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The 2016 Nissan Leaf equipped with the 30 kWh battery has an official EPA range of 172 km (107 miles), while the NEDC estimates the range to be 249 km (155 miles). [99] The range for the Leaf with the smaller 24 kWh is 135 km (84 miles), the same as the 2014/15 model year. [51] [100]
It has a 40 kWh battery pack (39 kWh usable) with an EPA-rated range of 243 km (151 miles). [17] The electric motor produces 110 kW (147 hp) and 320 N⋅m (236 lb⋅ft) of torque. [ 16 ] It charges through either a 6.6 kW regular plug ( SAE J1772 in US/Japan, or a Type 2 connector in EU countries) or a 50 kW CHAdeMO , and has the ability to ...
The following table compares official EPA ratings for fuel economy (in miles per gallon gasoline equivalent, mpg-e or MPGe, for plug-in electric vehicles) for series production all-electric passenger vehicles rated by the EPA for model years 2015, [1] 2016, [2] 2017, [3] and 2023 [4] versus the model year 2016 vehicles that were rated the most efficient by the EPA with plug-in hybrid ...
Nissan's (NSANY) Leaf electric car will get the equivalent of 99 miles per gallon, making it the most fuel-efficient midsize car on the road. The Leaf does not use gasoline, so the EPA created an ...
Nissan has finally rectified that at CES 2019 by unveiling the 2019 Leaf e+. It packs a 62 kWh battery pack that can propel it about 226 miles, approaching the range of Chevy's Bolt and the Tesla ...
The base model Kona EV has a range of around 200 miles, but with the boosted 64.8-kWh battery, it can drive up to 260 miles on a single charge, equal to its competitors.
As of December 2019, despite more reliance on recycled materials the cost of electric vehicle batteries has fallen 87% since 2010 on a per kilowatt-hour basis. [3] Demand for EVBs exceeded 750 GWh in 2023. [1] EVBs have much higher capacities than automotive batteries used for starting, lighting, and ignition (SLI) in combustion cars. The ...
The Nissan Leaf has a United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rated range of 73 mi (117 km). Range anxiety is the driver's fear that a vehicle has insufficient energy storage (fuel and/or battery capacity) to cover the road distance needed to reach its intended destination, and would thus strand the vehicle's occupants mid-way.