diego we started with the battery at 80% and stopped at the Fresno, Tejon Ranch, and Lake Elsinore Superchargers for 30-40 minutes each. Our destination in San Diego had Level 2 chargers in the parking garage, but at 49¢ / kWh for members of that network, it was cheaper to Supercharge.

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Our route from the Sacramento area to San Diego and back. Major destinations, and Superchargers that we used along the way are noted (photo credit: Maria).

Work before play: the Society for Neuroscience meeting was busy as usual with over 28,000 people in attendance. After talks, posters, and meetings, we had a chance to meet up with friends and colleagues.

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Left: Hanging with 28,000 of our best friends. Right: Dinner with a smaller group of friends.

In the San Diego area we went on a few excursions for the family including an afternoon in LEGOland and a trip to Cross Border Express on the Mexican border.

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Einstein, Egypt, Lincoln, Wookiees… they’ve got it all at LEGOland.

After visiting LEGOland we checked out the nearby urban Superchargers in Carlsbad, CA. I guess I hadn’t been keeping up with the news and was surprised to discover that the 72 kW urban Superchargers were cheaper than full power 120 kW superchargers (20¢ versus 26¢ / kWh in CA).

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Charging on an Urban Supercharger in Carlsbad, CA.

To the Mountains

Our route home included a stop in Kings Canyon National Park. After leaving San Diego we stopped at the Lake Elsinore supercharger and found a second hand bookstore where the kids picked up some good books that kept them occupied for the next leg of the trip.

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We picked up some good reads in a second hand bookstore in Lake Elsinore.

We next stopped in Bakersfield after driving 185 miles (300 km), and ate a leisurely lunch while charging the Model 3 up to 301 miles (485 km) – which was the highest we had charged our Model 3 at that time. From there we drove up to King’s Canyon to stay the night.

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We had a late lunch while charging in Bakersfield.

The trip from Bakersfield to Kings Canyon was about 145 miles and included a 6600 ft climb. This is not an issue when you can tap into Tesla’s extensive supercharging network and put over 250 miles (400 km) in the pack. There are currently two 120V outlets listed on Plugshare in the part of Kings Canyon we visited, but we didn’t need the charge.

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We spent the night at Grant Grove in Kings Canyon National Park on the way home. Driving 145 miles and ascending 6,600 feet from Bakersfield left 134 miles in the pack.

The next morning after breakfast we went to General Grant Grove and walked among trees over 1000 years old, over 200 feet tall, and with trunks up to 40 feet in diameter. These trees count among some of the largest living things on the planet. Pictures don’t capture and words barely do justice to the immense size of the Giant Sequoias. But if I had to choose one word: Majestic. If you haven’t done so yet, visit a grove of these giants when possible.

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Kids big and small enjoy the Sequoias.

Note: Transportation generates almost 1/3 of carbon emissions in the United States. It’s on us to create and use cleaner sources of energy to meet our transportation needs and protect our planet. Driving an EV is one way to reduce pollution and carbon emissions.

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Energy Use and Emissions

If we had flown, the round-trip flight to San Diego would have produced a combined 1820 lbs of CO2 for our family of four. Instead we used 274 kWh of electricity, which at 0.54 lbs* of CO2 per kWh of electricity (generated and delivered in California) produced 147 lbs of CO2. I am not the fastest driver, I’m usually content to hang out in the right lane, and the weather was ideal so keep that in mind.

The EPA’s range estimate for the long range RWD Model 3 of 310 325 miles is based on an average use of about 240 Wh per mile. At that rate of energy usage you would have produced 180 lbs of CO2 for this trip. If you had a heavy foot and used 400 Wh/mile, you would have consumed 554 kWh and produced about 300 lbs of CO2. Still far less than that produced by flying, and much less than that produced by driving a car that gets 25 MPG (1086 lbs CO2), or even a 50 MPG Prius (543 lbs of CO2). Click here to read up on how much CO2 is produced by burning various types of gasoline and Diesel. Note: That CO2 goes into our atmosphere, which is not a limitless reservoir. Also Note: CO2 is just one of the pollutants generated by exhaust, but it is a major component of green house gases.

*This is an average. Sources of energy used to produce electricity, and therefore emissions from production vary throughout the day and change throughout the year.

