
Originally Posted by
DCFusor
I find my CC will do some regen in D, just not enough for a steep hill. It seems to work better and smoother than it did in my '12 Cruze or '10 Camaro SS - probably an easier to control drivetrain in the Volt.
I notice that the same (subjective) G acceleration from the cruise control doesn't lift the little ball as much as when you do the same acceleration with the pedal. Not sure why that should be, unless that's the software saying "I know what I'm doing here".
It seems in mine that even the slightest use of the brake pedal lowers the ball, even though I thought you were getting some extra regen that way before you were really using brakes? I've yet to try very light brake on a long downhill to look at the resulting power numbers, though. L is just so easy to use in that mode it hadn't occurred to me yet.
I too don't use cruise control all that much, you can do a better job with your brain, at least in some situations. Since I live in the mountains, all twisty roads, the CC can't know that it's wise to regen-slow going into a hairpin, for example. Or not to hammer it because it's losing speed just as it tops a hill and you're going to go down for the next mile or a few anyway. That would take some fancy integration with the gps, hmmm. I can see it giving your leg a rest on a long boring highway trip. But in every car I've had so far, I still get better mpg with the foot, due to being able to anticipate things. All CC's I've had so far seem to be wanting to accelerate just as that guy in front you were closing on anyway slows down...and have wasted some gas by the time you can shut them off.
In my case, I live partway up a mountain, and can go down to go to town, or up and then down. The former way I get the first 4-5 miles almost all regen - no bars go away. I get the next 6-7 miles with one bar going away, but the mile indicator staying the same as it was in my driveway (going very gently downriver)!
The trip home is another story, of course - up all the way, or nearly. By then, I'm probably on gasoline mode, so I go ahead and drive it like the sporty car it is - maybe that's not for the purist, but hey, fun is fun and I specialize in that. I still get very respectable net mileage.
But if I want to have a little extra in the battery when I get home, I take the way that takes me over the mountain top (in mountain mode) and can then regen for 3-4 miles to my place, and I get a couple extra indicated miles (and usually a bar) doing that. Yeah, it's burning gas going up the extra altitude, but I might not care in winter when I have less spare solar to top it off with when I return - an average good sun day in winter gets me just about half a charge on it with my extra power, so a little extra on top of MM is just right for me to start from for tomorrow's charge.
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