nevetsyad said:
I have a friend that auto trains to Florida every few months, I've thought about it to hit Disney World on a long weekend or something. But my friend and I are considering spending 7-14 days doing a giant loop. Head down 81 in the mountains, sleep at KOA camp grounds in tents. Visit museums and historical sites, wander around towns and catch movies if there's nothing else to do. There's 6 or so DCFC along the way, that will get me almost half the way. Other half of the distance will be from L2 or L1 overnight KOA charging. Coming up will be along the coast, hitting beach towns. VA Beach on up is covered in DCFC, so that will be a simple half day trip. There's a few spots that will be a little hairy, but it should be quite the adventure.
Terrific plan, nev! Highly recommend investing in a portable EVSE that can do 240V. I've done enough road trips in my Leafs and Spark EV to know that it makes a huge difference. There aren't enough public L2 or CCS stations, yet, to go without it. It'd be much nicer if our Spark EVs has 6.6 kW onboard chargers, as then stopping-in at an RV camp for 60 - 90 min whilst having a meal nets much more range than the current 3.3 kW.
I've done a bit of tent camping at RV parks in my Leaf. Got stuck with a tent site a few times that had only 120V/15A, but since it was overnight, it didn't matter as much. In the mornings, the RV park owners allowed me to top off my battery at a vacant 240V hookup whilst I had my breakfast.
Many RV parks will have a lounge area with a laundry, snack bar and light kitchen, pool, and etc. I've gone on short daywalks, hikes and done some on-foot sightseeing whilst waiting for the car to charge. Love doing this! Visit local towns, craft breweries, restaurants, museums, etc.
We're trying to get the attention of the state and nat'l park admins. EVs and parks are the perfect match: no tailpipe, no emissions, little noise and the battery technology has reached the level that makes both environmental *and* economic sense.
You also get the chance to chat with folks from all over, many who are interested in the car/technology. They're mostly happy retired people, seeing the country in their RV, and they've got time on their hands. I've had many an interesting conversation that way.
-Bob K.