Tesla Model 3 RWD: Long Range vs Standard Range | Don’t Make a Mistake!
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 พ.ย. 2024
- Save 5% off of your JOWUA Tesla accessories Purchase: www.jowua-life... | Coupon Code: CLEANERWATT
NOTE: When you purchase JOWUA products using the link above, I earn a commission (at no extra cost to you) which helps support this channel.
**This video is Sponsored by Jowua**
Tesla just released a LONG RANGE RWD Model 3 in the US market with an EPA rated range of 363 miles, but how does this compare to the Standard Range RWD with LFP batteries and is it really a better deal?
Support Cleanerwatt:
1. Join the Patreon Community: / cleanerwatt
2. Purchase Cleanerwatt Apparel: cleanerwatt.cr...
** All video and pictures are used with permission or in accordance with the copyright owner's stated policies and use allowance, or applicable fair use laws. **
Image & Video Clip Sources:
1. Tesla video clips/images used in the video courtesy of Tesla, Inc. (where noted in the video).
Data Sources:
www.teslarati....
www.tesla.com/...
/ 1745151146539286944
www.motortrend...
docs.google.co...
• Tesla Model 3 LR Highl...
www.tesla.com/...
NOTE: The content found in this video should NOT be regarded as financial advice. I am not a financial advisor, and this is NOT in any way a recommendation or offer to buy or sell securities. While the information in this video is believed to be accurate at the time of recording, no guarantees are being made about the accuracy of the information presented in the video. As of the recording of this video, I am NOT invested in Tesla stock or securities, nor any other company mentioned in this video.
Save 5% off of your JOWUA Tesla accessories Purchase: www.jowua-life.com/CLEANERWATT | Coupon Code: CLEANERWATT
Quick question for you. Does it come with floor mats? Or they are extras, just like those ICE’s in the dealers? Wife is picking up hers in two days. Thanks.
This is the most comprehensive comparison between the Long Range and Standard Range, especially with all the charts and numbers. Really appreciate the hard work and thanks for doing that for us.
I prefer the new long range RWD. Lower price and longer range.
I own the basic RWD Model 3
I tsk s trip every other month
I couldn’t be happier with range , charging, and the safety potential over nickel type battrries
I believe the nickle battery is not recommended staying at 100% for long time like weeks. But if you can drive it next day, I think it is ok. staying at 90% also ok, so one day I use up 12-15% it is ok for me to charge slow charge up to 100% still ok. The nickle battery is faster charge when supercharge it.
Love my LFP 2024 model rwd --- charging to 100% is the biggest no brainer ever, just charge and forget about it. Reality is i rarely even get the car below 80% except for road trips.
But I would have for sure bought the new long range rwd model instead -- 1) 100% charge for first leg of road trip and get over 300 miles of range, thats a game changer 2) cheaper 3) cheaper 4)slightly faster
How is it cheaper ? I just ordered the new one and its more expensive.
@@omaribrahim8048 if your eligible for the tax credit, new long range rwd is cheaper than the lfp rwd (no longer offered)
First time viewer. Excellent video with solid data comparisons and explanations. Subscribed, thanks
please do LR RWD vs LR AWD vs performance! Very insightful commentary.
Thanks to your video I decided on the model that I am going to order. I had some questions about the battery technology, features and charging performance but you answered all my questions. LR RWD it is, thank you! :)
My reasoning is that It is more than enough the 80% charge for daily usage and when I have a long trip to do, then I will change it to 100%. I do not plan to keep it for my entire life so battery degradation is not a concern for me.
I guess it is better to have more range available and not need it :D
Highland SR LFP battery owner and happy as I could be with it. I really like your videos, they are very illustrative
Thank you for this! Awesome! I've owned multiple Teslas and I was on the fence as to which 2024 model to get!
Picking up my LR RWD this Saturday. See how it goes. But thank you, this clears things up a bit.
How’s it so far?
@@Franzwagna fantastic, I love this thing. Easy to drive, fast to charge. Looks great doing it. Only thing I would add is a turn signal stalk.
