An article written by Jim Gorzelany of CTW Features, and published in my newspaper today, reports that "AAA put three different electric vehicles (didn't say which ones and the sample is pretty small) through their paces under controlled circumstances to gauge how well their batteries fared in stop-and-go-traffic under cold, moderate and hot operating conditions." According to the results, the three cars averaged 105 miles on a charge at an ambient temperature of 75 degrees F. However, the vehicles range dropped to just 43 miles at an air temperature of 20 degrees F and to 69 miles when it was 95 degrees F. They note that all of the vehicles had provisions to either warm or cool the batteries via liquid or forced-air heating/cooling methods. Needless to say operating the AC and heater had an effect on the range, unfortunately the article didn't say if these systems were off or on during the test. Not very scientific, but better than nothing, I guess.