Electric Cars Are the Future for Commuters,but Can They Go the Extra Mile on a Road Trip?
AS I UNPLUGGED the cord from my Tesla SUV on a sunny afternoon in May, I struck up a conversation about electric cars with a gentleman in his sixties who was charging a Porsche hybrid next to me. We were parked at one of the most picturesque vehicle charging stations in America, under thousand-foot-high red sandstone cliffs at a lot inside Utah’s Zion National Park.
“You won’t get much charge for that here,” he said, nodding at my car. The station delivered a meager 16 miles of battery life per hour— fine for a gas hybrid but not for us. I laughed in agreement and explained that I just needed to make it to my next Tesla Supercharger station, 109 miles up the interstate. Such is the reality for electric-vehicle owners who want more than just a daily commuter.
After we juiced the car, my girlfriend, Hilary, and I loaded our camping and climbing gear into the Tesla’s front and rear trunks, bade our neighbor goodbye, and pulled away—reveling in that stealth electric-car silence. We had set out from our Denver home five days earlier on a six-day road trip in Tesla’s new Model X 100D, the automaker’s bid to reach a more adventurous demographic. It’s a black pod with all-wheel drive, a panoramic windshield, touchscreens everywhere, and Tesla’s Falcon Wing doors, which open upward like on the famous 1980s DeLorean from Back to the Future.
This story is from the August 2017 edition of Outside Magazine.
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This story is from the August 2017 edition of Outside Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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