How far do you REALLY travel by golf cart How far do you REALLY travel by golf cart - Page 4 - Talk of The Villages Florida

How far do you REALLY travel by golf cart

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  #46  
Old 06-04-2024, 07:48 AM
vintageogauge vintageogauge is offline
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I bought a new cart when we moved here and not being a golfer found it to be almost useless, we much prefer having a car with air conditioning for both comfort, protection from weather, as well as keeping groceries cool, most times we buy way too much to put in a cooler in the back of the golf car and I worry about spoilage. After 2 years and driving the cart less than 300 miles we sold it and enjoy the extra room we have in the garage, don't miss the cart at all. We might be the minority but there are still plenty of residents that feel the same way.
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Old 06-04-2024, 07:49 AM
OhioBuckeye OhioBuckeye is offline
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For 8 yrs. I drove my cart every Wednesday from Charlotte to Orange Blossom Garden to shoot pool. I had a 2012 Yamaha cart & had 25,600 miles on it when I traded it in on a 2018.
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Old 06-04-2024, 07:51 AM
lwhitsel lwhitsel is offline
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I have two Yamaha gas carts, 2 seater and 4 seater. When I fill up I set my trip odometer to 0. Then when I refuel later I check to see how many gallons I used. I average on both around 50 miles to the gallon. They have. 5.9 gallon tanks. We usually go about 150 miles a week, more some weeks less other weeks.
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Old 06-04-2024, 08:22 AM
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dewilson58 dewilson58 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by maryannesk View Post
I'm retired. You don't need to give me an assignment to perform for you. You should write down your mileage every day and figure it out yourself
Glad this inquiry brought you out for your second post.

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Old 06-04-2024, 08:44 AM
Justputt Justputt is offline
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Dabney to Brownwood is more than I want to do with any regularity! There was "life before golf carts", and I have no problem with taking an airconditioned and dry car ride when the drive in a cart gets much past the 5-10 mile range. Could I go further in a cart, sure, but why? I didn't retire here so I can ride around in a cart looking when there are so many things to do. But, to each their own; do what you enjoy!
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Old 06-04-2024, 09:09 AM
jmaccallum jmaccallum is offline
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I drive a lithium electric cart for about 97% of travel in TV.

Average day is about 10 miles for golf, stores and eating out.
Longer trips are sprinkled in there.

I go just under 4,000 miles per year.

Longest trip has been Spanish Springs - Sawgrass - Eastport - Middleton and back to Spanish Springs with sight seeing detours. It was 55 miles total and had 52% of battery when we got home.
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Old 06-04-2024, 09:19 AM
MorTech MorTech is offline
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I suppose with electric carts becoming so comfortable/quiet/serene and luxurious (air conditioning, bluetooth speakers, seating, etc), a lot of people will want to cruise TV all day once in a while. Figure 8 hours at 15 MPH average = 120 miles. About 2.5ah per mile so you will need a 300ah lithium battery

How long do you really want to be in a gas cart with all that ruckus...and if you still have good hearing and still have a sense of smell?

A lot of people value serenity. You really don't get that with laughable gas carts.

Last edited by MorTech; 06-04-2024 at 09:26 AM.
  #53  
Old 06-04-2024, 09:29 AM
OrangeBlossomBaby OrangeBlossomBaby is online now
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You can charge your EV as long as:
1) you have several HOURS to do it
2) you don't have a power outage due to hurricanes or other emergency situations.

I know there's been times when I've woken up in the morning, and see that the clock is flashing 12:00:00. Then I check the clock on the stove, isn't digital. Turns out the power was off for four hours overnight while I was sleeping.

Get to your EV and learn that it's only half-charged, on the exact day you were planning on meeting the girls for lunch on the other side of The Villages.

Good thing you have your gas car. Too bad you didn't have a gas cart.
  #54  
Old 06-04-2024, 09:31 AM
OrangeBlossomBaby OrangeBlossomBaby is online now
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MorTech View Post
I suppose with electric carts becoming so comfortable/quiet/serene and luxurious (air conditioning, bluetooth speakers, seating, etc), a lot of people will want to cruise TV all day once in a while. Figure 8 hours at 15 MPH average = 120 miles. About 2.5ah per mile so you will need a 300ah lithium battery

How long do you really want to be in a gas cart with all that ruckus...and if you still have good hearing and still have a sense of smell?

