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Tesla To Blanket US With Superchargers In Two Years

dublin writes "Electric car manufacturer Tesla is planning to triple its construction of "supercharger" rapid charging stations, with a trail of stations in place for L.A. to New York trips by the end of this year. In addition to the east & west coasts, islands in Colorado, Illinois, and Texas will grow together to cover nearly the entire continental US by 2015. The two biggest obstacles for electric cars are high cost and range problems. Cost is still a problem, but this move to blanket the US with supercharger stations could fix the range half of the e-car equation."

311 comments

  1. As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    cost is the MAIN problem.

    Wait till you get to replace those batteries and discover the real costs :D

    1. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by icebike · · Score: 4, Interesting

      cost is the MAIN problem.

      Wait till you get to replace those batteries and discover the real costs :D

      From what I've read about the Prius the battery life is exceeding expectations by a wide margin.

      Most drivers have never faced a battery replacement, because they are easily managing 10 years (200K miles) and the batteries
      have shown no sign of needing replacement.

      Admittedly it costs around 2000 to 2500 bucks when you do need a replacement, although salvage yards will sell them
      to you for around $500. A cottage industry has sprung up refurbing Prius batteries.

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      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    2. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by ebno-10db · · Score: 0

      A cottage industry has sprung up refurbing Prius batteries.

      If they don't need to be replaced, why is there a market for refurbs?

    3. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by icebike · · Score: 4, Informative

      Nobody said they don't have to be replaced.
      Just that the vast majority of them are running much longer than expected.
      Only the first generation of Prius vehicles are reaching their 10 year life.

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      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    4. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $20,000.00 for a Chevy Volt battery

    5. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Because he never said that you imbecile, the very first line of his post is "battery life is exceeding expectations by a wide margin" and then he goes on to elaborate that even after 10 years most people still don't need a replacement.

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    6. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by codepunk · · Score: 1

      Exactly it is like me going to a car dealership and buying the car and the gas for the life of it and paying interest on both up front. Then we add another 5K paid by someone else all for the luxury of having a low range inconvenient vehicle. I have nothing against electric vehicles but they are going to have to get hell of a lot more practical before I jump into one.

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    7. Re: As far as I'm concerned . . . by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      I can burn down my garage with $10 worth of gas, thankyouverymuch.

    8. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not so much a cottage industry as a redneck trailerpark industry.

    9. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as Chinese peasants are happy to put up with Lanthanium extraction on their doorstep.
      (Hint: rare earths aren't rare - only places dodgy enough to allow them to be processed economically are.)

    10. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I've read about the Prius the battery life is exceeding expectations by a wide margin.

      Posting anonymous to avoid losing mod points....

      The detractors of electric cars and even solar panels have one serious misconception. A lot of them believe that as soon as the warranty runs out, the things quit working.

    11. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it is not inconvenient to have to go to a gas station once a week or so? If you are regularly driving long distance, then current electrics are not for you, but if you are primarily doing commuting (and have a garage in which to charge it overnight) it is probably more convenient. Price is another matter and, lacking anything close to the up-front funds, I haven't done the math on pre-paying.

    12. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish Tesla would make an electric lawn mower. What's out there now has terrible reviews of batteries losing longevity in 6-12 months.

    13. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by tyrione · · Score: 1

      cost is the MAIN problem.

      Wait till you get to replace those batteries and discover the real costs :D

      From what I've read about the Prius the battery life is exceeding expectations by a wide margin.

      Most drivers have never faced a battery replacement, because they are easily managing 10 years (200K miles) and the batteries have shown no sign of needing replacement.

      Admittedly it costs around 2000 to 2500 bucks when you do need a replacement, although salvage yards will sell them to you for around $500. A cottage industry has sprung up refurbing Prius batteries.

      Considering a typical Honda Accord will have two full tune-ups and maybe three of them by the time it hits 200k miles, the cost of those tune-ups will set you back equal that cost of the battery replacement, if not more. Never mind the usual replacement of struts, brakes/brakepads, exhaust system, transmission, etc.

    14. Re: As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those last few items still apply to electrics. Not sure why you mentioned them.

    15. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're quite the asshole...

    16. Re: As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tesla S does not have an exhaust system (obviously), nor does it have a gearbox. Non-emergency braking can be done using the motor regeneration, so brakes will last almost forever unless they rust.

    17. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      EVs have rather different battery packs to the Prius though. It is unlikely you would ever replace the whole thing, just like you wouldn't replace the whole engine in a normal car. Some of the cells might start to fail and need changing.

      --
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    18. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by tgd · · Score: 1

      $20,000.00 for a Chevy Volt battery

      $4000, if you need one today. And the price will drop again as more of their cars use that battery.

      And Chevy has said their indications right now are 300k+ miles out of the battery.

    19. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by tgd · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nobody said they don't have to be replaced.
      Just that the vast majority of them are running much longer than expected.
      Only the first generation of Prius vehicles are reaching their 10 year life.

      The Prius's use of the battery is fairly minimal -- most people wouldn't notice if the battery had lost 50% or more of its capacity. (The Prius gets its fuel efficiency from the Atkinson cycle engine, not from the electrics. The electrics are only there because the Atkinson engine has so little torque you'd never get the car moving without an electric "boost".)

      If the battery was completely toast, you'd be stuck in a Prius, but even at 15-20% of the capacity, the car will drive just fine.

    20. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by necro81 · · Score: 1

      cost is the MAIN problem.

      Wait till you get to replace those batteries and discover the real costs

      In terms of a percentage of the original purchase price, replacing the batteries in an electric car, after the first 10 years of life, is not all that different to the powertrain maintenance that a conventional auto would need during or by that time: engine rebuild, tranny rebuild and fluid replacement, timing belt replacement, (ordinary, starter motor) battery replacement(s), brake maintenance and replacement (over and above what an electric vehicle needs), and 25-50 oil changes.

    21. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      $0, they are covered under warranty. None of them is yet out of warranty.

      $2500-$4000 will likely be the cost in 10 years or so when they start needing out of warranty replacement.

    22. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly it is like me going to a car dealership and buying the car and the gas for the life of it and paying interest on both up front. Then we add another 5K paid by someone else all for the luxury of having a low range inconvenient vehicle. I have nothing against electric vehicles but they are going to have to get hell of a lot more practical before I jump into one.

      It's $7.5k not $5k and it's not paid by someone else - this is a common misconception probably put about by fox news types - the $7.5k is a tax rebate, so you get to keep $7.5k of your own tax money instead of giving it to Uncle Sam. Guarantee nearly all Telsa Model S owners are paying more than $7.5k / year in taxes.

    23. Re:As far as I'm concerned . . . by nobodie · · Score: 1

      The thing is that most FAMILIES have more than one car. One of those cars should be a car that will work for long range driving, while the other car should be an electric for around town driving. I have a number of colleagues who are switching their cars to this model as one or the other wears down. It just makes sense.

