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If you don’t live in the southern hemisphere or close to the Equator, then cold temperatures are headed your way, if they haven’t already arrived. As winter approaches, here are six tips for how to get the best range from your electric car’s battery.

Electric cars in winter

Operating range is one of the most important performance metrics of your electric car, and it can be impacted by cold weather. It’s harder for ions in Lithium-ion batteries to move around in the cold, and that can affect your car’s range.

Cold weather also affects charging, and your car’s battery likes to be within a certain temperature range. If it’s really cold outside, it’s better for the battery to warm up first before it can charge at faster speeds. That means charging can take longer in winter.

The whole process is controlled by the car’s battery management system that protects and optimizes the performance of the battery cells.

Here are six tips on how to get the best performance out of your EV as the winter months quickly approach.

1. Park your car in a garage if possible

Not everyone has a garage, but if you’ve got one, put your EV in it. (And if it’s full of stuff, then clean it out – your car needs it.)

Keeping your vehicle inside during winter can make a difference in its battery performance. The warmth of the garage will help your car hold battery charge for longer and charge more quickly.

Also, if you’re out and need to park, if there’s a choice between parking outdoors or in a parking garage, go for the latter.

2. Warm up your car in the morning

Most EVs come with apps that allow you to heat up your car in advance of departure. If you turn on your car’s heating before you leave the house, it will heat up the cabin to your desired temperature and also warm up the battery to aid performance.

Most people charge their cars at home overnight. If the car is still plugged in when you start heating it in the morning, then the battery’s charge won’t be tapped.

3. Don’t let the battery charge get too low

When it’s really cold, the car’s battery management system reserves a certain percentage of the battery capacity – generally about 15-20% – in order to heat the battery up.

So if you usually keep your battery charged above 15-20%, and ideally a minimum of 50%, then you will have a nice margin to keep your car’s performance as optimized as possible. 

4. Heat the passenger, not the car

Since EVs of course don’t have an internal combustion engine, there’s little additional waste heat that helps to warm the passenger cabin.

However, blasting the heat when it’s cold can drain your EV’s battery and reduce its range. Try restricting heating to just the driver, whether it’s by turning air vents on or off, or controlling seat or steering wheel heating settings. It consumes less electricity than heating the whole car.

5. Inflate your tires

As the temperature drops, the air in your tires contracts and the pressure falls. Regularly check your tires’ pressure in order to maximize winter range. You want your car to drive with as little resistance as possible.

Also, if you live somewhere that gets a lot of snow, you’ll probably want to consider putting on winter tires. You can read more about that here, if you’re a Tesla Model 3 driver, for example.

6. Use Eco-Mode

Most EVs have a form of “eco-mode,” in which you can boost mileage and reduce power consumption by limiting the energy supplied to the driving motor and cabin heaters. You may accelerate more slowly, but this can also make driving safer in icy or snowy conditions.

Read more: How does a Tesla Model 3 perform in an Arctic Circle winter?

Do you have other tips for how to get the best range out of your EV in cold weather? Let us know in the comments below.

Thanks to David Lewis, electric lead at EV guide and leasing broker Select Car Leasing in the UK!


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Wild At Heart actress Diane Ladd dies aged 89

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Wild At Heart actress Diane Ladd dies aged 89

American actress and Wild at Heart star Diane Ladd has died aged 89.

Laura Dern, Ladd’s daughter who is also an actress, announced her mother’s death on Monday.

Ladd was a triple Academy Award nominee for her supporting roles in Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, Wild at Heart and Rambling Rose.

She also starred in 1973 film White Lightning and HBO’s Enlightened in 2011 with her daughter. Often, they played mother and daughter together.

For the 1991 drama Rambling Rose they were the first, and only, mother and daughter duo to receive Oscar nominations for the same film in the same year.

Diane Ladd pictured with daughter Laura Dern, holding her award for Enlightened in 2012. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Diane Ladd pictured with daughter Laura Dern, holding her award for Enlightened in 2012. Pic: Reuters

‘She doesn’t care what anybody thinks’

Ms Dern, who starred in Jurassic Park, said of her mother in 2019: “She is just the greatest actress, ever. You don’t even use the word brave because she just shows up like that in life. She doesn’t care what anybody thinks.

