#931
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Holy moly. It takes 7.4kwh to charge an EV? I don’t see how we can make enough renewable energy to support thousands of these |
#932
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We charged the Bolt 25 nights in the last 5+ months, 3,000 miles, and that's cold weather driving (less efficient, more heat needed). Average is once every six days or so. |
#933
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For Level 2 charging, you can use a 220/240v outlet, like an existing dryer outlet, to get anywhere from 20-50 miles/hour. Most of my friends have installed a level 2 charger that gets them like 45-50 miles/hr. In my case, I have a 220v dryer outlet, so with a 10-30 NEMA plug from Tesla, I am able to charge at max of 24 miles/hr. But that works for me since I'm using off-peak hours (midnight to 3pm) to charge and can get to 80% overnight. That's also the cheapest way around here. For those days, when i forget to charge and need to add miles, it makes sense to go to a Supercharger, which is level 3 charging that charges at 250kw. I also do this for trips and can easily add 100+ miles of range in like 15-20 minutes. The cost, at least here in SF, is about $0.45/kw and is about the same as peak time cost of $0.43/kw. Since the level 3 is substantially faster, it makes sense. Of course, YMMV! Good Luck! |
#934
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If I consider in October/November the sun is down before I get home I’d need 15kw (2 hours) worth of power to charge. That’s a little rich for my blood |
#935
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You don’t need level 3 charging and Tesla recommends it for only trips. With the Tesla v3 chargers, it’s supposed to charge at like 1000 miles/hr. The highest I’ve ever seen was 860 miles/hr and that’s only for a few minutes in the beginning of the charge. Good Luck! |
#936
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I get by with 110v 12a charging from home. I have a 45 mile round trip work commute, 4 days a week. Battery use is about 10-14% on a work day and can charge about 11% overnight (8pm to 6am, 10 kwh). Peak electricity rate at home is 4-8pm, so I avoid charging during those hours.
I considered installing the Level 2 charger and even bought the charger, but haven't installed it yet. My employer is planning to provide free charging soon, so I'm holding off on installing the Level 2 home charger. Charging all day on Friday when working from home gets the battery to a good level ( ~80%) heading into the weekend. |
#937
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#938
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And if it DOES come from Tesla...as you charge, does any $ go to Tesla? Like the dedicated Tesla chargers you see in shopping center parking lots? From Ozz- Quote:
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo Last edited by oldpotatoe; 04-08-2023 at 08:08 AM. |
#939
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No money would go to Tesla when I charge at home any more than your cell phone provides income to the manufacturer of that phone when you charge. It's simply a level 2 connector that they sell which will allow far more rapid charging than the level 1 connector that came with the car when I bought it. I assume Tesla makes a profit when they sell their Wall Connector. It isn't a source of revenue for them after it is installed. The level 1 connector plugs into a regular wall outlet. The level 2 connector must be hard wired to your house. That said, they also sell (or you can purchase from other sources) adapters for various types of outlets, including a typical NEMA outlet for a dryer. They sell this stuff to make it easier for owners to charge at home, which is how they recommend keeping it charged. Tesla Superchargers that you see in parking lots of stores occasionally are manufactured by Tesla in Buffalo, NY. |
#940
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Kinda like a 'Ford' gas station..Money smart, making a unique charging system, network that generates $.
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Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo |
#941
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Install dedicated circuit for car charger outlet, Nema 14-50, in the garage of the home
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2003 CSi / Legend Ti / Seven 622 SLX |
#942
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However, this year the Biden admin negotiated a deal with Tesla that will allow other mfrs using CCS to charge at Tesla Superchargers. Tesla will be paid billions and adapt some of their chargers to accept CCS via something they call Magic Dock. The program just started at some NY and SoCal locations. It will spread and the superchargers will get very crowded. lol Tesla makes it very easy to charge at its Supercharger stations. You drive up, back in, plug in and go! It's so simple. Further, when Tesla puts in a supercharger, they don't just put in 2 or 3 chargers, they put in at least 10 chargers and on a busy stretch like I-5 between SF and LA, you can stop off at Harris Ranch where there are like 50 chargers! lol In contrast, I heard that charging at other EV stations by EA, Chargepoint, EVgo and others can be an adventure as there are complaints of broken cables, card readers not working, etc. Not good when you need a charge! So bash Elon for making money, but he had the foresight to build the best charging system in the world. In contrast, Toyota and others are trying to push hydrogen for their fuel cell cars. However, unlike Tesla, they haven't built any hydrogen stations. Instead, they depend on the government or others to build the hydrogen filling infrastructure. Not good as there are very few hydrogen stations in a crowded area like the SF Bay Area. So if you need to "fill up," you need to find a station...Good Luck! |
#943
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7.4 kw per hour rate of storing into vehicle
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This foot tastes terrible! |
#944
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We charge the Bolt and The PHEV Pacifica on one charger. It is big enough to charge both at fastest L2 rate the cars can accept. It is 220v/40a breaker 32a charger. Before that charger, we shared smaller one on a 220v/20a breaker 16a. Did not have sharing issues with that one, but with two full EVs I can see it could. But I like always getting to Bolt done and unplugged and staged for wife a.m. commute before I go to bed. The smaller level 2 that was not happening. The smaller one is on line and once in a great while both are plugged in same time. But the bigger charge fill an empty PHEV in 1:55, 1/2 the time of the smaller one. So 99% of the time it is used, and is a smart unit with app and data I can calc the actual cost the car are using. Just me, but I will not charge a EV nor put a ICE vehicle in an attached garage. It's full of bikes anyway...
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This foot tastes terrible! |
#945
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As to the Ford gas station? Pretty much. Though I don't think that was necessarily their intent. But they developed their Supercharger network alongside the expansion of their national scope and as the number of cars increased. Tesla uses their own standard of connector, but has released it as an open source concept I believe. Other manufacturers could use that standard, though I'm not sure that would necessarily open the Supercharger network to the other brands. That could likely be worked out though. Nissan used a different standard when they brought out the Leaf EV. Not sure what others used but they were produced in such small numbers and with such low capacity I'm sure they just plugged into a wall outlet. I give full credit to Nissan for trying something new with the Leaf, but Tesla went really next level with the Model S in larger scale production numbers. All others followed and created a different charging standard. The only other brand that I'm aware of that has adopted the NACS (North American Charging Standard) is Aptera, a tiny startup that I don't believe has even actually produced any vehicles for sale yet to the public. They're radically aerodynamic and are probably not going to survive because it is basically a cross between a car and a motorcycle, but the idea looks really cool. I love when people forget all the rules and forge ahead. I hope they find their niche and survive. It can also self charge when parked outdoors as it has solar panels built in and because it is small and light, the battery is far smaller than any other EV. |
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