sendler2112 said:
Yes dude. Apparently. You are not even measuring consumption in any way. Your just going off of the spec sheet for battery capacity. The Spark is not 20% more efficient than the Leaf. 5.0mpkWh for your stated spec for the Spark would be 170MPGe. Not happening.
Sorry, but you're just flat wrong. While it's true that we do not measure consumption directly, we do know how big the useable capacity of many of the batteries are. And we know how many miles were traveled from external to the car measurements.
For instance, we were able to determine the the Mercedes B-Class ED does in fact report inaccurate consumption data at the dash (the only car to have a significant issue with this). We know that specifically because we know the exact battery configuration and cell spec sheets (not from Tesla or Daimler, but from Panasonic).
The same type of issue is true of the LEAF. Their advertised battery is 24kWh, but we know from government tests that the battery is 21.38kWh usable at room temperature when new. Our data reflects that (and all our tests are done at about room temperature). In addition, the LEAF has been hacked so that all the CAN bus info is readily available from the battery.
For the Toyota Rav4 EV, we have hacked that too, and get real time BMS data from the CAN bus, not advertising or marketing data.
So, as to the GM Spark EV, I do not have the same level of external confirmation of the battery size, other than what GM produces and what the dash data shows (it actually shows kWh burned). For me to be wrong means that GM purposely put a larger battery in the car and is not advertising that, because that is the only way that is can go 97 or 89 miles at less than 5 miles per kWh. The same is true of the BMW i3... it showed exactly the 18.8kWh usable that BMW advertises.
Now, you tell me what is logical. Each manufacturer is HIDING a bigger battery (to make your assertion true that the consumption rate is too economical) or I'm right, and both the consumption and advertised kWh just happens to agree EXACTLY with the miles driven? What are the odds?
Yes, the Spark EV is that 25% (5 is 25% greater than 4, not 20%... Math 101) more efficient at 62mph than a LEAF, and we can FURTHER prove it with a recharge after the test with each car. It makes it a bit difficult to just discount all the "circumstantial" on your hunch, eh? I'll stick with facts, and you keep guessing.