That would be by definition starting with a -0- charge in the battery right? and running Soley on gas? on a 1st gen Volt
The site I looked at said the 2016's are 41 mpg combined city/hiway? and
Just thinking out loud. and as an example:
If a person were to drive a 600 miles a month (7 miles to town) x 2 =14 miles + 6 miles around town driving for a total of 20 miles total a day X 30 days a month = 600 miles.
In our area most electricity is produced by hydroelectric and is just over 10 cents a Kilowatt hour.
Found this on a site that get's in the ball park for calculating a volts charging to a full charge, cost calculation
Electricity: You drive 1,000 miles per month, your car (The Chevy Volt) gets 2.7 miles per kilowatt hour used (EPA estimated average), and you pay $0.12 per kilowatt-hour (national average) That means:
1000 miles / 2.7 miles per kilowatt-hour = 370 Kilowatt-Hours
370 Kilowatt-Hours * $0.12 Per Kilowatt Hour = $44.44 in Electricity per month.- that is based on a 1000 miles @12 cents per kilowatt hour
So if my math is right?
370 X .6 = 222 kwh 222kwh X .11 cents ( a bit over our rate)= $24.22 a month in electric charges X 12 months = $293.04 a year driven in this manner. ( electric mode only) I did check and it appears the extra energy per month would not raise our electric rate because we are already just over the threshold point for the increased kwh price.
Obviously this does not count cost of the car, maintenance, or other costs, But I think that running in full electric for around where I live looks pretty reasonable to me.
Driving a 3500 Cummins powered Ram 4x4 as a daily driver. and am getting about 18 MPG local short trip driving, and about 21 mpg hiway, ( which is decent-I think) Down the road the Volt looks like a pretty good addition (possibility)- for me, but then i (want) a hybrid.
guess the white elephant in a dark room is- if buying a well used 1st gen Volt, how much of the battery packs life is left and how big of hit is it to replace with a new pack?
i did a search and this really surprised me:
Zero Battery Degradation Replacements Giving Chevy Volts an Edge
Mmm maybe they are fairly long lived after all?