On Thursday, I drove my E500 the 5.5 hours (each way) from Houston to New Orleans for a long road-trip, to visit the National World War II Museum near the French Quarter, which I hadn't seen since late 2008.
http://nationalww2museum.org/
They have significantly expanded the Museum, which back in 2008 was called the National D-Day Museum, into a full-blown WW2 Museum. Back in 2008, the Museum only was a single, large building. Today it covers more than three city blocks. And the Museum isn't done yet, with yet another building to be built during 2015-2016, opening late in 2016.
5.5 hours is a fairly long drive, but it was quite effortless in the E500. I did get one ticket, from the
Iberville Parish Sheriff, for going 72 MPH in a 60 MPH construction zone. That ticket cost $175 and is payable online, and will not be reported to go against insurance as long as I pay it by early June. This was clearly a local Iberville money-making operation, as the trap I got nailed in was coming down over a bridge over a swamp, in the right lane, and the Sheriff was pulled over with a Laser gun. I had no time to react, and my Valentine One was of absolutely no use. The ticket was handed out quickly and before I had even gotten off the road at the nearby exit (the Sheriff waved me over onto an exit ramp for the pull-over), and gotten back onto I-10, he already had nailed another "victim." The funny thing is that I was pulled over about 50 yards before a "70 MPH" sign. Lucrative business for that Parish, I think. That's how they do it in :dasauf:
The Louisiana State Police were out in force, though I was able to stay out of their wily clutches. There are a couple of 15-20 mile elevated causeways on I-10 that cross giant swamps in southern Louisiana, between Lake Charles and Baton Rouge, with no exits/off-ramps. On these causeways, the Louisiana troopers station themselves on the side of the bridge, and have a nice, long, straight shot at oncoming cars with their laser guns. I saw two of these "traps" but luckily was able to avoid them with little difficulty. Lots of roving LSP SUVs, too.
On the way home, I crossed Lake Pontchartrain, which is a massive saltwater lake immediately north of New Orleans. I wanted to take I-12 back until it met up with I-10 at Baton Rouge. Lake Pontchartrain has a
north-south causeway that bisects it; this causeway is 23.85 miles long.
This is the world's longest continuous bridge over water.
The storm surge on Lake Pontchartrain was a major cause of the flooding of 80% of New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina, due in some part to the levees between the Lake and downtown New Orleans breaking.
The most notable thing about this trip was the gas mileage I got in my E500, however. I filled up the tank two times - once in Crowley, LA on the way there, and the other time in Vinton, LA on the way back to Houston. One tank (which was about 60% full when I started in Houston) I received 18.9 MPG. The second fillup (which was 100% freeway driving) was 20.9 MPG. This was one of the best tanks I've ever had with the E500, and I didn't even use cruise control to get it.
Cheers,
Gerry