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  2. Seriously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't tell me what you are going to do, tell me when you have it done.

    I am sick and tired about all this "flying car in every garage" public relations dreck.

    1. Re:Seriously? by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      But if they don't tell you what they will do, then who will invest? Who will be ready to buy as soon as they hit the market? It's a pretty stupid advertising strategy to roll your product out the door and then start telling people about it.

    2. Re:Seriously? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am sick and tired about all this "flying car in every garage" public relations dreck.

      Can someone tell me why a readership that embraces every speculative technology suddenly gets downright angry about the very thought of an electric car? Or for that matter any mention of energy produced by any alternative means?

      Why does it make you so damn mad?

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    3. Re:Seriously? by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Can someone tell me why a readership that embraces every speculative technology suddenly gets downright angry about the very thought of an electric car?

      Because they're a dumb idea until we have a much better battery technology, and we're forced to pay taxes so rich people can buy them at a subsidized price.

      Or for that matter any mention of energy produced by any alternative means?

      Because many of those 'alternative energy' technologies are scams and most of the rest are subsidized by our taxes because they make no financial sense.

    4. Re:Seriously? by multiben · · Score: 1

      Q. And what do you think will drive better battery technology? A. The *need* for better battery technology. If the world subscribed to your point of view we probably wouldn't have invented the wheel yet because we were waiting to come up with a good enough axle. Most technologies are highly dependent on other technologies which means they improve iteratively over time. Do you know how inferior early internal combustion engines were compared with today's? And yet we didn't give up on the car altogether.

    5. Re:Seriously? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because they're a dumb idea until we have a much better battery technology

      Smartphones used to be a "dumb idea" until better battery technology came along. Certainly tablets were a dumb idea.

      The Apple Newton was a dumb idea until better battery technology came along but I bet the same people who get whipped into a fury at every mention of an electric car were creaming themselves over the Apple Newton.

      Because many of those 'alternative energy' technologies are scams

      Did I mention that Texas is getting better than 22% of it's electricity from wind turbines? Do you know how much of Germany's electricity comes from solar? Germany is a lot more cloudy than the US.

      Only in the US do you hear the "Alternative Energy is a Scam!!" routine. I wonder why.

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    6. Re:Seriously? by dublin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Germany has so much solar because it has *insane* subsidies. It's moronic *not* to put money in solar in Germany, because (although this is changing), any excess power you produce *must* be bought by the power company at a very hefty multiple of the normal price. Germany is *not* the way we want to go here - in fact, the rush to solar and the Green's crusade against nuclear have created very significant instability in Germany' power grid. They are not far from the time that a large, dark front could crash the country.

      Germany's subsidies are a lesson in how to create a really unsustainable ecosystem. It only works because Germany's industrial base is a world leader and makes enough to keep the socialist redistribution (barely) afloat. With its current balance of trade, I'm not sure that the US could even pull off German-style subsidies, and the Germans themselves are backing away from them very quickly as they begin to see the train wreck unfold.

      BTW, fraud and abuse is rampant in the industry in general (I work in solar, and have worked int he oil industry - "green energy" really is thousands of times sleazier than oil & gas ever was) - in Spain, for instance (which also pays a premium for power delivered from solar plants), a large solar PV farm was caught using a bunch of generators to inject power into the grid at night - not only was this dirtier than a real power plant, they were getting many. many times more for that power since it was "green" because it came from a solar plant!

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    7. Re:Seriously? by gslj · · Score: 1

      Can someone tell me why a readership that embraces every speculative technology suddenly gets downright angry about the very thought of an electric car?

      Or for that matter any mention of energy produced by any alternative means?

      Because many of those 'alternative energy' technologies are scams and most of the rest are subsidized by our taxes because they make no financial sense.

      Have you considered this: things that make no financial sense may make no financial sense because of the way that accountants arbitrarily add in only a few of the costs of the existing technologies. The rest, like the cost of sick days from polluted air, high building maintenance or replacement costs because of acid rain, the contribution towards the costs of global warming, these are all called "externalities" and not considered. Add in those, and some of the alternative sources of energy might have a lower cost than the traditional ones. If not, then do the comparison after the R&D for the alternative energy sources is paid off. For example, I was reading Flibe Energy's estimate that the thorium-liquid salt reactor they want to mass produce will cost $100 million to develop. On the other hand, once it's developed, many of the (pollution, scarcity, radioactive waste processing and storage, high cost of manufacture) issues of other forms of energy production will virtually go away. I note that business may not fund this because it provides no short-term financial return, so they're going after military funding. It's also government money in the form of military funding that's keeping Polywell research alive.

      -Gareth

    8. Re:Seriously? by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      What subsidies? If you're talking about the tax payer loan from the DOE to Tesla, in case you've been living under a rock they paid that back... with interest. The model S isn't subsidized by anyone; it's making a profit. A good one, apparently.

    9. Re:Seriously? by halltk1983 · · Score: 1

      Subsidized price? Are you talking about the loan that they paid back already, 9 years early, or are you talking about the $7500 that the government is pitching in? I'm not a big fan of the subsidy, myself, but I have to wonder if you've considered the taxes that the oil companies aren't paying, and the relative impact of that versus the cost of the electric vehicles. Maybe if the oil companies didn't have a stranglehold on our collective scrotums, we'd balance out a bit better.

      --
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    10. Re:Seriously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You didn't address any of his points.

    11. Re:Seriously? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      . It only works because Germany's industrial base is a world leader and makes enough to keep the socialist redistribution (barely) afloat.

      So, you're saying that Germany's economic, industrial and social success is proof of the failure of democratic socialism?

      Uh-huh.

      --
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  3. Map of intended locations by The_Wilschon · · Score: 5, Informative

    Tesla has made a map of where they intend to put the stations and how far you can drive from them. http://www.teslamotors.com/supercharger

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    1. Re:Map of intended locations by Eightbitgnosis · · Score: 1

      Thank you. This was just what I was looking for

    2. Re:Map of intended locations by kat_skan · · Score: 1

      Interesting that they're free. Just curious: is that distance round-trip or if you drive to Vegas will you be walking back to LA?

    3. Re:Map of intended locations by icebike · · Score: 1

      Very interesting, but most people would still have to charge at home, and plan routes very carefully, even at the end of the timeline.

      This is really an around town roadster, maybe a daily driver, but not something most people will want to set off on a road trip in.
      By the time Tesla gets these built, the industry will have moved on to Fuel Cell technology. Tesla is a stopgap measure at best.

