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13.6 kWh battery. 39mile EPA range. Equals 2.87 miles of range per kWh. Leaving it out for 8 hours straight, on a sunny day, in LA, netted 915 Wh. Or, 2.86 miles. [0] Not 3-6, 2.86. 2.86 miles of charge, but only if left outside, uncovered, in full sun, on a fully sunny day, for a full 8 hours, in a place that gets effectively the maximum amount of solar radiation per day out of anywhere in the entire country. Now, do the same experiment anywhere else in the country, that doesn't get max solar radiation, or that can't get full sunlight for full 8 hours, or where it's cloudy at all, or rainy at all. 2.86 miles per day is the practical MAXIMUM, given perfect conditions. For the average scenario it'd be some fraction of that. The 6 miles figure is what they said you'd get if, in addition to perfect conditions, "if the sun shifted its orbit" (?) and gave perfect sunlight for 12 hours straight. Which is a number which should obviously not be thrown around as if it's obtainable. The fact that they're quoting numbers about what range you'd get if the solar system was constructed differently also makes me doubt the impartiality of their experiment and the numbers they provided. [0] https://www.motortrend.com/features/the-2023-toyota-prius-pr... |
In your particular setup.
A typical car can expose about 3 square meters of lateral area for those same 8 hours, and receive 3 kW of irradiance. multijunction cells can exceed 50% efficiency, so we're talking about a theoretical upper limit of 12 kWh electric per day.
That would require a vehicle totally covered in cells, including the windows, so not very practical, but adding up to 30 miles/50 km per day is nothing to sneeze at.
We could also imagine all sorts of solar receivers that engage during parking and inflate the apparent surface within the limits available, track the sun etc. to maximize energy.