Model S P100D
762 ch · 98 kWh · 2016
Motorway range comparison
Trip mapped at a glance. Charging stops visible, total duration predictable. Caralogy simulation at 130 km/h.
Paris → Marseille · 130 km/h · Caralogy simulation
| Model S P100D | Megane E-Tech Electric | |
|---|---|---|
| Total time | 7h35 | 7h30−5 min |
| Charging stops | 2 stops | 2 stops |
| Total cost | 51,13 € | 35,17 €−15,96 € |
Both vehicles drive at 130 km/h. The difference comes from charging stops.
Analysis
Both vehicles drove at 130 km/h for the entire trip. The gap is built at the stops: 2 stops totalling 29 min for the Megane E-Tech Electric versus 2 stops totalling 34 min for the Model S P100D.
The official WLTP figures (20,5 kWh/100km for Model S P100D and 15,8 kWh/100km for Megane E-Tech Electric) are measured on a mixed cycle averaging ~46 km/h. At a steady 130 km/h, aerodynamic drag weighs much more heavily — it grows with the square of speed. Caralogy calculates a motorway consumption specific to each vehicle based on its aerodynamic profile (SCx), weight and power curve — not a uniform correction factor. For this trip, the simulation yields 20,7 kWh/100km (Model S P100D) and 13,8 kWh/100km (Megane E-Tech Electric). Full methodology: see the dedicated button above the summary.
During the 29 minutes of charging for the Megane E-Tech Electric, range recovers by 414 km. During the 34 cumulative minutes for the Model S P100D, range recovers by 380 km. Per minute: the Megane E-Tech Electric recovers 1,3× faster. The gap is less pronounced but accumulates over long distances.
A BMW 530i (equivalent segment) consumes about 8,0 L/100km on the motorway at 130 km/h. At 1,9 €/L, this Paris → Marseille trip would cost ~115 €. That is 2,2× the electric cost of the Model S P100D and 3,3× that of the Megane E-Tech Electric. The gap narrows in winter but never reverses.
The cost per kilometre depends on the electricity rate applied to each segment — based on the energy source used at that point of the trip.
| Segment | Distance | €/km | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paris → Limonest, A6initial energy charged at home · 0,21 €/kWh | 425 km88 kWh consumed | 0,044 €/km | 18,52 € |
| Limonest, A6 → Montélimar, A7energy charged at Supercharger 138 kW · 0,45 €/kWh | 189 km39 kWh consumed | 0,093 €/km | 17,64 € |
| Montélimar, A7 → Marseilleenergy charged at Supercharger 139 kW · 0,45 €/kWh | 160 km33 kWh consumed | 0,094 €/km | 14,97 € |
| Trip total | 51,13 € | ||
| Segment | Distance | €/km | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paris → Limonest, A6initial energy charged at home · 0,21 €/kWh | 391 km54 kWh consumed | 0,029 €/km | 11,34 € |
| Limonest, A6 → Montélimar, A7energy charged at Ionity 120 kW · 0,45 €/kWh | 174 km24 kWh consumed | 0,062 €/km | 10,80 € |
| Montélimar, A7 → Marseilleenergy charged at Ionity 110 kW · 0,45 €/kWh | 210 km29 kWh consumed | 0,062 €/km | 13,03 € |
| Trip total | 35,17 € | ||
How many kilometres do you recover depending on the time spent at the charger? Comparison at nominal peak power.
| Charging stop duration | Tesla Model S P100D | Renault Megane E-Tech Electric |
|---|---|---|
| 5 minutes | ~41 km | ~55 km |
| 10 minutes | ~82 km | ~110 km |
| 20 minutes | ~163 km | ~220 km |
| Full session 10 → 80 % | ~331 km44 min | ~304 km30 min |
Replace one of the two with an alternative from the same segment
762 ch · 98 kWh · 2016
218 ch · 60 kWh · 2024
The advantage comes from the combo real range + charging speed. On Paris → Marseille (775 km at 130 km/h), the Megane E-Tech Electric arrives in 7h30 with 2 charging stops.
WLTP consumption does not reflect motorway reality. Aerodynamic drag grows with the square of speed, so real consumption is 15 to 25 % higher than WLTP combined. Caralogy calculates a highway consumption specific to each vehicle based on its aerodynamic profile (SCx), weight and power curve.
Total time = driving time + charging time. Driving time is calculated at an average speed of 130 km/h on the motorway (adjustable). Charging time is calculated based on the real power curve of each vehicle, respecting the optimal 10 → 80 % range and the maximum power accepted by the chargers on the route.
No. The displayed cost covers only the energy consumed during the trip: kWh × energy rate, with a mix of home charging and DC fast chargers. Battery wear is a long-term ownership cost, not a trip cost.
Electric: 51,13 € (Model S P100D) and 35,17 € (Megane E-Tech Electric). An equivalent petrol SUV (~8 L/100 km) would cost about 115 € in motorway fuel. Electric costs less in energy but adds charging stops.