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    4. Re:Map of intended locations by ebno-10db · · Score: 1
      The Toyota fuel cell has reduced the platinum needed. From http://www.greenoptimistic.com/2013/05/07/toyota-fcv-r-hydrogen-fuel-cell-concept-set-for-production-in-2015/#.Uafv79gzVc0

      Toyota has managed to reduce the amount of platinum in the fuel cell to about 30g, just over $1,600 worth and is looking to reduce this even further.

      I wonder what makes the cars cost $50k-$100k then. Is it just the low volume production? Are there things about fuel cells other than the platinum that make them expensive?

    5. Re:Map of intended locations by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Interesting. It seems like they're solving the range problem, but not necessarily the convenience problem. There's about 20 gas stations within 5 miles of where I live, but there won't even be 1 of these supercharger stations. That's not really a problem being at home, but I think it's probably going to be a problem for some people. Not to mention, with 4 to 10 stalls and the charge time, there's a good chance that people are going to be stuck waiting once they get a lot more of these on the road like I hope they do.

      That said, these stations look straight out of the future. I wouldn't mind having one in the neighborhood, if they weren't completely unmanned - they're going to get tagged to hell by dumb kids with spray paint.

    6. Re:Map of intended locations by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

      with 4 to 10 stalls and the charge time, there's a good chance that people are going to be stuck waiting once they get a lot more of these on the road like I hope they do.

      When they get a lot more of them on the road, there will be more charging stations.

      That's how this stuff works. When there's a need, somebody will step up.

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    7. Re:Map of intended locations by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      You're talking lithium cell rechargeable batteries, which aren't exactly cheap. Just look at 6-cell laptop batteries, now multiply by a couple hundred, that's pretty pricey. That combined with production costs is a pretty penny, why the premium is usually $20-30K over a comparible petro-fueled car.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    8. Re:Map of intended locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In his world, economies are planned.

    9. Re:Map of intended locations by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      My point is that I don't know if Tesla will be stepping it up quickly enough. They're expecting to build 20k Model S's in the next yer - even assuming they don't ramp up production further at all, which is highly unlikely given their track record, that's about 60k of them on the road by the end of that map's timeline, and most of those will be concentrated in the major metro areas instead of spread across the country fairly evenly like these stations. I have no doubt that the stations in Montana are likely to be empty almost all the time - it's the ones that will be heaviest-used that I'm talking about.

      I don't know what the situation is with these supercharger stations, but I'm guessing it's something only Tesla can build due to patents. If that's the case, they'll probably need to ramp up the infrastructure around the cities quicker than they're projecting to do so right now.

    10. Re:Map of intended locations by GLMDesigns · · Score: 1

      No. In planned economies there are lines for toilet paper. In "unplanned" (ie free markets) amazing things get done. Come Thanksgiving stores make certain that they have ordered enough turkeys, take them out of the freezer (most are frozen) a few days early and when people come to the store voila, defrosted turkeys.

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    11. Re:Map of intended locations by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      If you can't see that Telsa is planning an emerging sector of the economy right now, you're blind.

    12. Re:Map of intended locations by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Note, that they've just _reduced_ the amount of catalyst, not eliminated it completely. Fuel cell cars are not possible in any large quantity - there's not enough platinum for that. Also, they STILL have the problem with catalyst poisoning - it's happening even faster than Li-Ion battery degradation (good news is that you can reuse platinum cheaply).

      And on top of it, hydrogen is mostly produced from methane. And it's more energetically favorable to simply burn methane in a regular combustion engine.

    13. Re:Map of intended locations by istartedi · · Score: 1

      Very useful link. It isn't obvious at first glance, but you can click at the bottom of the map to see the build-out timeline. I wonder what they're thinking targeting that route across the northern plains for Winter. I don't imagine there being too many road-trippers through there when it's brutally cold and subject to blizzards.

      I wonder if their long-term plan includes franchising the stations. A lot of travel centers would kill to have the Tesla demographic hanging around with nothing to do for half an hour.

      --
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    14. Re:Map of intended locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cars in metro areas aren't the ones that need super chargers. Metro area cars will primarily be charged overnight and have enough range to make all the daily trips you are likely to need. It's when you want to road trip outside the city that you begin to need a quick, non-home charge.

    15. Re:Map of intended locations by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 1

      My guess would be that they're including a bit of major civil infrastructure change in the cost of the car.

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    16. Re:Map of intended locations by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Charging times will decrease as well. Elon has hinted at this recently, but when you consider that a few years ago a full charge took a few hours and now a Model S can do it in under 50 minutes it's obvious where this is heading.

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    17. Re:Map of intended locations by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      The cars in metro areas aren't always based in that metro area. Here in New Jersey, in particular, is where I'd think this would be the biggest problem, since there's tons of cars that come from New York and Pennsylvania, with a good number coming from other areas of the megalopolis. Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland and Virginia license plates are very common too, with a good number of Florida plates in the summer and a smattering of the other states all year round. It'd likely be the biggest problem in New Jersey for a single reason - a large portion of those cars are diving through, not staying in the area.

    18. Re:Map of intended locations by AaronW · · Score: 2

      That's what I've been thinking. I've heard that Harris Ranch is quite pleased with the Superchargers there. It's one of the busiest ones and they've had to expand it, probably in part due to people staying longer than their charging time to get a good steak.

      The ones I have been to in Gilroy and Folsom are at malls, though a lot of shops are closed in the Gilroy outlet mall there are still a number of places to eat within easy walking distance.

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    19. Re:Map of intended locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stores make certain.

      That sounds a lot like planning!

    20. Re:Map of intended locations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And they wisely did not put any in the actual city but on the interstate from city to city. So that city people do not abuse it instead of plugging in at home. He is a sharp guy. I would have put the trip from LA to Vegas in faster than the map is showing, and I am from Chicago.

    21. Re:Map of intended locations by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      Interesting. It seems like they're solving the range problem, but not necessarily the convenience problem. There's about 20 fields within 5 miles of where I live where I can feed my horse, but there won't even be 1 of these gas stations. That's not really a problem being at home, but I think it's probably going to be a problem for some people. Not to mention, with 1 to 2 pumps and the filling time, there's a good chance that people are going to be stuck waiting once they get a lot more of these on the road like I hope they do.

      blackraven14250, circa 1903. :-)

      Couldn't resist. Sorry...

  4. Re:Business Model by The_Wilschon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That was Henry Ford's model, of course. But don't forget that before the Model T, there were a number of very expensive automotives available that only the rich could afford...

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    wait... not that kind of sig.
  5. ... with government funds and subsidized charging. by eepok · · Score: 1, Troll

    First, 100 fast chargers does not a nationwide blanket make.
    Second, these things are extremely expensive to install (especially if they're not immediately next to major power lines). We're talking hundreds of thousands of dollars.
    Third, fast charges are very inefficient by comparison to level 2 chargers-- there's a lot of waste energy.
    Fourth, fast chargers are most likely to be used midday when electricity is at its costliest.