“She leads with a boundarylessness.”

In 2023 they released a joint memoir together titled Honey, Baby, Mine: A Mother and Daughter Talk Life, Death, Love.

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The book was based on their conversations together during daily walks after Ladd was given only months to live, after she was diagnosed with lung disease.

Ms Dern said at the time: “The more we talked and the deeper and more complicated subjects we shared, my mother got better and better and better.

“It’s been a great gift.”

Ladd was married three times and worked into her 80s.

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Forget the gym – a ‘cultural workout’ could be the key to better health

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Forget the gym - a 'cultural workout' could be the key to better health

Culture lovers have long believed in the healing power art. Now, science has caught up, with new research showing it has measurable benefits on the body.

A study from King’s College London has found that looking at original artworks, in a gallery, doesn’t just lift us emotionally – it also has a positive impact on our physical health.

Fifty people aged between 18 and 40 were shown art by a selection of leading 19th-century artists: Toulouse-Lautrec, Manet, van Gogh and Gauguin.

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864 – 1901), Jane Avril in the Entrance to the Moulin Rouge (c. 1892)
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Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864 – 1901), Jane Avril in the Entrance to the Moulin Rouge (c. 1892)

Édouard Manet (1832 – 1883), Banks of the Seine at Argenteuil (1874)
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Édouard Manet (1832 – 1883), Banks of the Seine at Argenteuil (1874)

Édouard Manet (1832 – 1883), A Bar at the Folies-Bergere (1882)
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Édouard Manet (1832 – 1883), A Bar at the Folies-Bergere (1882)

Vincent van Gogh (1853 – 1890), Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear (1889)
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Vincent van Gogh (1853 – 1890), Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear (1889)

Paul Gauguin (1848 – 1903), Te Rerioa (The Dream) (1897)
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Paul Gauguin (1848 – 1903), Te Rerioa (The Dream) (1897)

Participants viewed five paintings for three minutes each, in a 20-minute session.

But while half viewed the original paintings in the Courtauld Gallery in London, the others looked at reproductions in a neutral setting.

Their heart rates and skin temperature were measured with research-grade digital watches to indicate levels of interest and arousal, and saliva samples were taken with swabs before and after the session to measure stress hormones.

The results in those looking at the results in the gallery were significant, and immediate: The stress hormone cortisol fell by 22% and inflammatory markers linked to health problems including heart disease, diabetes and depression were reduced by as much as 30%.

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No change was observed in the reproduction group.

Dr Tony Woods, researcher at King's College London
Image:
Dr Tony Woods, researcher at King’s College London

Dr Tony Woods of King’s College London, who was the study’s lead researcher, told Sky News: “The magnitude of the difference between being in here and looking at the real art, looking at the copies in the laboratory, the difference between the two participant groups was quite enormous.”

It’s good news for the NHS, which is increasing its use of social prescribing, which can include visits to galleries.

Dr Woods went on: “The government’s health strategy is all about prevention. And this is a gift to [Health Secretary] Wes Streeting. Art is very well worth investing in because of the return on investment – it will keep people out of hospitals.”

Over one and a half million people in the UK accessed social prescribing between September and August this year across the UK, and NHS England told Sky News their ambition is to make it available to every person in England.

Dr Woods says the next steps of the study will be to find out how long the positive effects last, and research further into the effects of art on older participants.

Russell Tovey, actor, art lover and co-host of Talk Art, chatted to Sky News about his favourite piece at the gallery – van Gogh’s Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear (1889).

Talk Art podcast hosts Russell Tovey and Robert Diament
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Talk Art podcast hosts Russell Tovey and Robert Diament

Tovey jokes: “Look at this painting here. It’s quite a troublesome picture, especially for me with my ears…

“But you can look at the surface and the way that he makes brushstrokes and the scale of the things and the colour he used. And you think about his life at the time and where he was living, and all those questions and answers will reveal the painting.”

Tovey adds: “Art is intrinsic to humanity,” and “shows us who we are”.

And now with the new findings, the hope is that gallery visits will be considered just as good as your ‘five-a-day’.