A lot of people value serenity. You really don't get that with laughable gas carts.
If I want serenity, I walk to Paradise Park and sit on a bench. No gas or electricity needed.
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Old 06-04-2024, 09:46 AM
Bill14564 Bill14564 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OrangeBlossomBaby View Post
You can charge your EV as long as:
1) you have several HOURS to do it
2) you don't have a power outage due to hurricanes or other emergency situations.

I know there's been times when I've woken up in the morning, and see that the clock is flashing 12:00:00. Then I check the clock on the stove, isn't digital. Turns out the power was off for four hours overnight while I was sleeping.

Get to your EV and learn that it's only half-charged, on the exact day you were planning on meeting the girls for lunch on the other side of The Villages.

Good thing you have your gas car. Too bad you didn't have a gas cart.
The probabilities, the statistics, and the math aren't going to support your scenario.


Simplest way to look at it:
- my cart restores about 6 mikes of range for every hour of charging
- in the four hours that power was NOT off it would have recovered 24 miles.
- in the three hours between arriving home and going to bed and between waking up and going back out it would have recovered another 18 miles
- if I traveled so far yesterday that recovering 42 miles was not sufficient for my travels today then I need a day off anyway
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  #56  
Old 06-04-2024, 09:53 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Susan1717 View Post
So you think that people with gas carts could probably go their same daily distance with an electric? But the point is, I do not want to have to think about daily charging my cart, or when did I last charge my cart. I want to know I can probably go for up to a month and not think about charging or gas. It’s bad enough I must charge my cell phone every night, I don’t want to think about charging my cart. Oh and there’s the worry about leaving town at the last minute as I make trip plans always on the spur of the moment. Hmmm did I leave my cart plugged in? For me, it seems like an extra hassle.
Our electric cart is always plugged in when in the garage. Easy peasy.
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Old 06-04-2024, 10:08 AM
sowilts sowilts is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mbene View Post
Every time anyone writes about golf carts it usually turns into a gas vs electric thread and then gets into a range war.
I want to know how far you REALLY travel day to day. I don't want guesstimates, I want real world numbers.
The distance from Mulberry Grove Rec Center at the very north of the Villages to Saluki Rec Center at the south is 22 miles, I doubt anyone is making that trip daily. Round trip would be 44 miles.
It would be nice if people got in their cart in the morning, noted the beginning miles, did their average daily trips, then noted the total miles traveled at the end of the day.
I'm guessing most would be surprised that they really don't go as far as they think they do.
I live at Linden. Travel to Nancy Lopez often. 19.2 miles plus Golf. I have all of the Championship Courses in my phone with miles and times. I have an EZGO Lithium and don’t have any problems there and back.
  #58  
Old 06-04-2024, 10:09 AM
MorTech MorTech is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OrangeBlossomBaby View Post
If I want serenity, I walk to Paradise Park and sit on a bench. No gas or electricity needed.
Just think of an electric cart as a mobile park bench...And TV as a really huge park.

What are the odds of all that worrying actually happening?

Last edited by MorTech; 06-04-2024 at 10:17 AM.
  #59  
Old 06-04-2024, 10:11 AM
fdpaq0580 fdpaq0580 is offline
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Have an old gas cart I bought 10 yrs ago. No fuel gage. Got to lift the seat and look at the tank to see how much fuel I have. It's noisy (especially at top speed), smelly. Get it tuned and checked annually. E-cart would be nice, but everything is expensive and mine is paid for. It serves It's purpose.
As far as range goes, all carts have limits and issues. If/when you run out of fuel/charge, it will not be at a fuel pump or charging station. Unless you carry spare gas or battery, you better have your phone charged and handy. 😉😉😉
  #60  
Old 06-04-2024, 10:22 AM
MCJEFE MCJEFE is offline
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Over the past 6 years, I've built from scratch, around 10 lithium batteries now for golf carts ranging from 90ah to 304ah and installed a half a dozen more commercial lithium conversions.

My recommendations to people are as follows.

- 105ah, 35-40 miles, the smallest I will recommend is great for those who only play and shop in their local areas with occasional longer trips. Most people charge frequently.

- 150-160ah, 50-60 miles, this reach anywhere in the Villages. If you like to roam and the budget allows, get this size. This is the largest size offered by the Big 3 cart manufacturers and most of the conversion batteries. Only charge as required. This is my usual recommendation for people wanting a conversion, budget allowing...

-200-300 ah, 75-120 miles, (these are what I run) Never think twice about range worries. The downside is limited availability, they are only offered by a few non-mainstream cart manufacturers, so I build my own. Lol
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