    So, they're expensive to install, wastes electricity, and are most likely to be used when electricity is at its most expensive. Thus, if they want to install them and want people to use them, there's going to have to be massive subsidies.

    Or Tesla's spending themselves into a hole again because they figured out that the quagmire that is proprietary charging payment systems has stymied adoption and they're going to just do it themselves... because their product depends on it! And because they missed out on the only true future for battery-electric vehicles: Battery Swapping!

  6. Re:Business Model by multiben · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, that is not Tesla's job. Tesla are fulfilling a very important part of getting the industry to take electric cars seriously by appealing to the car enthusiasts. This group represents a big barrier to green technology cars because they are traditionally seen as pokey, boring machines. Tesla are changing that perception and there are plenty of other companies who are now starting to produce cheaper electric vehicles. Tesla should keep doing what they are doing - challenging the dominance of the petrol driven sports car.

  7. bah...Humbug by rmdingler · · Score: 0, Troll

    The negligible benefit of POV's that recharge from the fossil-fueled grid makes the entire carbon footprint thing a moot point. Essentially, the more individuals who take advantage of the electric automobile, the less the overall benefit to us as a community. We can barely/not quite barely amp the grid up in Texas and California to cover the summer's A/C demands... the supply is not there for millions of drivers to switch from a fossil fuel to electricity generated from the burning of fossil fuels.

    --
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    Ernest Hemingway

    1. Re:bah...Humbug by Z34107 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A few quibbles:

      1. Have you tried filling your gas tank with solar, hydro, or nuclear power? It's actually pretty hard. Being able to power an electric car with anything that makes electricity is actually a benefit.
      2. Fix your power grid.
      3. I like the assumption that someone's supposed to buy an automobile for your benefit, and that you won't benefit anyway.
      --
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    2. Re:bah...Humbug by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      Could electric cars have rooftop solar panels to slowly charge the batteries while the car sits in a parking lot all day? It's too small of a surface to charge them to capacity, but it might make enough of a difference to be worthwhile, especially in sunnier areas.

    3. Re:bah...Humbug by haruchai · · Score: 1

      The efficiencies are too low and the cost is still too high. A rooftop solar panel was an (grossly overpriced) option on the Fisker Karma but would only generate enough power to keep the car cool on a hot day and power some electronics.

      Even at 100% efficiency, the most that could be generated from a 1 meter square panel would be 1 kW.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    4. Re:bah...Humbug by AaronW · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that here in California during the summer there is much less demand at night when most charging takes place. In fact, with time of use fees it is cheapest to just configure the car to start charging at midnight. Temperatures are much lower at night so the demand for AC is significantly lower. The numbers have been run and there is plenty of capacity for EVs to charge overnight. In fact, there is excess supply at night since it's difficult to quickly start up and shut down power plants.

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    5. Re:bah...Humbug by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      Bingo... if I had mod points, I'd mod you up.

      Tesla Model S and it's ilk will most likely be charged at night when demand is low, anyway. Few people will charge during the day unless they're on a road trip... and for that they have the Supercharger stations (which long term it's intended that they all run solar and some will have local storage to feed back into the grid).

  8. Re:Business Model by Osgeld · · Score: 1

    yea, I dont see tesla pulling a ford

  9. If you build it, they will come by Hadlock · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Electric cars have long been a chicken or egg problem. We would have gladly rented a Tesla model S for our trip to New Orleans from Dallas last weekend (Elon, lend me a car when we can do this and we'll document the trip), but A) you can't readily rent a Tesla and b) there are no charging stations yet.
     
    I think it's interesting that they're building out a "free forever" stations, and carpeting the nation with them. They probably represent a fixed cost, as you can only charge so many cars per day, and eventually competing stations will pop up along the most popular routes. Electricity really isn't that expensive.
     
    I was thinking about how US automakers might try and sue Tesla in federal court over providing "fuel" for the cars, but I wonder if the "free forever" is due in part to the fact that it's much more difficult to sue a company for anti-competitive practices if there's no money changing hands in the fueling process.

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
    1. Re:If you build it, they will come by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bolding the whole interesting thing doesn't make it interesting .

    2. Re:If you build it, they will come by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      They are NOT going to continue the "free forever" model indefinitely. Right now it's a promotion and at some point in future new Teslas (and other car makes if they license Tesla technology) are going to pay for charging.

    3. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >Electricity really isn't that expensive.

      Maybe where you live. I live in California, where peak energy rates hit .49 $/kWh, filliing up a 60 kWh or 85 kWh battery will cost up to $30 or $42.50, respectively. About the same as a tank of gas.

      This will become very, very expensive. They can halve the costs installing large scale solar, but you're still going to get into a very expensive obligation that will probably result in the company going bankrupt over the long run.

    4. Re:If you build it, they will come by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Commercial and residential rates are billed wildly different. Second, energy rates vary wildly. Depending on the region, like Texas or Tennessee, energy rates are closer to $0.06/kwh if you shop around. Obviously the more you buy, the more you save.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    5. Re:If you build it, they will come by dummptyhummpty · · Score: 1

      cost up to $30 or $42.50, respectively. About the same as a tank of gas.

      Where are you getting gas that cheap? Or your car has a really small gas tank. I pay between $60-70 to fill up.

    6. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >Where are you getting gas that cheap? Or your car has a really small gas tank. I pay between $60-70 to fill up.

      Google says the average gas tank is 12 gallons, so at $3.75 a gallon here in Fresno, that works out to $45.

      That gasoline gets you about double the the range of a Tesla (265 miles) for about the same price, assuming you have an efficient gas powered car or hybrid.

      So there's really no cost advantage of electricity over gas at peak power rates. Obviously, as I said, if you build out solar at roughly have the rate of peak power costs, you'll break even.

    7. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 2

      >Commercial and residential rates are billed wildly different. Second, energy rates vary wildly. Depending on the region, like Texas or Tennessee, energy rates are closer to $0.06/kwh if you shop around. Obviously the more you buy, the more you save.

      Peak power costs (Tier 5) for residential is also about 55c/kWh (http://www.pge.com/tariffs/ResTOUCurrent.xls). That's why I put solar on my house. The LEC of solar is about half peak power rates - so you install just enough solar capacity to drop you back down into the reasonable power rate tiers (which start at 8c here for Tier 1 Winter power).

      Here in California, the more you buy, the more the cost of power goes up. The lower tiers are supposedly subsidized by the higher tiers, but even the lower tiers are much more expensive than power elsewhere. Also, one should note the price of natural gas has plummeted, but mysteriously enough, the price of our power is about the same as it was four years ago.