@@delawarepilot I just test drove one yesterday and yeah the signals now being buttons is weird. That and the drive mode no longer being on a stalk is also a big change.
@@gabrielvazquez81 I solved the turn signal problem, let the thing drive itself :-)
Daily range doesn't really matter. Few are driving over 250 miles daily. The difference then, is when traveling when you charge the LR RWD to 100% you get a significant extended range. Also the LR charges at twice the speed of the LFP at the latest Tesla superchargers. . And then there is acceleration. The LR RWD gets 0-60 in 4.7 seconds compared to 5.8 with the LFP, if that is important to you. Finally it's all moot for a new car purchase as here in California and maybe in all of the USA the LFP version is no longer available unless maybe it's in inventory.
I got the RWD Model 3 on a 3 year lease and that is the best deal out there , and they let me transferred the FSD from the trade ,
LFP Batteries also lose more range in cold weather, to be factored in when comparing 2170 Nickel batteries. 3:07
Really good, in depth review. Thanks
First, I want to say I love your videos and everything you have said is correct AFAIK. However, I think it should be mentioned that your daily driving range is mostly unimportant for the vast majority of drivers. Road tripping is really the only time that charging to 100% would matter, and while it is true you can charge your LFP cells to 100% whenever you want, you still can't charge any faster to 100% than in NMC (and as you showed, even slightly slower). So, I guess if you are going to charge over lunch, dinner, or your destination charging (like at the hotel over night) that will be an advantage, but for you typical stops most folks won't charge to 100% on road trips because it will just take too long. Now, your first leg of the trip can be longer, but that is the majority of the advantage there. Still an advantage, but not as much as it seems.
Rest of the advantages are fully legit, again AFAIK.
On top of this new model release, now they have a deal where you can get it with a 1.99% interest rate until the end of August!
Just ordered my M3 LR RWD, Thanks
You probably got yours already by now. Quick question for you. Does it come with floor mats? Or they are extras, just like those ICE’s in the dealers? Wife is picking up hers in two days. Thanks.
@@JUSTENizationNo floor mats. Found inexpensive all weather ones on Amazon which are excellent.
Please discuss the level 2 charge limits. The 2023 LFP Model 3 RWD seems to be limited to 32 Amps (7.7kW)
Maybe on AC only?
There’s also DC limits. LR is limited to 250kW and 11.5kW while SR is limited to 170kW and 7.7kW.
This new RWD LR appears to have the 250/11.5 limit.
@@albert109 Thanks. Was wondering this myself.
it is your onboard AC converter charger. It takes 240v AC converts it to DC and charge your high voltage battery. The RWD only capable to charge max 32A, the long range NMC battery has an 48A onboard AC charger. If your L2 power supply can suport 48A, the onboard charger will out put 48A to charge your high voltage battery.
Absolutely Correct! The 2024 LR RWD charges at 48 amps at 41 mph versus my Model 3 RWD standard at 32 amps limit and 30 mph charging rates. Much quicker!
have a '23 M3 RWD. Off on surgery and health recovery so only 12k miles so far after 16 months of ownership. I show 262 miles at 100% vs 272 when new. This is a ~4% drop?
I took the "charge to 100% often" as gospel even though in the back of my head i'm thinking, nahhhhh man, this is STILL an lithium ion based battery. And with LFP batteries the capacity to voltage curve is FLAT. Which means without getting into everything, if you're like me and not driving a ton? Keep it sitting at 50% or so. Anywhere from 25% to 80 or 85 ish %. Sitting for a week at 100% is not good. Let it get down to 20% or so before you charge up. Now, with LFP i would still say for the BMS, to charge to 100% twice or 3 times a month. That's my opinion using knowledge i have.
But, overall, we've taken it on some long road trips and man, by far the nicest car i've ever owned and bulletproof. NO panel gaps, no noises, no nothing. Perfect car. And it is fast! Even for base model
Ford tells 100% once a month with a LFP battery. Perhaps once a month is also enough on Teslas, kinda no reasons for it to be different.
