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posted by cmn32480 on Thursday March 15 2018, @12:03PM   Printer-friendly
from the move-it-when-you-are-done dept.

Motor Trend magazine has passed 15K miles with their long term Chevrolet Bolt test car. The latest report http://www.motortrend.com/cars/chevrolet/bolt-ev/2017/2017-chevrolet-bolt-ev-review-long-term-update-6/ discusses charging away from home and work -- availability and use of Level 2/3 chargers in and around Los Angeles.

I've used public chargers from several companies, including ChargePoint, EVgo, Blink, and EV Connect, but a cursory internet search turns up at least 15 providers operating in the U.S. Every single one of them would prefer you sign up for a membership and download their app, but every one I've tried also allows for guest use. There are perks for membership, including better rates, quicker payment, and quicker activation at the charger, but the real benefit is not having to deal with guest access. At minimum, it requires entering a credit card number either online or through their app, which you'll have to download. At worst, it requires calling the customer service line, waiting on hold, then reading them the charger's ID number and your credit card number over the phone. Some EVgo stations I've used have credit card readers, but every one I've found hasn't worked. Prices vary wildly as the charging networks generally let the owner of the station set the rates. Some charge a flat fee, some charge by total time or electricity used, and others do both.

(discussion of the author's experiences over the 15K miles including trips that required charging at the destination and also airport runs with the Bolt full of people and luggage)

I've waited to address public charging until my time with the Bolt is nearly up so I could provide as complete a picture as possible. Here in Southern California, where EVs are popular and public chargers are fairly common, public charging is workable if mildly inconvenient. So far, the number of chargers seems to have mostly kept pace with the popularity of EVs, but we're already seeing lines forming at Tesla Superchargers. As EVs become more common, the public charging network is going to need to grow at the same or better pace to keep up, and whether that happens is anyone's guess. If electric cars are ever going to be ubiquitous like some people predict, we're going to need a lot more chargers, and we're going to need them everywhere, at nearly every parking space, so people who can't charge at home or are running low can top up. That's going to take a lot of investment from a lot of people, and it remains to be seen if supply keeps up with demand.


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  • (Score: 2) by bob_super on Thursday March 15 2018, @06:54PM (1 child)

    by bob_super (1357) on Thursday March 15 2018, @06:54PM (#653045)

    A few random facts:
      - The solar race across Australia had problems when the single-seaters started cruising above 80mph, causing chaser cars to break the law
      - That same race now has a "practical car" category 2 or 4 seats, but definitely not Lexus comfort.
      - Comfort and crashing into SUVs (after being blinded by their too-high lights) are probably the main reasons people don't bring pure-solar to the market. If they can go 80 in Australia, they should work most days at most reasonable latitudes. Tall buildings probably don't help.
      - removing the grill changes the look of the car too much for the conservative auto manufacturers. Tesla succeeded because their cars don't look alien, but the flat front of the model 3 takes some getting used to. Agreed that it's idiotic to keep a big opening when cooling a few thousand watts rather than a quarter to two thirds of a megawatt (do the math), but this is the same industry that produces Lexuses and black-fake-plastic-openings Civics.

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  • (Score: 2) by Nuke on Thursday March 15 2018, @08:35PM

    by Nuke (3162) on Thursday March 15 2018, @08:35PM (#653097)

    Comfort and crashing into SUVs (after being blinded by their too-high lights) are probably the main reasons people don't bring pure-solar to the market.

    ????

    removing the grill changes the look of the car too much for the conservative auto manufacturers. Tesla succeeded because their cars don't look alien, but the flat front of the model 3 takes some getting used to.

    Funny, because for for a long time many IC cars have lacked anything that looks like a grille. In the UK the Ford Zephyr Mark IV [wikipedia.org] was a conspicuous example from 50 years ago. The Tesla Model 3 [wikipedia.org] is very similar in that respect. What is supposed to be the problem?