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I solved this with a spreadsheet some time ago and posted a thread. This was followed by smart people (I think by Saghost and Iklundin) pointing out that the problem is a simple maxima question solved with a derivative of the energy consumption function.This has been an obsession of mine for years. It seems like it would be so obvious, just track the MPG and the MPH with an OBD2 reader and there should be a best speed you can derive for any car.
Coming in here late and haven't read all 12 pages so I apologize if this has already been asked and answered but why doesn't the app get elevation data from the car's GPS receiver?
I've gotten the two keys and entered them both. Sometimes one of the tow will verify but not the other, most of the time neither will verify but both will never verify. Any tips?
https://teslawinds.com/?ownAPIK=[OpenWeatherMap API Key]&gnUN=[GeoNames Username]
Thanks. I'll give that a shot. Hope I can get it going because it looks like a very valuable tool for long trips.
BTW I'm in an X. Does that change the picture any?
I've seen this myself, this appears to be problems with the Model 3's browser implementation. You can keep trying and eventually both will verify, or you can manually enter the URL in the browser as follows:
Code:https://teslawinds.com/?ownAPIK=[OpenWeatherMap API Key]&gnUN=[GeoNames Username]
If you enter that URL manually, insert your OpenWeatherMap API Key into the proper spot in the URL (no square brackets), and also insert the GeoNames username (also no square brackets). If this is successful, the application will load, then bookmark the page.
https://teslawinds.com/?owmAPIK=[OpenWeatherMap API Key]&gnUN=[GeoNames Username]