brucek
Registered Member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2019
- Messages
- 263
- Reaction score
- 145
- Points
- 43
- Location
- West Chester, PA
- Genesis Model Year
- 2024
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis GV60
I am writing a small report about my recent trip. I had a friend with me to share driving. The bourbon portion of this report is covered in the ABRP expertise thread. We did come home with about 30 extra bottles of weight.
TLDR: Total distance = 1487 mi. / total KWh charged = 712 / Total time spent charging = 335 Min / total cost of charging saved = $397
We left on a Tue at about 4:30 and spent the night near the first OH charge station. We got to Louisville and had a friend who flew in to meet us at the EA charger. Then, I drove 48 miles to Buffalo Trace, back to the same charger, and then to the Airbnb in town. The car did not move while we were in Louisville.
On Friday, with snow predicted to start around 10-11 AM, we decided to scuttle the day's plans, get on the road, and stay ahead of the weather. I was reluctant to go all the way to the Cincinnati charger, where ABRP showed we would be below 5%, so we went to the close Louisville charger again but with only about 15 min to precondition, you can see the charge rate sucked. We left at about 7:40 AM and got home just at midnight. We made seven charge stops and two stops that were not charging for a total of about an hour, I would guess, so let's call it 15 hr driving for an average travel speed of 47 MPH.
Some of my friends who asked about it were in disbelief that I had to stop for seven charges, and they teased me about if I was still happy buying an EV. The stopping and taking breaks did not feel so bad for me, and I was pleased to break up the driving. I think it was a worst-case scenario with freezing temperatures. The trip limited me to stopping at each EA charger, and you can see they were all about 90-110 miles apart. I suspect that I could have leapfrogged with better weather and had fewer change stops. If I did not want to use the free EA charging, I probably could have been more efficient in selecting chargers and optimized distance better.
The hard part on the way out was finding the EA destination since the nav system would not show the ones over 30 or 40 miles away. After a suggestion on the forum, I used the store where the charger was located as a destination and then searched for chargers near the destination to find the appropriate charger. That made life better. Life improved on the return trip when all the chargers were in the recent destinations.
ABRP attempted to route me to a charger that was not yet open, but I realized it when I could not find it in the car nav system. Since the car, for some reason, is smart enough to know if I have a different navigation system on and will turn off the internal navigation, I was careful messing with Wayz or ABRP. I did not want to risk preconditioning not happening in this weather, but I did see some evidence of it continuing to precondition with ABRP. Further experimentation is needed since it could take time to turn it off, but this trip in cold weather did not inspire me to try anything that may cause a problem.
Overall, I will do more road trips with the GV60 as it is comfortable and easy to drive. I think Supercharger access will make things easier and allow me to try to go further. I will buy one if Genesis does not send the adapter before my next trip.
Many people want to hate EA, but my experience was good overall. I only had 1 station where I had to wait, and it was the final charge closest to home. A PA turnpike station with 2 of 4 operational, and the station is limited to 85%, so they know there is an issue, and I only waited about 10 min for a BMW to pull out. The Columbus charger in a Walmart lot was set up with pull-through islands, each having two chargers. Two vehicles parked to block access to the second charger on their island, but there was an out-of-service unit, and I could pull there and use the charger from the other side. The next car that pulled in had to wait since the blocking driver was not in the vehicle. So, I advise avoiding pulling in too far in a pull-through location.
The table below shows all the relevant data that I could think of.

- Fly Eagles Fly -
TLDR: Total distance = 1487 mi. / total KWh charged = 712 / Total time spent charging = 335 Min / total cost of charging saved = $397
We left on a Tue at about 4:30 and spent the night near the first OH charge station. We got to Louisville and had a friend who flew in to meet us at the EA charger. Then, I drove 48 miles to Buffalo Trace, back to the same charger, and then to the Airbnb in town. The car did not move while we were in Louisville.
On Friday, with snow predicted to start around 10-11 AM, we decided to scuttle the day's plans, get on the road, and stay ahead of the weather. I was reluctant to go all the way to the Cincinnati charger, where ABRP showed we would be below 5%, so we went to the close Louisville charger again but with only about 15 min to precondition, you can see the charge rate sucked. We left at about 7:40 AM and got home just at midnight. We made seven charge stops and two stops that were not charging for a total of about an hour, I would guess, so let's call it 15 hr driving for an average travel speed of 47 MPH.
Some of my friends who asked about it were in disbelief that I had to stop for seven charges, and they teased me about if I was still happy buying an EV. The stopping and taking breaks did not feel so bad for me, and I was pleased to break up the driving. I think it was a worst-case scenario with freezing temperatures. The trip limited me to stopping at each EA charger, and you can see they were all about 90-110 miles apart. I suspect that I could have leapfrogged with better weather and had fewer change stops. If I did not want to use the free EA charging, I probably could have been more efficient in selecting chargers and optimized distance better.
The hard part on the way out was finding the EA destination since the nav system would not show the ones over 30 or 40 miles away. After a suggestion on the forum, I used the store where the charger was located as a destination and then searched for chargers near the destination to find the appropriate charger. That made life better. Life improved on the return trip when all the chargers were in the recent destinations.
ABRP attempted to route me to a charger that was not yet open, but I realized it when I could not find it in the car nav system. Since the car, for some reason, is smart enough to know if I have a different navigation system on and will turn off the internal navigation, I was careful messing with Wayz or ABRP. I did not want to risk preconditioning not happening in this weather, but I did see some evidence of it continuing to precondition with ABRP. Further experimentation is needed since it could take time to turn it off, but this trip in cold weather did not inspire me to try anything that may cause a problem.
Overall, I will do more road trips with the GV60 as it is comfortable and easy to drive. I think Supercharger access will make things easier and allow me to try to go further. I will buy one if Genesis does not send the adapter before my next trip.
Many people want to hate EA, but my experience was good overall. I only had 1 station where I had to wait, and it was the final charge closest to home. A PA turnpike station with 2 of 4 operational, and the station is limited to 85%, so they know there is an issue, and I only waited about 10 min for a BMW to pull out. The Columbus charger in a Walmart lot was set up with pull-through islands, each having two chargers. Two vehicles parked to block access to the second charger on their island, but there was an out-of-service unit, and I could pull there and use the charger from the other side. The next car that pulled in had to wait since the blocking driver was not in the vehicle. So, I advise avoiding pulling in too far in a pull-through location.
The table below shows all the relevant data that I could think of.

- Fly Eagles Fly -
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