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We used 274 kWh to drive 1386 miles. On the right is a comparison of CO2 emissions produced by various ways of traveling to San Diego.

FYI: Don’t fall prey to non-sense that keeps popping up about how EVs run on coal or that long distance trips in an EV burn hundreds or thousands of pounds of coal. Websites publishing that stuff may be looking for clicks, trying to mislead you, or simply bad at basic research. Reminder: there are multiple sources of electricity and as of 2017 cleaner burning natural gas is the majority source for electricity in the US (32%), and nearly 20% of the US electrical grid is powered by renewables. Furthermore, as the grid gets cleaner EVs produce less pollution and carbon emissions every year.

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Our 6.2 kW rooftop solar system produces nearly as much electricity as we use for our house and EV.

The Charging

On the highway we stopped every 150 – 185 miles at a Tesla Supercharger. With traffic that worked out to charging stops for every 2½ to 3 hours of driving. Our longest drive between charging stops was 215 miles (350 km) when we drove from Bakersfield up to King’s Canyon, and back down to Fresno the next day. Even though we burned extra electrons on the uphill portion of that leg, we gained back quite a few coming downhill: after 215 miles of driving we arrived at the Fresno Supercharger with 118 miles remaining in the pack.

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Cost

Using Tesla Superchargers our trip of 1386 miles cost $63. Gas is $3.50 in my area. For comparison, driving a 25 MPG car would have cost me $194 at that price, and a 50 MPG Prius would have cost $97. If gas was only $2.50 a gallon, the 50 MPG Prius would have cost $69. Not only does driving electric produce far less pollution and carbon emissions, it has the added benefit that it’s cheaper.

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Supercharging in Bakersfield. Over $4 for gas in some parts of California. Fueling the Model 3 with electricity is far cheaper.

Driving the Model 3

There are many, many reviews on the Model 3, and I’ve written briefly about this before. But after driving this car for 7 months, and now after this trip let me add that the Model 3 is an extremely comfortable car to drive. The seats, driver controls, navigation, the whole shebang, it’s been thought out very well. Is it perfect? Well, no car is really perfect. For example I’d like a list of favorites for quick dialing friends and family. But, it is pretty damn good and with the almost monthly, free, over the air software updates my Model 3 just keeps getting better.

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The Model 3 is a good road trip car (photo credit: Maria).



In summary: Driving an EV immediately reduces pollution and carbon emissions compared to gasoline powered cars. The Model 3 functions perfectly as a commuter and also allows you to go to many of the places you’d want to visit. Learn about EVs any way you can. Check out a friend’s EV, visit a dealership or showroom, take an EV for a test drive. You’ll be glad you did.

This guest post from Steve Noctor originally appeared on his blog It’s Electric



 
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Nice writeup. I drive a lot, and tell people I save about $7000 a year vs electric. All they get out of that is to ask, "How much did your electric bill go up?" Sigh, it's work educating people, I should just print this out, encase it in plastic and have em read it while I drive em around (UBER, model S).
 
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Great article and well thought out. When we drove our Model 3 down there from Reno this past January, one of the charging spots that we used was the exact parking spot you pictured in Carlsbad. We also charged in Lake Elsinore so reading your experience brought back memories of our trip that we really enjoyed also. Good to see the superchargers being added by Tesla as the sales increase to cover the demand for them.
 
Excellent journey. Thanks for the article. Another route that is really great is to travel down Highway 1 along the coast. There are Superchargers along the way with some new ones going in this year I hope.
 
Great article and well thought out. When we drove our Model 3 down there from Reno this past January, one of the charging spots that we used was the exact parking spot you pictured in Carlsbad. We also charged in Lake Elsinore so reading your experience brought back memories of our trip that we really enjoyed also. Good to see the superchargers being added by Tesla as the sales increase to cover the demand for them.
Yup, sounds familiar. I take a trip to SD from Reno about every 2 months. glad to see more superchargers going in down there as it has been a nasty experience in the last year waiting for charging at various locations in the city.

Nice article.