I would pay more money for a LFP long range if they had one. I am hoping that the LFP batteries become more dense over time so that they can fit more cells. I've lost around 5% degradation on my Model 3 RWD at 90,000. Very happy with the battery performance.
The difference in the quality of the sound systems is night and day.😊
Yes. Much more depth and less tinny
I chose my Tesla MY RWD because of the LFP battery pack advantages, especially charging to 100% without concern. Recently did a family/dog 5k mile road trip across Europe & around Norwegian scenic routes (epic scenery). It was easy & delightful with SC, car needed less stops/charging than the passengers. Electric car made driving experience awesome & effortless, would not attempt in an ICE car.
You missed some important facts between lfp vs nmc. The lfp batteries you are continuing to compare at 100% soc and always 80% for nmc. Experience shows that charging from 90-100 on all chemistires is VERY slow meaninf road trips will be much much slower for lfp batteries whereas the nmc going to 90% often gets you enough range to continue to the next charger. Living in northern Canada the difference is big because you n eed all the quick range you can get due to longer distances travelled and cold weather requiring more range due to loses in -25C and colder.
Yeah, every youtuber seems to forget this. For long trips where you charge to 80% along the way, LFP sucks. The time you need the range, you need the range
One more point, people who cannot charge at home (condo owners, people who don't have a driveway, etc) there is a trend with electrify America to only allow charging to 85%, Tesla superchargers limit charging to 80% when in high use and even if you override it to 100% often they charge more to top up. Add to this the fact that charging from 90-100% is extraordinarily slow and people who do this are hated by all other EV drivers... I'm not sure this is a something to recommend in many use cases.
I have a MY LFP, I find the charging very fast. 0-50% in about 14-15minutes and 0-80% in 22-23 minutes. There’s no reason to charge to 100% on a road trip. 80% charge gives you roughly 200 miles of range. This is more than enough to get to another charger. Tests have shown there’s no much difference in charging times on road trips
Worth a watch 👌🏻
th-cam.com/video/f8FMkeLC9OQ/w-d-xo.htmlsi=1zNoY9sUouRS5ZLS
@@stevemann6110 this depends on where you live, there are no superchargers north of the city I live, those chargers are spaced out much further requiring more than 80%, this is reality for many outside large cities across Canada
@@TeslaPrinceit sounds like your needs are an outlier.
One observation is you might need to keep the 2170 between 80% and 20%. That would change the daily range comparison which was based on max charge of 80% without factoring in limiting discharge. This assumes the LFP can get near 0% without battery degradation
It would be nice to know the curb weights of both RWD models and what tires they come with but as long as the $7,500 tax credit remains in place for the LR RWD, it seems to be the better deal. I wonder how long we have to wait for the CATL licensed American made LFP pack??
Very good review!
thank you, very helpful
Is it really though? I would use 90% on LFP and 70% on NMC which makes the difference about 10 miles. LFP is the only current battery tech I'm satisfied with but advancement right now is insane.
If people are in the market right now today, then the timing is good to consider the latest offerings or consider the older model years if this EV is going to be commute or local driving. In that case, model years since 2021 is still worth considering now that we have more information on LFP and NCA batteries over 100k. But if driving range is really what's important to people above all else, just get a hybrid, plug-in or lease the EV until the tech gets good enough to reconsider. Your basic 2016 Honda Civic gets 360 miles (35mpg) of range and that's 8 years ago. The 2025 model year for the Civic Hybrid will get 588 miles (49mpg) today at half the cost of the 2024 M3LR. If EV range is really what people are chasing above all else, get a Model S and call it a day for the next 10 years as the 18650 batteries is the cream of the crop and have shown to retain 90% capacity over 10 years and 300k miles.
2018 battery are all Panasonic nickle based chemistry. Lfp did not come out until a few years later after giga Shanghai opened up.
