Author
RNR
Category
Efficiency
Read Time
10 min

PIR TUTORIAL SERiES
EV savvy: kW β kWh calculation
A PLUGGED IN RIDE tutorial:Understanding why heat pumps help EVs.
Tutorial Overview:
Section 1 The thermal revolution
Section 2 The mechanics of heat pumps
Section 3. Heat pump performance
Section 4 Benefits and drawbacks
Section 5. Comparison to resistive heaters
Section 6. Our conclusion
Learning objectives
| 1. Know why Heat pumps help EVS Explain what makes EV-rated tires different | 2. Know how heat pumps work Review snapshot of 6 EV-rated tire options | 3. Cost/benefit analysis Step-by-step schedule of what needs to be done |

EV savvy Power & Energy
kW β kWh Calculations Explained
Introduction
One of the most common points of confusion for new EV owners β and even experienced ones β is the difference between kilowatts (kW) and kilowatt-hours (kWh), and how these two units relate to real-world driving. Youβll encounter both constantly: your charger delivers power in kW, your battery stores energy in kWh, and your efficiency is measured in miles/kWh or kWh/100mi.
Getting comfortable with these calculations will help you plan trips, understand charging times, predict range, and evaluate your vehicleβs real-world efficiency.
3β5Γ
EFFICIENCY VS RESISTANCE HEAT
+20%
WINTER RANGE RECOVERY
β7Β°C
TYPICAL LOWER OPERATING LIMIT
The Core Distinction: Power vs. Energy
Everything starts here. These are fundamentally different physical quantities.
Power (kW β kilowatts) is the rate at which energy is used or transferred at any given instant. Think of it like the flow rate of water through a pipe β gallons per minute. Your EVβs motor might be drawing 50 kW while cruising, or 200 kW during hard acceleration.
Energy (kWh β kilowatt-hours) is the total amount of energy consumed or stored over time. Think of it as the total volume of water that has flowed through the pipe. Your battery pack might store 75 kWh. Driving for an hour at a steady 25 kW of consumption uses 25 kWh.
Key Insight
The relationship is simply:
Energy (kWh) = Power (kW) Γ Time (hours)
Or rearranged
Power (kW) = Energy (kWh) Γ· Time (hours)
Time (hours) = Energy (kWh) Γ· Power (kW)
These three forms of the same equation are the foundation of nearly every EV energy calculation youβll ever need

Basic kW β kWh Conversions
02 β MECHANICS
2.1. How much energy does driving consume?
Your EVβs onboard computer shows youβre drawing 30 kW from the battery while cruising on a flat highway. You drive at this power level for 2.5 hours.
Energy = Power Γ Time
Energy = 30 kW Γ 2.5 h
Energy = 75 kWh
Youβve consumed 75 kWh β which, for most EVs, would be close to a full battery.

2.2 How long does it take to charge?
You arrive home with 20 kWh remaining in a 75 kWh battery pack. Your Level 2 home charger delivers 11.5 kW. How long to reach a full charge?
First, find the energy needed:
Energy needed = 75 kWh β 20 kWh = 55 kWh
Then solve for time:
Time = Energy Γ· Power
Time = 55 kWh Γ· 11.5 kW
Time = 4.78 hours β 4 hours 47 minutes

2.3 What power level does a charging session represent?
You plugged in for 3 hours and the car added 34.2 kWh to the battery. What was the average charge power?
Power = Energy Γ· Time
Power = 34.2 kWh Γ· 3 h
Power = 11.4 kW
This is consistent with a standard 48A Level 2 charger running at 240V (48 Γ 240 = 11,520W β 11.5 kW).
2.4 Waste Heat Integration β Tesla’s “Octovalve”
SECTION

3.1 Efficiency: The kWh/Mile and Miles/kWh Relationship
Raw energy numbers only become meaningful when you factor in how far the vehicle travels on that energy. EV efficiency is expressed in one of two ways depending on region and context:
kWh per 100 miles (kWh/100mi) β How many kilowatt-hours the vehicle consumes per 100 miles driven. Lower is better. This is analogous to MPG in reverse β itβs a consumption figure.
Miles per kWh (mi/kWh) β How many miles the vehicle travels on each kilowatt-hour. Higher is better. More intuitive for range calculations.
The two are reciprocals of each other:
mi/kWh = 100 Γ· (kWh/100mi)
kWh/100mi = 100 Γ· (mi/kEh)
A typical modern EV achieves somewhere between 3.0β4.5 mi/kWh (or equivalently 22β33 kWh/100mi) under mixed driving conditions.
3.2 Calculate real-world range
Your vehicle has a 77 kWh usable battery pack and your recent driving has averaged 3.8 mi/kWh. What is your realistic range?
Range = Usable Capacity Γ Efficiency
Range = 77 kWh Γ 3.8 mi/kWh
Range = 292.6 miles
Example 5 β Calculate efficiency from a trip
You drove 180 miles and the battery went from 95% to 18% on a 82 kWh pack. What was your efficiency?
First, calculate energy consumed:
SOC used = 95% β 18% = 77%
Energy consumed = 82 kWh Γ 0.77 = 63.14 kWh
Then calculate efficiency both ways:
Efficiency = Distance Γ· Energy consumed
Efficiency = 180 mi Γ· 63.14 kWh
Efficiency = 2.85 mi/kWh
In kWh/100mi:
kWh/100mi = 100 Γ· 2.85 = 35.1 kWh/100mi
This is on the lower end, suggesting highway driving at higher speeds, headwinds, cold temperatures, or heavy HVAC use β all of which increase consumption.
2.2
Heating COP by temperature
Β°Celsius
Β°CELSIUS
+20Β°C outsideCOP 4.5
+5Β°C outsideCOP 3.2
β5Β°C outsideCOP 2.1
β15Β°C outsideCOP 1.4
Resistive heaterCOP 1.0
REAL-WORLD RANGE IMPACT
WINTER
WINTER
Heat pump EV, mild coldβ8% range
Heat pump EV, severe coldβ22% range
Resistive EV, mild coldβ20% range
Resistive EV, severe coldβ40% range
Based on AAA and Geotab cold-weather range studies. “Severe cold” = β15Β°C / 5Β°F.
Key Point
Efficiency
EFFICIENCY
Even at β15Β°C, a heat pump with COP 1.4 is still 40% more efficient than a resistive heater. And most modern heat pumps supplement with resistance at extreme cold β a hybrid approach that always wins.
Section 4. Benefits & drawbacks

