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- Jun 13, 2008
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Drake the Outlaw
We were in South Florida the last couple of days and rented a car from Hertz. Turned out, they gave us a Polestar EV. When we left the rental center, they verified the charge level of the car and instructed us that the car should be returned with at least the same charge level as when we picked it up.
First problem.... The charge level was 40%, meaning that if we'd needed to go more than about 80 miles with our newly rented car, we'd have needed to spend a substantial amount of time at a charging station. That's just a screw job from the get-go.
Second problem... Where we were, there were no rapid chargers that worked on the Polestar. The only chargers we could find charged at about 10% an hour, so we'd have needed to charge for 4+ hours if we wanted to make a 200 mile drive.
Third problem....There really weren't any convenient charging options. Given our usage, we needed to charge the car for an hour plus to return it at >40% charge. Sorry, given the sketchy charging locations we found (none at the office we were visiting and none at the hotel where we stayed), we just returned it at 28% charge and I guess we'll pay whatever the charging fee is.
Certainly we hadn't considered all of this before taking the EV, but it was serious disappointment that the car didn't have a good charge when we picked it up and that there were zero decent charging options.
There were multiple Tesla superchargers around, but those don't work for the Polestar.
In the future I'll think long and hard before renting an EV away from home...
PS... I didn't like the Polestar anyway. The car had a high beltline, so the windows and dash were way up high, with windows that weren't very tall at all. I always felt like a little kid trying to peek out of granny's buick or something like that. And the controls were not intuitive - particularly things like finding and adjusting the HVAC. I'm sure we'd have picked up on it in a couple of days of active use, but on a rental, I really need to understand how to operate the vehicle before I leave the lot, and that just wasn't in the cards.
First problem.... The charge level was 40%, meaning that if we'd needed to go more than about 80 miles with our newly rented car, we'd have needed to spend a substantial amount of time at a charging station. That's just a screw job from the get-go.
Second problem... Where we were, there were no rapid chargers that worked on the Polestar. The only chargers we could find charged at about 10% an hour, so we'd have needed to charge for 4+ hours if we wanted to make a 200 mile drive.
Third problem....There really weren't any convenient charging options. Given our usage, we needed to charge the car for an hour plus to return it at >40% charge. Sorry, given the sketchy charging locations we found (none at the office we were visiting and none at the hotel where we stayed), we just returned it at 28% charge and I guess we'll pay whatever the charging fee is.
Certainly we hadn't considered all of this before taking the EV, but it was serious disappointment that the car didn't have a good charge when we picked it up and that there were zero decent charging options.
There were multiple Tesla superchargers around, but those don't work for the Polestar.
In the future I'll think long and hard before renting an EV away from home...
PS... I didn't like the Polestar anyway. The car had a high beltline, so the windows and dash were way up high, with windows that weren't very tall at all. I always felt like a little kid trying to peek out of granny's buick or something like that. And the controls were not intuitive - particularly things like finding and adjusting the HVAC. I'm sure we'd have picked up on it in a couple of days of active use, but on a rental, I really need to understand how to operate the vehicle before I leave the lot, and that just wasn't in the cards.
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