You never tell the time it takes the standard range 18 inch wheel to go from 10% to 100%, so while the mileage is close to that of an 80% charge on a 2680 battery, we don’t know how much longer it takes to achieve that close range, which would make a big difference to those of us who charge at the supercharger daily
Batteries degrade through use (miles) but also over time. By giving so much detail about how well their batteries stand up the miles, it makes me wonder if they are hiding how much they degrade with time. It is fine to say cars are scrapped after 200k miles but how long do cars take to get to this many miles and how much capacity will a Tesla battery have after 10, 15 or 20 years ?
You should have mentioned leasing. Because the tax credit gets taken into account on the Standard range. So it make more sense if leasing. The standard range is only $299 per month. Somewhere else on the internet I saw the LR RWD will be over $400 per month.
not really, once you submitted your application, the price will be changed. 299 is naked price, with no additional fee, such as delivery fee, tax...., tesla is really good at ad, and misleading price,or fool price....
I just leased it at 36 months with 15k miles per year for $2k down and $413 / a month for the standard RWD
@@Ace-xt8lvjust leased a 2024 standard rwd M3 3 years/12kmiles $0 out of pocket $187 a month
@@wifiworker how ?!
@@Ace-xt8lv i’m in WA State - they currently have a $9k incentive on top of the 7500 federal. $17.5k in incentives with a referral code - paying $6700 in payments over 3 years. insane
Waiting for the next battery gen. 300 miles just sucks for super commuters...
Really strange. In Germany we have 702km or 436mi….quite different to 363mi…🧐
Did you talk about efficiency? Did i miss it?
Tesla nickel based batteries will outlast the car and extremely rare fires. Having a battery like LFP which will also outlast the car and extremely unlikely to catch fire, is a pointless advantage. No practical advantage for a car buyer.
@Cleanerwatt Your key assumption is that the new Long Range RW does not have LFP batteries. As the main point of the video is based on it this is pretty bold and I hope you are wrong as I want the LR RW with LFP
None of the LFP vehicles qualify for the tax credit, that’s why the standard range doesn’t so it’s a pretty safe assumption. Also they only recommend charging the LFPs to 100% so that’s another sign it’s not LFP.
I also asked a Tesla rep lol and they confirmed the long range is the nickel based battery. But I’m with you, really with it was a long range LFP :/
I saw this comment in Tesla wall charger doc..†Maximum charge rate for Model 3 Rear-Wheel Drive and Model Y Rear-Wheel Drive is 32A (7.7kW) - up to 30 miles of range per hour. This in comparison to AWD that can do 48AMP or 44 miles of range per hour charge. Not 100% if this for the old RWD or the new one.. Comments??
My 2024 LR RWD charges at 48 amps for 42 mph.
I have a US-spec 2018 Model 3 RWD with only 60K miles and only charged using L1 and L2 and have rarely used L3 or Superchargers.
Anyone know what kind of battery it has? Also how do I run the battery degradation test properly. It is already paid for and planning to keep for another family member. Are the Tessie battery status results?
John and fellow subscribers: seeking advice if it’s worthwhile upgrading to MY2024 Model 3 RWD Long Range.
Many thanks in advance for your advice and feedback!
I have one of those cars...lithium (NMC). You can run a battery test in the service menu BUT it takes about 24 hours and you can't start until your battery is below 50%.
What do expect the new LR RWD battery type to be?
I wish we could get the Model3 rwd long range in Canada.
Performance is the only way
Once the long range battery pack breaks in the overall range will end up being the same as the standard range version. Plus daily range will be 80% on the long range which is disappointing. Not very long ago the recommendation was 90% which wasn't to bad.
It's still over 22% more range if you assume an 8% degradation.
Does the RWD LR has the Panasonic pack?
yes
My 2023 RWD M3’s range has gone from 273 miles - 263 miles (3.7% loss) in 13 months and a bit less than 11,000 miles of driving. I’ve supercharged about 5 times. Either your numbers are off, or I’m doing worse than projected. On another note, it’s not clear why they even sell the standard range M3 RWD in the US at this point. Furthermore, federal incentives could disappear in 2025 post elections.