    8. Re:If you build it, they will come by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I think the free aspect to is emphasize that the energy is (at least partially) free from solar. If you have panels on your home you can basically run your car for free in a lot of the US.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    9. Re:If you build it, they will come by AaronW · · Score: 1

      Switching to time of use billing significantly reduces the rate for charging an EV. I'm going one step further and planning to move to PG&E's E9B rate which involves adding a second meter for time of use billing for the EV only.

      As for Tesla's rate for their Superchargers, they are planning to offset the electricity use with solar (supplied by Elon Musk's company Solar City).

      --
      This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.
    10. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >Switching to time of use billing significantly reduces the rate for charging an EV.

      For personal use, sure, and if you're willing to wait till night to recharge. Even then, I'd never say it gets *cheap* here in California. Tier 4 residential TOU is still 30c/kWh, which still isn't competitive with a gas hybrid.

      >As for Tesla's rate for their Superchargers, they are planning to offset the electricity use with solar (supplied by Elon Musk's company Solar City).

      Solar costs money, too. As I said, it'll be about half of peak PG&E rates. Still not cheap by any stretch of the imagination.

    11. Re:If you build it, they will come by msevior · · Score: 1

      Actually the cost for a bulk purchase of solar panels is currently around $0.50 per peak watt. In California with its high insolation, solar power comes out at much less than half that price per KWhr hence the idea behind Solar City, Elan Musks' latest venture. He can make a killing selling electricity from his solar-powered chargers at 0.49%/KWhr to the grid and use them as a marketing gimmick to promote sales of $90K autos. Either way he's ahead. This a brilliant move.

    12. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >He can make a killing selling electricity from his solar-powered chargers at 0.49%/KWhr to the grid

      If you meant to say 49c/kWh, that's not much of a discount.

      My solar system produces at a LEC of 24c/kWh or so.

    13. Re:If you build it, they will come by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Why would you ever charge at peak power rates?
      Charge at night, when power is cheaper.

    14. Re:If you build it, they will come by dublin · · Score: 1

      >Commercial and residential rates are billed wildly different. Second, energy rates vary wildly. Depending on the region, like Texas or Tennessee, energy rates are closer to $0.06/kwh if you shop around. Obviously the more you buy, the more you save.

      Well, that's true in the free parts of Texas - here in the People's Republic of Austin, we don't have the option of buying from the market like the rest of the state, so our real rates are more than twice that. My power bills for comparably sized houses more than doubled when I moved from Houston back to Austin. There are even power companies in much of Texas that do not charge at all for power at night - this could be a pretty good deal if you charge an electric car on a timer... Oh, and Austin Energy will give you a bunch of solar rebates that don't even offset the vastly increased cost of your solar system due to their ridiculous regulations and mandated crony installers. And don't even get me started on Austin's hideous water rates...

      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
    15. Re:If you build it, they will come by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make a bold argument, sir.

    16. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      We're talking about the Tesla Superchargers. You can't control when people use them, really.

      People will tend to fill up during daylight hours.

    17. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      That is why you have to look at levellized costs of energy, amortized over either 10 or 20 years.

      It's very expensive to get free energy.

      Overall, it works out to about 25c/kWh for my system, which is higher than Tier 1 power, but lower than Tier 3-5 power.

    18. Re:If you build it, they will come by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      amortized over either 10 or 20 years.

      So that would put rapidly developing technologies like renewables at a considerably disadvantage then.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    19. Re:If you build it, they will come by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      That's how the calculations are done. If they're at a disadvantage, they're at a disadvantage.

  10. Open platform charging ? by Lexor · · Score: 1

    Are these plugs public ? If so, do they only key to Tesla cars ?

    Or can I deliver the Lexor 3000 to the masses and have 'em charge for free at the Tesla stops ?

    (then again tin cans for the masses aren't working so well for Tata right now...)

    --
    Regards, Lex
    1. Re:Open platform charging ? by voidptr · · Score: 4, Informative

      Right now they're Tesla only. However, Tesla also has a side business selling power trains to more traditional car companies, and they're probably likely to license access to the network to those cars as well once they've built it out some.

      --
      This .sig for unofficial government use only. Official use subject to $500 fine.
    2. Re:Open platform charging ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Tesla is serious about this then it would be nice to be able to say, retrofit an older car with electric power, a compatible battery pack, and purchase a port that is compatible with the supercharger. I've got a 37 year old 4200 pound guzzler with a 27 gallon gas tank. That's 324 miles of range at 12 mpg. Now take out the engine, transmission, fuel system, cooling system, exhaust system, and other ICE requirements. Now add the 300lb Tesla AC motor and its induction unit, and 50lb of aluminum-air batteries which give about ten times the range of heavier lithium-ion units. I now have a vehicle which weighs roughly a thousand pounds less than the 4617lb Tesla Model S. I don't need a big touch screen or an HVAC system. I don't need leather seats, 19 inch wheels, or GPS navigation.

      Just give us the kits and the instruction manuals we need to retrofit the vehicles we have, and not have them looking like the cars in Looper with crap bolted to the hood and hoses sticking out everywhere.

  11. Genius Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It also partly solves the cost equation, since you will save money on gas. OK, it doesn't cover the cost of the battery / car, but those prices will come down over time. I'm starting to think that this could in fact be the start of a new era for transportation.

    1. Re:Genius Idea by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

      Back of the envelope calculation: [(10k miles per year) / (30 miles per gallon)] * (4 dollars per gallon) = 1.3k$ per year. Over ten years, 13k$. Tesla offers a pre-paid battery replacement (pay when you buy the car, get the new battery much later) for 12k$. So, if the battery lifetime is on the close order of ten years, then you're not far from the break-even point. If gas prices go up, or if you drive more, or if your gas mileage is worse, or if the battery replacement price comes down, then less than ten years will do.

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
  12. cost of charging by zeroryoko1974 · · Score: 1

    And then when everyone has an electric car, they will start charging to charge your car. 5 dollars a KW or something lol

    1. Re:cost of charging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In California it'll cost $10/KWh because the electricity will be specially formulated to reduce emissions!

    2. Re:cost of charging by Kneo24 · · Score: 1

      And not cause cancer.

    3. Re:cost of charging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WARNING: This product contains chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm.

    4. Re:cost of charging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Electricity is often generated at coal fired plants. Yet since the car itself doesn't pollute with greenhouse gases, it's considered "green".

    5. Re:cost of charging by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      Because even the worst coal fired plant is leaps and bounds better than any traditional ICE.

    6. Re:cost of charging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Those coal-fired plants are less dirty (per unit of energy produced) than your typical car. Hybrids come pretty close on average to matching the coal plants. It's amazing what can be done to clean a large, centralized source of something that can't economically or practically be done with hundreds of thousands of smaller, mobile versions of the same thing.

      2) Electricity is *also* often generated at hydro-electric stations, wind farms, solar farms, nuclear plants, etc. Let me know when your non-electric car can run off of the energy generated at those.

