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SerialBrain9
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So i put it to Grok if Warrnambool to Sydney is doable
In your BYD Dolphin Premium, but it’s a proper long-distance EV trip (not a casual Sunday drive). The route is roughly 1,100–1,120 km via the Princes Highway and Hume Highway, taking about 11.5–13 hours of pure driving time in a normal car (longer with charging stops and breaks).
Real-World Range on Highway
Your Premium has a 60.5 kWh battery with 427 km WLTP claim. On highways at your usual 80–100 kph (or a bit higher on the open road):
• Expect 320–380 km of real-world range per full charge in good conditions (mild weather, light load, no heavy AC/heater).
• At steady 110 kph or with headwinds/hills/cold, it drops to 280–340 km.
• Your daily commute efficiency (~15–17 kWh/100 km) is excellent, but long highway runs with constant speed and possible AC will push it toward 16–18+ kWh/100 km.
Bottom line: You’ll need 3–4 charging stops one way (more if carrying passengers/gear or in winter). Plan for 30–45 minute stops each time rather than full charges. Charging on the Route (2026 Reality)
Australia’s highway fast-charger network (mostly Chargefox, with some others) has improved a lot, but the Warrnambool–Sydney corridor still has gaps compared to Melbourne–Sydney.
Typical stops (check PlugShare or Chargefox app for live status): • Early leg: Warrnambool → Geelong/Melbourne area (plenty of fast chargers).
• Then along the Hume:
• Final stretch into Sydney has good coverage.
Your Dolphin charges at up to ~80 kW DC (CCS) on fast chargers — realistic 30–80% in 25–35 minutes (adding ~200–250 km of range). It’s not the fastest EV out there, so you’ll spend more time at chargers than in a bigger battery car.
Tips for success:
• Precondition the battery and cabin via the BYD AUTO app while plugged in (uses grid power, not your battery).
• Charge to 80–90% at each stop (faster than going to 100%).
• Use the car’s navigation or A Better Routeplanner (ABRP) app — it factors in your Dolphin’s real efficiency, weather, and charger speeds.
• Download Chargefox and PlugShare apps — they show real-time availability and payments.
• Carry the portable granny charger as backup for overnight hotel stops (many places now have Type 2 sockets).
Is It Practical?
• Yes, with planning — plenty of Dolphin/Atto owners do similar interstate trips. It’s comfortable and quiet for long hauls, with good regen on descents.
• Time penalty — Add 2–4 hours total for charging + breaks vs a petrol car. Overnight stops make it relaxed (charge while sleeping).
• Cost — Still much cheaper than petrol (~$40–60 in electricity for the whole trip if using public fast chargers, vs $150–200+ in fuel).
For occasional long trips like this, the Dolphin is fine — especially since your daily commute is so efficient and you have home/solar charging most of the time. Many owners say it’s relaxing once you get the rhythm (charge while eating/coffee/leg stretch).
Pro tip: Do a shorter test run first (e.g. Warrnambool to Melbourne return) to get comfortable with the car’s real range and the apps.
When your car arrives, you’ll quickly get a feel for it on your normal runs. Long trips are totally manageable with a bit of planning — the big battery buffer and decent DC speed help a lot.
Let me know if you want a more detailed stop-by-stop plan or ABRP setup tips once you have the car. Safe travels whenever you head north! ⚡🚗
ABRP stands for “A Better Routeplanner” — it’s the most popular and highly regarded app/website for planning long-distance EV trips (exactly what you asked about for Warrnambool to Sydney).
What ABRP Does (Simply)
• You pick your exact vehicle (BYD Dolphin Premium is supported — choose the Australian spec if available).
• Enter your starting point and destination.
• It calculates the best route with optimal charging stops, factoring in:
• Your real-world efficiency (it learns from your driving or uses community data).
• Weather, temperature, elevation/hills. • Current charger availability and speed. • Your preferred charging level (e.g., stop at 80% for faster times).
• It gives you a full trip plan: total time, number of stops, how long each charge will take, and even live navigation while driving.
• Free version is very good; Premium (~$5/month with 14-day trial) adds live data from your car (if connected), better weather integration, and more advanced features.
Why It’s Useful for Your Dolphin on Long Trips
The Dolphin Premium has a decent 60.5 kWh battery and ~80 kW DC fast-charging, but it’s not the longest-range or fastest-charging EV. ABRP helps you avoid range anxiety by showing realistic stops along the Princes/Hume Highway route. Many BYD owners (including Dolphin users) use it successfully for interstate trips in Australia.
How to get started:
• Download the app: A Better Routeplanner (ABRP) on Apple App Store or Google Play.
• Or use the website: abetterrouteplanner.com (works great on phone or computer).
• Select your Dolphin model, input Warrnambool → Sydney, and hit “Plan”.
• It will suggest stops with Chargefox or other fast chargers along the way.
Pro tip for your setup:
• Once you have the car, pair it if possible (some users use an OBD dongle for live battery data, though BYD support can be patchy — the free version still works fine with manual SOC input)
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