Heat Pumps
The Advantages
01
Dramatically Better Winter Range
Heat pumps recover 15β25% range vs resistive heat in typical winter conditions, a meaningful real-world benefit.

02
Waste Heat Recovery
Sophisticated systems harvest heat from motors, inverters, and chargers β energy that would otherwise be lost.

03
Dual-Mode (Heat & Cool)
One system handles both cabin heating and A/C, eliminating a separate compressor and reducing weight.

04
Faster Battery Pre-Conditioning
Integrated systems can warm a cold battery pack more efficiently before charging, reducing charge time.

05
Lower Lifetime Emissions
Less energy consumption = fewer kWh drawn from the grid, reducing total carbon footprint.

Heat Pumps
The Disadvantages
01
Higher Upfront Cost
Heat pumps add $1,000β$2,500 to vehicle cost. Some manufacturers offer them only on higher trims.

02
Reduced Effectiveness at Extreme Cold
Below β15 to β20Β°C, COP drops close to 1.0 and most systems engage resistive backup heating.

03
Mechanical Complexity
More refrigerant lines, valves, and heat exchangers = more potential failure points vs simple resistance heating.

04
Refrigerant Handling Requirements
Repairs require certified HVAC technicians with specialist equipment, unlike resistance heaters.

05
Slow to Warm Up
Heat pumps take slightly longer to produce initial heat vs resistive elements, which are instant-on.

Section 5. Comparison

| Factor | HEAT PUMP | RESISTIVE HEATER |
| Mild cold efficiency (0Β°C) | COP 2.5β3.5 | COP 1.0 |
| Extreme cold (β20Β°C) | COP ~1.2 + backup | COP 1.0 (consistent) |
| Winter range penalty | β8 to β22% | β20 to β40% |
| A/C capability | Yes (reversible) | Separate system needed |
| Warm-up speed | Moderate | Instant |
| System complexity | high | Very low |
| Manufacturing cost | +$1,000β2,500 | Minimal |
| Long-term range benefit | Significant | None |
| Waste heat recovery | Yes (advanced systems) | Simple |
| Maintenance complexity | Specialist required | Simple |
Section 6. Annual cost comparison EV vs ICE

none
Oil Changes per year
none
Spark plugs, belts, filters (engine)
$400
Avg EV annual maintenance cost
$1200
Avg ICE annual maintenance cost
$800
Typical annual savings vs ICE
$800
Non-EV tires replaced 70000 km avg. EV-rated tires replaced 40000 km avg.
global
EVs eliminate exhaust emissions but do generate more tire particulate pollution vs non-EV tires ypical annual savings vs ICE
Should You Prioritize It?
Absolutely, if you live in a cold climate
If winter temperatures regularly drop below 0Β°C / 32Β°F where you live, a heat pump is arguably the single most impactful feature upgrade you can choose. The range recovery in real-world winter driving is substantial, and the cumulative energy savings over the vehicle’s life outweigh the upfront cost by a wide margin in cold climates.
Helpful, but less critical in mild climates
In climates where temperatures rarely drop below 5Β°C, a heat pump still helps β but the range benefit is smaller, and the A/C performance (not efficiency) is similar to a separate system. It’s a nice-to-have rather than a must-have.
The integration matters as much as the technology
Not all heat pumps are equal. A basic heat pump that only handles cabin air is useful. But an integrated thermal system that connects the heat pump to motor waste heat, battery thermal management, and the charger β like those in the Tesla Model Y, Hyundai Ioniq 6, or BMW iX β is transformatively better, especially in borderline cold temperatures where waste heat recovery can bring effective COP very high.
Bottom line: A well-engineered EV heat pump is one of the most elegant applications of thermodynamics in consumer technology. It doesn’t beat the cold β it borrows from it. For most buyers in temperate or cold climates, it’s worth every penny of the premium.
EV Heat Pumps β Technical Guide Β· All efficiency figures are approximate and vary by vehicle, outside temperature, and driving conditions.
Author: RNR

Interested in expanding your EV knowledge further? Hereβs a sample of what is offered in the PLUGGED IN RIDE EV Efficiency tutorial:
| Constant / Conversion | Value |
| 1 gallon gasoline (energy) | 33.7 kWh (33.705 kWh precise) |
| MPGe β mi/kWh | Divide MPGe by 33.7 |
| mi/kWh β MPGe | Multiply mi/kWh by 33.7 |
| Cost/mile (EV) | Electricity rate ($/kWh) Γ· mi/kWh |
| Cost/mile (gas) | Gas price ($/gal) Γ· MPG |
| Annual fuel cost | Cost/mile Γ annual miles |
| 1 kWh | 3,412 BTU |
| EPA test cycle blend | 55% city / 45% highway |
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