  13. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by nebbian · · Score: 5, Informative

    Third, fast charges are very inefficient by comparison to level 2 chargers-- there's a lot of waste energy.

    As much waste energy as carting around an inefficient internal combustion engine, that gets at best 30% efficiency? I think not.

  14. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, you are a bit off, Cost of install depends on size of install. 4 station charger will cost more than a 1 or 2 station. The power draw is easy enough to get around as they are installed in commercial districts with more than enough power available. Most of them are being installed in conjunction with Solar panels anyways. Eventually these will be refueling stations at a cost to all electric cars so the costs to build them will be fully recouped.

  15. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by eepok · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You're right that they're more efficient than combustion engines, but so are bicycles. The point is that fast charges are not the future-- they're a dead end to a technology.

    Battery swapping, on the other hand, is the most cost efficient, environmentally friendly, and quickest form of refueling an battery EV.

  16. Re:Business Model by SJHillman · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just wait until the Tesla Tow Truck. Then you'll see a lot of Teslas pulling Fords.

  17. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by SJHillman · · Score: 1

    Interesting idea with solar powered recharge stations... you could put automated recharge stations in the middle of nowhere where it's inconvenient to ship gas to, like long stretches of empty highway in the American Southwest. Of course, it will be a while before solar can keep up with the demand of anything more than a very low volume station but the potential is there.

  18. My first thoughts on seeing the title... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DATELINE Shoreham, New York

    Elecrical wizard Nicola Tesla plans to cover these United States with a system of his power-distributing towers by the end of 1915. These wonders of the modern electrified age will send power to homes and appliances without the need for wires and cables and surely put the makers of gas lamps out of business!

    What an awesome future, the past had.

  19. Superchargers are of really limited value. by Cosgrach · · Score: 0

    Of course they will only work with Tesla cars. While I understand that it helps sell Tesla brand cars, it does not really help the electric car movement as a whole. Is he going to include a Mc Donalds at every location so they can have a wonderful, healthy bite to eat while they wait?

    The only real way to get people on-board with electric cars is to not waste time having to futz around with charging, slow, fast, or 'super'. The only real solution to this is really to have battery swap stations. You pull up, the battery is swapped, and you pay for the power used in the old battery plus a service charge for the swap. It's really the only way to get charged up in just a few minutes, not tens of minutes. In this model, you do not own the battery but rather renting it. This also takes care of the expense of having to replace the battery that you own after ten or so years. As battery technology progresses and power densities increase, you get the benefit of increased range in the same battery format. All automatically.

    The down side to this is that electric car manufacturers have to standardize on just a few specific battery pack configurations. Oooooh. That's a deal breaker. Fucking get over it and standardize already.

    Now, I know that this is /. and I can already hear your cries of 'That will never work' and 'What a stupid idea' and 'They already tried that and they failed'. Well, to that I say - yes they tried, but it does not mean that it is the wrong way to go. They just could not sell it to enough people. Open your mind to the possibility of it actually being done right.

    --
    Why is it that most of the people that I encounter seem to have been shat from the Sphincter of Mediocrity?
    1. Re:Superchargers are of really limited value. by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      yes they tried, but it does not mean that it is the wrong way to go. They just could not sell it to enough people

      Doesn't sound like a great business model.

    2. Re:Superchargers are of really limited value. by Cosgrach · · Score: 2

      I do not agree. Many great ideas have failed on their first attempt simply 'the time is not right'. It does not mean that it was a bad idea. Subsequent tries on the same idea, modifying a few points have managed to succeed and thrive. Being the first to do something is not always best.

      --
      Why is it that most of the people that I encounter seem to have been shat from the Sphincter of Mediocrity?
    3. Re:Superchargers are of really limited value. by Shados · · Score: 1

      A small obscure example....the pda/smartphone...

    4. Re:Superchargers are of really limited value. by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      If you check the map or try to actually drive a Tesla (I did) then you'll notice that superchargers are located at service plazas, which typically have fast food restaurants (maybe even MacDonalds).

  20. Anything to be done about the 30 minute recharge? by mark-t · · Score: 1

    While 30 minutes is great compared to waiting several hours, they need to really bring that recharge time down by a factor of 5 or more. Being able to stop for a recharge in many places is good, but for longer trips (which mentioning coast-to-coast travel seems to be pointing towards) waiting for half an hour every charging cycle will start to add up on your travel time.

  21. EVs not really for long road trips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I feel like this is trying to force the current gas station paradigm (refuel, adding 300-500 miles of range in 5-10 minutes) onto EVs, when that paradigm doesn't really fit well.

    Based on a little Googling, Tesla's Superchargers can apparently charge 50% of an 85 kwh battery in about 30 minutes. Not bad (a bit over twice the charge rate of DC fast charging on a Leaf), but based on the EPA estimated range of 265 miles, that gives you about 130 miles of range. So every 130 miles, you stop for 30 minutes - more if all Superchargers at a station are in use. While I'm all for taking frequent breaks on long trips, this is a lot more than the usual 10 minutes every few hundred miles.

    To match gas station refuel times, the power requirements get ridiculous pretty fast. Superchargers put out 120 kw according to Tesla. Let's say we have a hypothetical battery that can take a full 85-kwh charge (265 miles) in 5 minutes like a gas pump. That's 12 times faster than the Supercharger rate of half-capacity in 30 minutes, or 1.44 MW per car! By way of comparison, most (many?) homes in the US have 240-volt, 100-amp service, or 24 kw maximum available power. 1.44 MW is equivalent to 60 homes all maxed out and about to trip breakers! If a typical charging station will service a similar number of cars as a gas station, multiply that by maybe 10 - or 600 maxed out homes. For one refueling station. Insanity. It gets even worse if you want more than 265 miles of range in 5 minutes.

    The bottom line is that even if battery technology gets there, how will the grid handle such quick charging? I see that being the bigger obstacle to EV road trips as convenient as gas-powered trips are now.

    The easier solution is to shift the paradigm - how we think about and use our vehicles. Everyone could have an EV for commuting and regular driving within its nominal range. You charge at night or any other time when you're not using the car anyway - NOT when you are on a trip and just want to keep going (but can't, until you wait to recharge). If/when you need to take a long road trip, you take a gas-powered car. Either an extra car in your household, a rental, borrowed from someone you know. Whatever. Or if you're not hauling a bunch of stuff, maybe it makes more sense to fly.

    As a current EV owner (Nissan Leaf), I've already made the switch in paradigm - and I love it. I'm saving tons of money on fuel costs, driving my Leaf over 16k miles per year. Pretty much every trip within its range will use that car, because it's cheaper and fun to drive. Going to Vegas (from SoCal)? We use the other car. Or any longer trip. Most multi-driver households have multiple cars, so road trips shouldn't really be an issue. I think this kind of strategy makes way more sense than seriously increasing travel time (waiting to charge) or the failed battery swap idea.

