no where in that article does it say that you can drive a vehicle 210 miles after the battery's dead. bruh. be real, my man.
Batteries don't "die", they degrade. You use lithium batteries in your phone every day. Does your phone just go from lasting a full day in a charge to not working overnight? No. Over the years it holds less and less charge. My last phone lasted 6 years before it went from lasting 2 full days until at the end of would only last about 16 hours.
Phones charge to 100% and discharge to 0%, which kills lithium cells fast. If I had limited my phone to 90% charge and 10% discharge it would have lasted twice as long. If I had limited it to 80% and 20% it would have lasted 4 times as long. That's what most cars do. After 6 years, a car with the same lithium battery chemistry as my phone would still have about 88% of its original capacity. If the car went 300 miles on day 1, it would still be going 264 miles 6 years later.
That's what the article is trying to explain to you, and that's precisely what is seen in real world tracking off EVs.
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