You're right. I am very careful, found out that the 100% charge for LFP is partially an hoax. Lost range after 3 100% charges. Model 3 Highland RWD December 2023: 2% in 18000 km, or around 11000 miles. Now I only charge to 85%.
@@pedromiguelareias you mean the car wont charge pass 85% even you set its max at 100%. I think the predict total mileage at 100% does not mean very much about the degradation of the hv battery.
@@tonymai1844 I manually the limit to 85%. Degradation in Teslas is measured by mileage at 100%. Systematically charging up to 100% degrades the LFP battery.
I’m on the same boat 10 months and 6k miles later at 262 miles out of 272. It went down to 260 previously and came back up. Super charged 3-4 times maxed.
@@jialiangliu2378Engineering Explained's channel recently did a video on the recent research on LFP batteries. Definitely worth a watch. I will be changing my charging habits as a result of the information in the video.
How do you know M3 RWD LR has a NMC battery? I haven’t found it anywhere
I have it. It’s NMC. Charge to 80%
I am a little confused, do the Canadian rwd and long range new model 3’s have the lfp and nickel batteries as the US, since they are made in China for now
This is the RWD long range instead of the normal AWD long range.
I just want an EV with an LFP (or whatever other chemistry doesn't mind being charged to 100%) battery that'll do 350+ real-world miles. That means I could charge at home, go do a weekend trip to LA, including touring around the city, and return back home, all without needing to stop to charge.
no way on tesla mod3.
All lithium batteries degrade if routinely charged to 100%, LFP do so to a lesser extent than Nickel but both types should only be charged to 80% on a day to day basis. Tesla is lying to you when they say to charge to 100% on LFP. They are trying to prevent voltage miscalculations because the LFP packs have such a flat voltage curve, you could have erratic range estimates if you don’t occasionally charge to 100%.
It truly makes a difference !
363 miles with current gen batteries is ridiculous range.
Guess what happens if Tesla finally acquire solid state battery technology.
why would LFP battery warranty be less than Long Range nickle? shouldn't it last longer, therefore they should stand behind it with the warranty? Makes no sense.
Are you dumb? That makes no business sense. Why would they give the cheapest car they sold the same or better battery warranty as their most expensive ones? If you want a better warranty spend more money on the LR or Performance… Tesla is a business after all.
Why no lease????
Tesla's share of the mkt is dropping. VW invested $6 billion in Rivian.
VW (or Rivian) will be bankrupt before Rivain sees that entire investment.
There is a big mistake here : just like NMC , LFP batteries will degrade faster when charged to 100% . LFP does NOT like to be charged to 100% . The only reason Tesla advises to charge to 100 % is that due to the charging curve of LFP , the BMS would have a very difficult job to predict the SOC (and hence remaining range) of the battery if you do not charge to a 100% on a very regular basis . This a disadvantage of LFP chemistry , NOT an advantage !
Does the AWD LR have LFP batteries?
It is a shame that you use your knowledge to give partial, biased and interested opinions towards the LFP. Even though the 100% charge of the LFP is almost 80% of an NMC...the LR with NMC can always charge up to 100% if it needs it...the LFP will never be able to go beyond that...
I use 12-15% for going to work one day (2 trips) so I think I can charge it at L2 every week up to 100% with no problem. I believe NMC should not charge up to 100%, staying plug in and parking in the garage for weeks. But if I drive the car every day, I would charge it 100% once a week is ok. Because I do not have any L2 at home, living in apartment is different with people has their own an L2 charger.
Don't think he is biased. LFP is indeed better than NMC battery in terms of charging to 100%, less degradation, much longer cycle life (some of the LFP used in energy storage industry can go up to 12,000 cycles and 20years of life. Tesla ESS product uses them) and higher fire safety. However, the downside of the LFP is energy density is around 20-25% less than NMC. Therefore, EV are adopting both LFP and NMC. But entire energy storage industry are pretty much on LFP now
@@y2hanTesla is a car , moving object and not energy storage facility which needs a battery with tens of years of service. EV main factor to compete against ICE is battery capacity, LFP is failure in EVs, including less dense batteries in ev is going backwards in progress.