    1. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple, every "gas" station will have a nuclear reactor. Solved.

      BTW, I fill my gas tank (with approximately 450 miles range) in much less than 5 minutes. I might take 1 minute at most.

    2. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Nemyst · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One of the biggest criticisms that surfaces with EVs is that long road trip "problem". I find it amusing because most Americans drive way under even the base model's maximum range. Yes, we'll need a paradigm change - use an EV for 99% of your commuting and take a gas vehicle for the 1% remaining. Those that need long range (work, distance from city, whatever) can keep their gas vehicles, they're not a significant proportion of the population.

    3. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting that unlike regular cars most EVs are charged at home at leisurely speeds. You only need to use superchargers when you do long road trips. Besides, your calculations are a bit off. If we assume that 85kW*h give you 200 miles of range (somewhat lower than Tesla's specs) then you need 340kW to charge battery in 15 minutes. Driving 200 miles takes about 3.5 hours at typical highway conditions, so you're looking for a break of about 20 minutes every 4 hours - that's not terribly different from regular gasoline car refueling.

      Assuming that your charging station hosts about 50 cars you'll need to use a 180MW power line to power your refueling station. Such power lines are not terribly expensive these days and can be buried underground. And you have some flexibility in siting refueling stations, so you can place them near generating facilities or major trunk lines. And you also can reduce charging power if you need to shed some grid load (i.e. your charging can take 25 minutes instead of 15 minutes if the grid is overloaded).

      So a network of Supercharger stations is definitely possible and doesn't even require much new upgrades to the existing grid.

    4. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Realistically you don't need to charge at anything like that rate to match the way most ICE vehicles are used though. Maybe 2x the current rate so that you can go the full range on a 30 minute charge. That way you can drive for ~4 hours and then take a 30 minute bathroom/meal break.

      I'm sure someone will come out of the woodwork and claim they drive 8 hour straight with no stops. Well, good for you... or probably not so good for your health, but my point is that most people don't. They want to travel in comfort, and that means occasional stops.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    5. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really don't know why you're comparing the power requirements of a supercharger with homes. Try comparing it with trais. The current Japanese Shinkansen "Super Express" trains have about 17MW, which is comparable to the current German ICE train sets. I consider it highly unlikely that Tesla is running their superchargers off the residential grid, they probably get much better rates for the electricity when running off 10kV or more with their own substation.

      Moreover, the superchargers can (and, as far as I know, do) have local batteries so that they don't have to draw their peak current from the grid.

    6. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      BMW i will have purchase / lease options that give you the g'teed use of an ICE when you need it. Solving both issues.

      Full disclosure: I work for BMW but NOT in i

    7. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by MMC+Monster · · Score: 1

      The bottom line is that even if battery technology gets there, how will the grid handle such quick charging? I see that being the bigger obstacle to EV road trips as convenient as gas-powered trips are now.

      I was under the impression that the reason they could make it free was that they were generating power on site with solar panels.

      That being said, it doesn't scale well to popularity of the stations.

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    8. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by khchung · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The easier solution is to shift the paradigm - how we think about and use our vehicles.

      This part is right.

      If/when you need to take a long road trip, you take a gas-powered car. Either an extra car in your household, a rental, borrowed from someone you know. Whatever.

      And this part is totally wrong. The clean solution is to take a page from Europe, make your train network actually useful, and let trains haul you AND your car from one city to another. You drive the station, park your car ONTO the train (as well as charge it if you like), then go sit comfortably in the passenger cart of the same train, let it take you to the destination city, and then get on your car and drive away.

      The train ticket may sound expensive, but if you account for the fact you saved fuel/electricity cost for the car, and you can comfortably rest or sleep overnight for the entire trip, it is a bargain.

      You have such a big problem with long road trips in the US because your train network sucks.

      --
      Oliver.
    9. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      BMW i will have purchase / lease options that give you the g'teed use of an ICE when you need it.

      Yeah, well the semi I drive round town give me the option of hauling 15 tons of stuff when I need to, solving the problem of getting from place to place and for hauling stuff.

      I mean I only need to haul 15 tons of stuff once every... well I haven't had to do it yet, but I'm sure I will one day. And it will be really convenient since I won't have to go and rent one.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    10. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for this! I hadn't really thought about the possibilities of a combined gas/electric car ecosystem. This got me thinking about my own car use. How much do you think you are saving, does this offset the higher initial cost of the EV? Sadly I live in an apt building I don't think running an extension cord out the window to the parking lot is practical. Yet.

      --
      This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    11. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      That's a good point, and what's even cheaper than owning an alternate gas-powered vehicle is to have a gas-powered generator on a trailer hitched to the back of your EV. You stop at gas stations to refill your trailer which charges your EV as you drive. EV manufacturers could make big bucks on this overpriced accessory which would still be way under the cost of buying a second vehicle.

    12. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the paradigm shift in thinking is an important step here too. Keep an eye on inductive charging plates which can be embedded in asphalt. Immediate usage is to add far more ways for people to charge at home: chargers could be placed under parking spots that currently are hard to reach existing home power outlets such as parallel parking spots on neighborhood streets. Then there's some interesting research into "smart roads" with inductive charging baked into the surface of roads so that simply driving over enough plates gives a steady trickle of electricity to a properly equipped car. If they can make that trickle steady enough on interstates at interstate speeds so that you spend less electricity than you gain, then they solve for the need for "supercharging" stations at interstate exits. Admittedly, this sort of infrastructure change is a huge pipe dream right now, but a fascinating one.

    13. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The clean solution is to take a page from Europe, make your train network actually useful, and let trains haul you AND your car from one city to another. You drive the station, park your car ONTO the train (as well as charge it if you like), then go sit comfortably in the passenger cart of the same train, let it take you to the destination city, and then get on your car and drive away.

      The train ticket may sound expensive, but if you account for the fact you saved fuel/electricity cost for the car, and you can comfortably rest or sleep overnight for the entire trip, it is a bargain.

      Bull. Europeans just have no idea about covering US sized distances. Most years I drive from DC to Florida; 1800 miles round trip. To do that on the Auto Train (yes, this route is one of the few in the US) would cost me (family of 4, 1 car) $1800. Gas for this trip is about $300; I can rent a condo in Orlando for a week and spend a day at Disney for the other $1500. So no, it's not a bargain, and that's not even a very long road trip by US standards. It's about the same as Paris to Rome & back.

    14. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, the supercharger stations are in fact grid-connected. Some have on-site storage (though not many so far) and most have solar panels.

