john1000uk
Established Member
Presumably the application of a good quality rain repellant should reduce drag and therefore increase battery range. Has anyone come across any tests of this?
I think as @Ian Key suggests, the word theory is key here, I like to keep my cars clean, whilst other's don't wash their cars for months, prime in my mind is keeping the car looking nice.Presumably the application of a good quality rain repellant should reduce drag and therefore increase battery range. Has anyone come across any tests of this?
Couldn't agree more @stevedee , I don't, (or can't) want to workout the exact savings of clean vs dirty, from mud picked up along roads, it's obvious to most of us, but totally agree with carrying additional weight, even a charge cable, and I wonder how much a dirty car wastes in both weight and drag? I've got a neighbour who travels everywhere with a tentbox on the roof, the drag on that must be very fuel wastefulI had a chat with Duck.ai asking about racing cars. As far as dirty vs clean car, one of the comments was:-
Also, just as a reminder, carrying stuff in your car all the time, that you don't really need, or giving a roof-rack a free ride will have an impact on your cars efficiency; e.g. lower miles/kW
- Drag Increase: Studies and real-world observations indicate that a dirty vehicle can experience increased drag by up to 5-10%, depending on the amount and nature of the debris.
- Performance Tests: In controlled conditions, racing teams have noted that cars perform better—often by several tenths of a second per lap—when maintained in a clean state compared to laps run with accumulated dirt.
HaHaHa, so FTF are you doing discussing slick economy?I run my car dirty, full camo, as I like to creep up on people!![]()