Sponsored

Gas prices

TruckDaddy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2020
Threads
10
Messages
301
Reaction score
560
Location
Texas
Vehicles
Tri-motor
Country flag
My electric rate is 9.3 cents/kwh. So 20% to 80% of the model Y battery is $4.19. (Don't let it get too low, nor too high for daily driving.)

This works out to about 195 e-mpg compared to gas.

My first year was free at superchargers on a promotion Tesla was doing at the end of 2020. I only managed to get 20K miles driven, a lot on Uber.
Sponsored

 
Last edited:

Quicksilver

Well-known member
First Name
Charles
Joined
Feb 24, 2020
Threads
10
Messages
559
Reaction score
667
Location
Alabama
Vehicles
Nissan van
Occupation
Retired military
Country flag
Today I put 24 bucks worth of gas in my Nissan van. It had half a tank in it.
Two years ago I could fill it up from bone dry for about 18 dollars.
Yesterday we filled the Diesel Pig up at the National Guard base where military and retirees don't pay the Alabama fuel tax (about 20 cents).
It had a quarter of a tank and it cost 150 bucks to top it off.
That CT can't get here soon enough.
 

DarinCT

Well-known member
First Name
Darin
Joined
Dec 16, 2020
Threads
8
Messages
357
Reaction score
625
Location
California
Vehicles
M3, CT triM
Country flag
My electric rate is 9.3 cents/kwh. So 20% to 80% of the model Y battery is $4.19. (Don't let it get too low, nor too high for daily driving.)

This works out to about 195 e-mpg compared to gas.

My first year was free at superchargers on a promotion Tesla was doing at the end of 2020. I only managed to get 20K miles driven, a lot on Uber.

Kinda along the same lines but not exactly, my wife is WFH and had to go into work. She got paid mileage and got to top off the charge on the car at work. If the cost is less than zero, it does some wonky things to the math. Of course, WFH beats math so it's all just fun thinking about it.
 
Last edited:


Tinker71

Well-known member
First Name
Ray
Joined
Aug 8, 2020
Threads
93
Messages
1,610
Reaction score
2,102
Location
Utah
Vehicles
1976 VW EV bus, 2007 Sienna, Tesla M3, Cancelled CT2 rez - holding for $65k
Occupation
Project Manager
Country flag
My wife's cousin charges his tesla at the free city level 2 charger a couple times per week and walks 2 blocks home......some people are so cheap. It kind of makes me chuckle but wonder about people at the same time.
 
OP
OP

TruckDaddy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2020
Threads
10
Messages
301
Reaction score
560
Location
Texas
Vehicles
Tri-motor
Country flag
What does the price have to do with mpge?

-Crissa
If local gas price matches $4.19, I'm getting the 195 miles at the same rate.

Let's pretend gas was double at $8.38 locally, and my electric rate is still 9.3 cents/kwh, then I would be getting double the miles at 390 mpge before I spend $8.38 in electricity.
 
Last edited:

BillyGee

Well-known member
First Name
Bill
Joined
Jan 22, 2020
Threads
11
Messages
738
Reaction score
1,640
Location
Northern California
Vehicles
Model Y P, Model 3 LR, Founders CT (Ordered)
Occupation
Technician
Country flag
I set up Tessie to compare my mY to the f350 it replaced and it's gotten insane. MPGe is a kind of messy metric, I broke it down to cost per mile for analysis and it's way more sensible. That said, here's what Tessie reports for just this past month:

Tesla Cybertruck Gas prices Screenshot_20220309-174410
 


Crissa

Well-known member
First Name
Crissa
Joined
Jul 8, 2020
Threads
138
Messages
19,571
Reaction score
31,475
Location
Santa Cruz
Vehicles
2014 Zero S, 2013 Mazda 3
Country flag
If local gas price matches $4.19, I'm getting the 195 miles at the same rate.