@nickage872 calm down. I agree on density is priority for EV. My point was OP wasn't biased - he clearly said the advantage and disadvantages of LFP battery
I really hate that they lock the improved sound system behind a complete vehicle upgrade, just give me the damn sound as an add-on...
yeah Tesla should have RWD long range as now and LR RWD with full sound system the same as AWD. People will pay for the options. Because I do not need dual motor, I only need long range and full sound system.
Both NOW old vehicles in a much different market place where even the Hyundai Group is in more demand - without even considering BYD et al.
Weird how before Tesla there has been many brand to choose from, suddenly Tesla should be worried? Did you or anyone expect Tesla to be the only EV maker ever? Tesla sold 440k EV last quarter. What is Hyundai volume sold? Ignorance and bias.
@@nguyep4 the problem is that the trend is certainly NOT Tesla's friend anymore. Not going to work and executing for years is no way to survive as an auto manufacturer. It's now a yet-to-be defined listed company with a super-salesman in charge of self-promotion as a priority........ still.
@davidpearn5925 Are you even aware Tesla is the only EV company that is profitable in EV? Ford, GM, and all others except BYD are not profitable for a long while. Ford and GM have said they will not be profitable until 2026, that is if all goes well. Tesla is announcing three new models. New ones could be in production by 2025 within the current factory line using a mix of unbox manufacturing techniques. Tesla is poise in the Ai and energy sectors. You don't have a clue.
Thanks to this video, I cancelled my LR Model 3 RWD Order
For SR or LR AWD?
The LR RWD is the best value...just saying.
The RWD LR is awesome! Just love it. Extremely fast.
These cars are still way too expensive for the average buyer, even when they're second hand.
Yeah, they're up there for sure, but compared to many of the other cars on the market, when you've added package after package to get to the same level, they actually start to make sense, all electric vehicles, hell, all new vehicles of decent quality are just so damn expensive atm, the market is out of control imo.
I respectfully disagree. The Model 3 is less than the average cost of a car, and with the Federal tax credit the RWD LR is just $35000. That’s Accord/Camry money.
I test drove an Ionic 5 SEL an hour before test driving a M3 LR RWD. It took me 10 seconds to figure out how much more I was getting with the Tesla. You pay an $8k premium going from the SEL to the Limited trim on the Ionic to get what are standard features on the Tesla. Take the $7500 tax credit from the Tesla off the top and I couldn't give them my money fast enough.
Totally disagree. The LR RWD is much less expensive with the 7500 tax credit than any other electric car in its class. Less expensive than the electric BMW and others and outperforms almost all others in 0-60 and range.
Used Teslas are cheap, dude! As for new, I only paid $34k for my Model 3 LR RWD which is comparable to a lot of other mid-size sedans.
All lithium batteries degrade if routinely charged to 100%, LFP do so to a lesser extent than Nickel but both types should only be charged to 80% on a day to day basis. Tesla is lying to you when they say to charge to 100% on LFP. They are trying to prevent voltage miscalculations because the LFP packs have such a flat voltage curve, you could have erratic range estimates if you don’t occasionally charge to 100%.
I was very interested in the M3 LR until it was announced Musk is giving U-No-who 45M/mo; No way can I give Tesla any business.
And you’re so insecure that you need everyone to know you’re allegedly passing on in order to feel good. Maybe you should skip car shopping and get therapy.
Not true - Elon states categorically he is not giving any money to either candidate or political party
@@dyemanozdo u have a link to the denial?
He denied it …..on his twitter page
After knowing about the speaker system I kinda don't want the car now... I just ordered one just waiting for it to be built.
I am hearing the sound system even w just the 9 speakers and amp is pretty darn good.
@zoepolzin87 yeah after I got the car I'm like this is fine. I already had a 2018 long range.
@@sk8er4lifeez see my 18 had premium sound (which included sub) so I don’t have anything to compare to. Good to know it “works”
You missed an important fact. When EV catches fire,it is really fast. No time to get out
That’s simply not true, they’re slow but long burns.