Drove from NoVA to the NW part of SC today in my 22 Bolt EUV. I used ABRP to route to chargers and put the addresses into Google maps to check reviews and GPS me there. The car is J1772/CCS, but I bought an adapter ahead of time to make use of Tesla/NACS chargers.
Unfortunately, this car only has a max charge rate of 55kW, so my refueling stops are either more frequent or longer than I would like, but I don't do road trips often and this car was half the price of the ioniq I wanted.
I had one issue today. A Tesla supercharger I stopped at just wouldn't initialize the charge. I even tried plugging into another one right next to it, but no dice. I've since learned that V2 superchargers won't work with my car even with an adapter, so I guess that's what that one was? I have no way of knowing. ABRP and Google maps don't specify. Maybe the Tesla app does? Thankfully, there was an Electric America charger just a couple miles away, but I was pretty stressed out since I was pretty well drained and didn't know where I was.
The hotel we're at has level 2 chargers, so I shouldn't need to deal with unfamiliar chargers again until we head back to NoVA. In the meantime, I've deselected NACS chargers from my ABRP vehicle options. It's possible that my adapter just died after only a few successful uses, but the location I had an issue with had a review of somebody else being unable to charge, so I think it's just that V2 issue.
In summary, the difference has been that it takes a little longer, it takes a little more planning and preparing, and there is a risk of some anxiety, but it's easier to drive, less chance of "car trouble" events, and especially right now it is significantly cheaper to refuel. But get something that accepts at least 100kW charging lol. I think the ioniq does like 240kW? With that, you basically plug in, use the bathroom, grab a coffee, and you're ready to go.
Where is NoVA and SC? How far did you drive, how long did that take you and how long did you spend charging mid drive (Ie not while you were parked up say overnight?)?
It was about 450 miles in like 10 hours total, but I was sitting in pretty rough traffic at two points, and there were mountains to go up and down. My car charges really slowly, so probably about 2.5 hours of that time was spent charging, but with bathroom/food breaks aligning with it we were really only waiting on it for maybe 45 minutes total. Google maps says it's like a 7 hour drive without stops, but it's also not showing traffic right now either.
Next time, I'll get a higher voltage car that can accept higher load charging and cut this time down to less than half, so it'll be basically the same as putting gas in a car. But I don't do many road trips, so this will be fine for me for a long while.
Story checks out
As somebody who moved from NoVA to upper SC, I totally understand. We have an Ioniq 5 (and soon a Rivian R2) and yeah charging stops are quick and nice. EVs are absolutely the future and I love being on the front of it. We had 2 teslas before but … yeah not anymore.
I had called a dealership to set up a test drive of their used ioniq 6 because it was listed as like $24k or something. They said ooh we already sold that, but you can test drive a new one that's $45-50k.
Surprisingly, the worst of the traffic was around Charlotte, NC.
Car dealers really are the worst.
Charlotte traffic (I live in the metro area) has gotten pretty bad. It was amazing when I moved here from NoVA, but the growth here has been insane.