Let's pretend gas was double at $8.38 locally, and my electric rate is still 9.3 cents/kwh, then I would be getting double the miles at 390 mpge before I spend $8.38 in electricity.
Ugh, okay, I kinda see, but not quite. Lemme run this on paper to see if I'm following. I'm going to end up sounding like ajdelange for a moment. x-x;

So I pay alot more for my electricity, 31¢ a kWh; and a bit more for my gas (just checked on gas buddy, I have never paid this much), it's $5.19 at Costco (ten miles away) and $5.99 at the local full-service (less than a mile). Letsee, I get 31.5 mpg in the Mazda and about 10 miles per kWh on my Zero (varies wildly, honestly, by temperature and speed)... which is essentially 337 mpge (miles per gallon energy equipment).

but miles per gallon cost equivalent...

gas gallon cost / miles per gallon = cost per mile
$5.99 / 31.5 = $0.190

Kilowatt hour cost / miles per kilowatt = cost per mile
$0.31 / 10 = $0.031

Now of course, a gas car has a cost for oil and maintenance per mile that's a bit higher. Tho with my low miles it's scarily similar. So I'll skip that part...

But we're looking at how many miles I could go on the same cost of a gallon of gas, instead of being

kWh energy per gallon / miles per kWh = mpge (miles per gallon energy equivalent)

we want

cost per gallon / cost per mile = mpgc (miles per gallon cost equivalent)

so...

$5.99 / 0.031 = 193 mpgc

Aha! Okay. Sorry I wasn't following there for a moment. ^-^

-Crissa

I suppose we could make a miles per dollar equivalent (mpde), too. How far a dollar will get you from home.

miles per gallon / dollars per gallon = miles per dollar

miles per kwh / dollars per kwh = miles per dollar

which would be 5.25 mpde for my Mazda and 32.25 for my Zero.

So I have to carry or replace six trips with my Mazda before it becomes cost equivalent. At least in fuel. Not time ^-^;
 
Last edited:

Sirfun

Well-known member
First Name
Joe
Joined
Dec 28, 2019
Threads
56
Messages
2,429
Reaction score
4,961
Location
Oxnard, California
Vehicles
Tesla Model Y , Chrysler Pacifica PHEV, Ford E-250
Occupation
Retired Sheet Metal Worker
Country flag
I set up Tessie to compare my mY to the f350 it replaced and it's gotten insane. MPGe is a kind of messy metric, I broke it down to cost per mile for analysis and it's way more sensible. That said, here's what Tessie reports for just this past month:

Screenshot_20220309-174410.webp
I'm curious how many miles were driven in that month, to come up with those dollar amounts. Has the model Y been capable of handling all the jobs you needed to do? I remember prior to ordering your Tesla, you were voicing some concerns about how your customers would react to you driving a Tesla. How's that going?
BTW, I saw where Ford is talking about selling E-Transit vans. The one problem I see is they are limited on range. With the amount of miles you drive, I can't imagine it would work.
 
Last edited:

BillyGee

Well-known member
First Name
Bill
Joined
Jan 22, 2020
Threads
11
Messages
738
Reaction score
1,640
Location
Northern California
Vehicles
Model Y P, Model 3 LR, Founders CT (Ordered)
Occupation
Technician
Country flag
Here's the updated numbers from today, Tessie is awesome for this, btw. Works out to about $0.058 per mile in the mY compared to $0.37 per mile in the truck, not including oil changes and fluids.

As for the reception, I've been to over 100 customer sites and only one person gave me guff, everyone else seems to love it and can't get over just how much I can fit in the trunk.

Tesla Cybertruck Gas prices Screenshot_20220312-133024


Tesla Cybertruck Gas prices Screenshot_20220312-133043
 

pagesix1536

Well-known member
First Name
Chris
Joined
Apr 20, 2021
Threads
0
Messages
73
Reaction score
202
Location
Atlanta
Vehicles
2015 Nissan Leaf SL, 2014 Tesla Model S P85DL
Country flag
So I pay alot more for my electricity, 31¢ a kWh; and a bit more for my gas
Wowzers... that's REALLY high. Even at my peek rate in hot Atlanta GA, my cost is only 13.5¢/kwh. Totally free between 12-6am on their EV charging rate plan. What city are you in that charges that high of a rate on electricity??
 
OP
OP

TruckDaddy

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2020
Threads
10
Messages
301
Reaction score
560
Location
Texas
Vehicles
Tri-motor
Country flag
I live in a county that has to use the electric coop, no choice.

In my previous location, it was free overnight electricity, running the AC all night, drying the laundry, running the dishwasher, charging cars, etc. My monthly bill was about $50.
Sponsored

 
 








Top