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Originally Posted by LeX2K
(Post 11867294)
Will be years if the S gets a refresh at all. I think it will eventually be cancelled.
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Originally Posted by patgilm
(Post 11867272)
You live in CA, east coast sucks. I had to drive to a charging station 17 miles away at 11 at night and it was full so had to wait. When I finally charged it took 45 minutes. It was also in the back of a shopping center.
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Originally Posted by Allen K
(Post 11867433)
They keep forgetting that part :p I would never roadtrip the Rivian if it didn't gain access to the Tesla network. EA stations top out at 4 plugs and most of them don't provide the marked power. I haven't used many but between a handful of EVGo and EA charging sessions, I never crossed 100kW charging
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Originally Posted by Allen K
(Post 11867433)
They keep forgetting that part :p I would never roadtrip the Rivian if it didn't gain access to the Tesla network. EA stations top out at 4 plugs and most of them don't provide the marked power. I haven't used many but between a handful of EVGo and EA charging sessions, I never crossed 100kW charging
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Originally Posted by RXSF
(Post 11867499)
Where are you located? While I haven't seen many, the Rivian Chargers are very pretty!
I've charged at one RAN before in Rhode Island and it was nice. I believe that one had 6 chargers available and was still limited to Rivians so availability was not an issue. I'd love to visit the outpost they have in Joshua Tree one day |
One of the main reasons China has been able to really accelerate EV adoption has been unified charging protocol and consistent infrastructure. With folks moving to Tesla charging protocol, all thats left is building out chargers at a consistent pace, on almost gas station parity.
Home charging should be primary but, if one has as many chargers as gas stations, folks wont have to dedicate mental capacity for planning a trip. |
Originally Posted by Framestead
(Post 11867519)
One of the main reasons China has been able to really accelerate EV adoption has been unified charging protocol and consistent infrastructure.
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Originally Posted by Allen K
(Post 11867433)
They keep forgetting that part :p I would never roadtrip the Rivian if it didn't gain access to the Tesla network. EA stations top out at 4 plugs and most of them don't provide the marked power. I haven't used many but between a handful of EVGo and EA charging sessions, I never crossed 100kW charging
https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.clu...c5d1f02234.png My daughter just got a notification that she can now use her Bolt at Tesla superchargers. She only charges at home, and doesn't trip with it, but it somehow gives her peace of mind |
Originally Posted by Mike728
(Post 11867531)
Totally agree with this. If everyone was on the same page on day one, most of the issues related to range anxiety would have already been in the past.
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The charging issue isn't because there have been competing standards (and remember, outside the US even Tesla uses CCS), it's because the likes of EA etc could neither build reliable charging stations nor maintain them properly to keep them up and running. Putting a NACS connector on an EA charger doesn't suddenly make the EA charging station any more reliable. The problem was never the plug or the standard, the problems were everything apart from the plug and the standard. Adapters have shown how easy it is to co-exist, and everyone should have one. The problem has been only Tesla built out a reliable network, and the reason for the reliability is the stations were better. At the connector end, NACS or CCS is mostly a distinction without a difference, particularly now that adapters are on the scene and can convert in both directions.
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Originally Posted by swajames
(Post 11867548)
The charging issue isn't because there have been competing standards (and remember, outside the US even Tesla uses CCS), it's because the likes of EA etc could neither build reliable charging stations nor maintain them properly to keep them up and running. Putting a NACS connector on an EA charger doesn't suddenly make the EA charging station any more reliable. The problem was never the plug or the standard, the problems were everything apart from the plug and the standard. Adapters have shown how easy it is to co-exist, and everyone should have one. The problem has been only Tesla built out a reliable network, and the reason for the reliability is the stations were better. At the connector end, NACS or CCS is mostly a distinction without a difference, particularly now that adapters are on the scene and can convert in both directions.
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Originally Posted by AMIRZA786
(Post 11867535)
You're forgetting, this Merica. We don't agree on anything :)
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Originally Posted by LexBob2
(Post 11867565)
Oh yeah? Well, I disagree. LOL
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Originally Posted by Allen K
(Post 11867433)
They keep forgetting that part :p I would never roadtrip the Rivian if it didn't gain access to the Tesla network. EA stations top out at 4 plugs and most of them don't provide the marked power. I haven't used many but between a handful of EVGo and EA charging sessions, I never crossed 100kW charging
Originally Posted by Framestead
(Post 11867519)
One of the main reasons China has been able to really accelerate EV adoption has been unified charging protocol and consistent infrastructure.
Originally Posted by Mike728
(Post 11867531)
Totally agree with this. If everyone was on the same page on day one, most of the issues related to range anxiety would have already been in the past.
but about tesla chargers... if the majority of ev's become tesla connector ones what will companies like electrify america do? will they be shut out or just go away due to lack of customers? or will they license nacs plug so they can work with newer ev's? :uh: |
Originally Posted by bitkahuna
(Post 11867583)
well i've used EA and one Florida Power charger and all times between 175 and 250kW or so charging. :D
yeah all we need is a dictator or a tech bro in charge. oh wait. (that's a joke folks!) :D but about tesla chargers... if the majority of ev's become tesla connector ones what will companies like electrify america do? will they be shut out or just go away due to lack of customers? or will they license nacs plug so they can work with newer ev's? :uh: |
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