melvimbe
FRF Addict
You're right, Wh/mi is the number we care about. The weight affects that. The heavier the vehicle, the more energy it takes to move it around, but that's moot. The OP didn't actually calculate that, so lets do it now.
Hummer EV: 200kWh (350 mile range) 200kWh/350 = 571Wh/mi
Cyber Truck: 200kWh (500 mile range) 200kWh/500 = 400Wh/mi
Rivian EV: 180kWh (400 mile range) 180kWh/400 = 450Wh/mi
Bollinger EV: 175kWh (200 mile range) 175kWh/200 = 875Wh/mi
Honestly, I don't even trust these numbers. I don't know if there are government standards for these ratings the way there is for MPG, but even if there were, I would expect them to be much more lax as the government doesn't want to discourage EVs...but they do want to discourage ICE. Besides, I don't have a good feel for Watts in a gallon of gas....which of course will vary by the efficiency of individual vehicles.
The reality is that these vehicles will rarely be offroad, and when they are, it will only be for people who happen to live 25 miles or so from the trails, and only use it for a couple hours at a time at most.
Hydrogen fuel cells will be the future, not plug in EV.
I remember when Bush said the same thing in one of his SOTU addresses. I just don't think the politics are ever going move away from pushing EVs to pushing hydrogen, and there is the same infrastructure problem. Besides, I get the feeling there are negatives that are never talked about, such as downside of creating the hydrogen fuel, and possibly the water waste (seems like there has to be a downside to it)