That makes sense. Thanks for that data point.On my Tesla the heat pump was great until it got below 20° F. Below that it couldn't keep up and efficiency went down the tubes.
I honestly think the Rivian is pretty darn efficient for not having a heat pump. A 5-10% gain is huge in the EV world though.
Everytime I see one of those I think it looks like a Smart Forfour on 4 temporary spares.Here is a video test of bmw i3 with and without heatpump. Basically small gain from heat pump version because driving takes so much more energy than heating.
It will be interesting to see with the Rivian.
Looks are odd but love ours for round town stuff. 5.1 miles/kwh for the past 3 months. Parking and turning radius is incredible plus plastic body panels so no PDR ;-)Everytime I see one of those I think it looks like a Smart Forfour on 4 temporary spares.
I'm in Wisconsin, so the need is realI had a tesla with Hp technology and I much prefer traditional system for marginal improvement. It took for ever to cool or heat the car with the Tesla and it never felt like it got to temp properly. I have been in other cars with HP technology and it’s the same story. I live in a warmer climate so the real need for heat is low. With the ability to warm pack from home power for pre conditioning makes a big difference preventing the need for a HP in my mind.
I'm guessing my summer efficiency will be around 2.4-2.5. So the average would be 2.3 m/kWh. I would really appreciate that in the winter.I’m no engineer, but the little I know is that these EV heat management systems are much more complicated than people give them credit for.
I think the real answer is much more nuanced than yes/no on a heat pump.
People that have driven both Rivian’s and Ford’s have reported that Rivian’s lose much less power in the cold than Ford’s (at least I remember reading that on here). So Rivian has already implemented some level of heat/temp management optimization even without a heat pump.
Maybe it has to do with how Rivian sources heat from the motors.
Based on my experience with residential heat pumps, my guesstimate is that it would be roughly halfway between the efficiency of cold weather vs warm weather driving. So if you’re getting 2.0 in the winter and 2.2 in the summer, you could maybe expect 2.1 in the winter. However, the real world impact will be lower, as heat pump efficiency/effectiveness/functionality drops precipitously at lower temperatures. Particularly below freezing.
So yes, a heat pump makes a difference and is a worth developing. Is it something worth getting really excited about? Not really.