Tovey goes on: “It’s good for your health, it’s beneficial to your mental health and to your wellbeing to be in a museum and to be around art…

“If you eat well, go to the gym and go to a regular art gallery visit, then your health will be through the roof.”

Tovey’s podcast co-host, gallery owner Robert Diament, agrees: “I think it’s really important just to slow down a bit. Going to a museum or gallery can be part of your self-care routine… It will improve your life.”

Amid rising costs, reduced funding and dwindling visitor numbers, the findings could also provide a boost to galleries.

Jenny Waldman, Art Fund director, told Sky News: “These museums and galleries were set up in all cities and towns by people, you know, hundreds of years ago, who felt that it was good for people. So, this is the evidence, finally, that they were right.”

Jenny Waldman, Art Fund director
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Jenny Waldman, Art Fund director

The national charity for museums and galleries, Art Fund champions art around the country, with initiatives including the National Art Pass which offers free or discounted entry to hundreds of museums, galleries and historic places around the UK.

So, what do gallery visitors think of the news that their time looking at art will positively impact their wellbeing?

Charlie, 10, from London said: “It makes me feel quite calm, and it draws me in.”

His dad Patrick, who had brought Charlie with his two young brothers to see the exhibition, added: “Looking at them on screens, or even in books, you just don’t get the full impression.”

Taeseok, an arts student from Amsterdam visiting the UK for the first time, said it felt good to stand and focus on just one thing, with no distractions. He summed it up: “Things around you start to not matter at all… It’s just you and the artwork.”

Re-framed as a course of treatment instead of an indulgent pastime, could the hard edge of science change the role galleries play in society?

If so, it could be a fitting reminder to the government of the true power of art, at a time when so many institutions are struggling to survive.

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Thieves steal more than 1,000 items from museum’s collection in ‘brazen’ heist

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Thieves steal more than 1,000 items from museum's collection in 'brazen' heist

Thieves have stolen more than 1,000 items from a museum’s collection in California, including jewellery, carvings and Native American artefacts.

The burglary took place at an off-site storage facility holding items for the Oakland Museum of California (OMCA) on 15 October.

A neckpiece by Florence Resnikoff was also taken. Pic: Leopold Macaya/Oakland Museum of California/AP
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A neckpiece by Florence Resnikoff was also taken. Pic: Leopold Macaya/Oakland Museum of California/AP

The museum’s director said on Thursday details about the incident were being made public because the items might show up at flea markets, pawn shops and antique stores.

“The theft that occurred represents a brazen act that robs the public of our state’s cultural heritage,” said Lori Fogarty.

“They’re not just a loss to the museum. They’re a loss to the public, to our community and we’re hoping our community can help us bring them home.”

She also said she believed it was an opportunistic crime, rather than a targeted raid.

“We think the thieves found a way to enter the building, and they grabbed what they could easily find and snatch and get out of the building with,” she said.

Oakland Museum of California. Pic: Leopold Macaya/Oakland Museum of California/AP
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Oakland Museum of California. Pic: Leopold Macaya/Oakland Museum of California/AP

A metal neckpiece by the late artist Florence Resnikoff, scrimshaw walrus tusks and Native American baskets were taken, with the thieves also making off with historic memorabilia like pins and sporting items.

Experts believe some items may have already been sold.

John Romero, a retired police captain, told the Los Angeles Times he expects detectives are looking at resale platforms such as Craigslist and Ebay, as well as networks specialising in historic or collectable goods.

“These people are interested in fast cash, not the full appraisal value,” he said. “They need to get rid of it quickly.”

Oakland Police Department is working with a specialist art crime unit of the FBI to track down the items.

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The OMCA’s mission is to document the art, history and natural environment of the Golden State.

Its collection carries works by famous Californian artists from the 18th century to present day.

The theft at the OMCA took place four days before the brazen jewellery heist at the Louvre museum in France.

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Suspects in Louvre robbery ‘partially confessed’

Thieves broke into the world-famous Paris museum while it was open to visitors on 19 October and made off with several Napoleonic crown jewels.

Authorities have made five arrests but the stolen items have not yet been recovered.

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