The only thing I could hope to be better for that trip is for Elon to dig one of his tunnels from here to there :)
 
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I curious. No mention as to how long it takes to charge your car. I can see how the breaks would be nice but what would be the total time added to your trip as you stop to charge your M3. I have one and looking forward to a longer road trip. Perhaps Seattle to Yellowstone next year. Just my wife and I. Nice write up. :)
 
I curious. No mention as to how long it takes to charge your car. I can see how the breaks would be nice but what would be the total time added to your trip as you stop to charge your M3. I have one and looking forward to a longer road trip. Perhaps Seattle to Yellowstone next year. Just my wife and I. Nice write up. :)

In our case we take trips of about 1700 miles with maybe 6 stops or so. If you sleep overnight at a destination hotel you just plug in your car. We find many Superchargers are placed next to Starbucks, Malls, restaurants, etc. where one eats, shops or needs a WC break. We like to walk as it is healthy from sitting too long. Some stops are 10 minutes, some 40 minutes but now the car is charging faster(150 kW) so stops will be shorter. We don't miss gas station stops for various reasons but all in all the time seems the same for us. Should add the EAP(we paid for FSD also) makes the long trips much more relaxing and arriving at destinations we can do more since we're not tired at all.
 
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In our case we take trips of about 1700 miles with maybe 6 stops or so. If you sleep overnight at a destination hotel you just plug in your car. Some stops are 10 minutes, some 40 minutes but now the car is charging faster(150 kW) so stops will be shorter.
Sounds close to what I do. My long trips are usually 2200 miles. I stop about 10-12 times, but that is because I don't like to run the battery down very low, nor charge to 100% each time. It's nothing to do with the battery life. It's just that I've found it isn't worth the extra time to charge above about 85% to 90%, and on the low side I want a reserve. In late 2017 when I went through Paradise California I was glad I didn't plan to reach the next supercharger with just 10%. I had to turn around and escape, else I might have just burned to death as well in that fire. Even with my gas car, I always like to get to the next stop with a reserve.

But sometimes I think my son would keep driving his ICE car until the last ounce of gasoline :eek:
 
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This post is for those who are learning about EVs, and those wondering how an EV will fit into their lives. This post was written when we’d had our Model 3 for seven months and the odometer was at 11,000 miles. Most of our mileage comes from the daily work commute, but we’ve also taken a few...
That’s funny I charge in the same place lol. I thought looks familiar. I thoroughly enjoyed reading the article.

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I curious. No mention as to how long it takes to charge your car.

I planned to take photos at start and finish to each charging session and use time stamps on the pics to calculate charging time but usually got distracted by my kids and didn’t get that data. However, most stops were about 35 minutes, and the time I charged up to 301 miles took ~65 minutes.

I you want a good estimate of driving and charging time for a Tesla check out https://abetterrouteplanner.com. On that website you select starting point and destination, the type of Tesla, desired SOC when arriving and leaving a Supercharger (for example 30% and 80%). And you can choose other variables like driving speed, temperature, headwind, Wh/mile efficiency, etc. The website then selects Superchargers, and calculates total driving time and charging time. It’s pretty accurate because they get their data from drivers in the real world.
 
I guess I hadn’t been keeping up with the news and was surprised to discover that the 72 kW urban Superchargers were cheaper than full power 120 kW superchargers (20¢ versus 26¢ / kWh in CA).

Pricing is no longer set by state, they can even vary around a city - in the Houston area the price tiers are
  • Channelview: $0.11 or $0.22
  • 290 and I45: $0.12 or $0.23
  • Richmond: $0.12 or $0.24
It seems likely that the lower draw of the urban Superchargers reduces the demand charges, which would in turn reduce the cost for power at those locations.
 
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I did a similar trip but from Vancouver to Palm Springs and back in 2017 in our X100D. My kids still talk about that trip and the great memories and experiences it’s provided. My trip was 6500km (4000 miles) in total and would have cost me $1200 in fuel if taking my full size pickup compared to $0 for free Supercharging. We just splurged on more souvenirs and better meals with the $ saved.
 
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What an incredibly insightful (even delightful) post. I’m not an M3 owner (I have an MX), but every word resonated with me. My first long-distance trip in the MX is coming up in July — San Francisco to Palm Springs — so your experiences and thoughtful guidance are really appreciated. You’ve also inspired me to visit King’s Canyon! Thank you again.