      This means that the SC stations are all feeding into the grid when not "filling" a car. This is how they can get away with the no-charge (uhhh... punny!) top-ups at the SC stations because at the moment at least the usage of the SC is a net zero or even possibly making a profit.

      As I understand it, the goal right now is to get the stations built, then add solar as the build-out progresses (the solar is lagging the construction of new SC stations by a bit), then add storage either as needed or as desired. I think they all have SOME storage built in so they can provide the peak load that a charging car requires, but it tapers off relatively quickly.

      All in all I think it's brilliant; people have been wondering how to get a useful buildout of solar panels in the US... well now Elon Musk is doing that. He just happens to be doing it to charge the cars he builds.

      And what's to bet the reason he's doing it is because he has his own personal itch to scratch; that he wants to drive his Model S from California to New York. Just because. That's how progress is made; people with an itch they need to scratch.

    15. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more as an ex-pat of the UK (and by extension Europe).

      The problem with the train here is that all of the rail lines are laid for cargo, not passengers. And cargo gets priority because that's what makes money. These big two-mile-long freight trains are the main paying customer, not the passenger trains. It also means the lines are often pretty beaten up by the heavy loads they're carrying, and quite often you will stop for an hour on a supposedly 4 hour train ride because some freight train has priority to the line ahead.

      Unfortunately rail would require a lot of infrastructure to make usable in the US. We have huge spaces between major cities; the nearest major cities to St. Louis where I live are Chicago (about 5 hours drive) and Kansas City (about 4). Considering that's like the distance between London and Manchester in the UK isn't too telling until you consider that to do the latter drive you would also pass through Coventry and Birmingham (both large cities in their own right)... and pass pretty close to Northampton and Stoke on Trent (again, pretty big cities) that's telling.

      It'd take a massive investment in time and money to build out a truly usable network in the main part of the US. On the East Coast it might be easier... but the East Coast is a very small part of the US (though densely populated). At the moment it's unlikely to get off the ground any time soon... even if I for one would far prefer it.

    16. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I calculated that I saved about $2000 on fuel in the first year, and I expect similar savings for the future. This is compared to a hypothetical 30-mpg car I would have otherwise bought (I needed a new car anyway). Part of the savings was due to the fact that I charge at work for free during the week, and only charge at home as needed on the weekends. My weekend charging cost me about $200 for the year, and shifting all of my charging to home would have added another $500-600. So $1400-1500 saved if I had charged at home exclusively. Keep in mind that I'm in California, which tends to have higher electricity rates than much of the US - my marginal rate is about $0.16/kwh.

      Additionally, I consider that I started out essentially even compared to that 30-mpg car. My Leaf cost me about $35k, but there were also $10k in federal and state rebates ($7500 fed tax credit, $2500 CA state rebate) so the net price was closer to $25k. That's pretty close to what I would have paid for a regular car (Nissan Altima or similar, with various options). Of course if you don't need a new car, or would be happy with fewer options/features in a less expensive one, then the cost comparison certainly changes.

      I wouldn't really recommend an EV to anyone in an apartment, unless you have a very reliable charging option elsewhere (work, etc). I've read about a few people who were determined to do it, and ended up pissing off management / other tenants by stringing a long extension cord out. Probably wouldn't end well.

    17. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The clean solution is to take a page from Europe, make your train network actually useful, and let trains haul you AND your car from one city to another. You drive the station, park your car ONTO the train (as well as charge it if you like), then go sit comfortably in the passenger cart of the same train, let it take you to the destination city, and then get on your car and drive away.

      The train ticket may sound expensive, but if you account for the fact you saved fuel/electricity cost for the car, and you can comfortably rest or sleep overnight for the entire trip, it is a bargain.

      Bull. Europeans just have no idea about covering US sized distances. Most years I drive from DC to Florida; 1800 miles round trip. To do that on the Auto Train (yes, this route is one of the few in the US) would cost me (family of 4, 1 car) $1800. Gas for this trip is about $300; I can rent a condo in Orlando for a week and spend a day at Disney for the other $1500. So no, it's not a bargain, and that's not even a very long road trip by US standards. It's about the same as Paris to Rome & back.

      This excuse may work for another decade, after that, when China had their high speed rails covering the entire country, which is comparably large, yet selling tickets at similar price as yours in Yuan instead of USD (approx 1/6), you will have a hard time trotting out this excuse anymore.

      Yeah, you can claim China's rail is dangerous and construction is shoddy, but the important part is the tracks are laid, the culture to use the trains will get ingrained into the people (much like the culture to drive long distances are ingrained into US), and with the economy growing by 5-10% every year, the quality will improve with time.

      Only in the US do you get people defending having to drive their own car for long distance trips with their family.

    18. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by strikethree · · Score: 1

      Those that need long range (work, distance from city, whatever) can keep their gas vehicles, they're not a significant proportion of the population.

      Hm. I strongly suspect that the folks who currently need to drive long distances will be a very significant portion of those who could actually afford one of these EVs.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    19. Re:EVs not really for long road trips by hacksoncode · · Score: 1
      Our train network sucks because our population density is half that of Europe, or more like 3-4 times lower if you just count urban areas.

      Well, that, and because our airplane network is spectacular and (relatively) low cost.

  22. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by ebno-10db · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Battery swapping, on the other hand, is the most cost efficient, environmentally friendly, and quickest form of refueling an battery EV.

    That would seem more credible if the company that tried it hadn't recently gone out of business.

  23. One way range. by pavon · · Score: 1

    The range bubbles are one way distance. To verify this look at the one surrounding Denver. Colorado is about 380 miles across, and the diameter of that bubble is slightly larger, so they have about a 200 mile radius. The advertized range for the two Tesla S models are 230 & 300 miles, so neither can drive from a charging station to the edge of a bubble and back.

    1. Re:One way range. by NFN_NLN · · Score: 2

      The range bubbles are one way distance. To verify this look at the one surrounding Denver. Colorado is about 380 miles across, and the diameter of that bubble is slightly larger, so they have about a 200 mile radius. The advertized range for the two Tesla S models are 230 & 300 miles, so neither can drive from a charging station to the edge of a bubble and back.

      I though this issue was solved years ago with... and I'm not joking... towing a gas/diesel generator.

      Put a hitch on the Telsa and tow a gas generator with fuel to extend your range. When you're using the car locally or once you reach your destination you unhitch and park the generator. There was even a prototype that looked like a tiny trailer.

      Is this not an option anymore?

    2. Re:One way range. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      It means buying a whole other engine for limited use.

      I guess rentals could work, but it would still be very expensive with the limited market and the fact that this trailer would need to be far more built up than a normal one for safety during a crash.

    3. Re:One way range. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this not an option anymore?

      Buy an extremely expensive sports car and tow a trailer? Anyone who can afford a Tesla can afford a second gas car or renting another car.

    4. Re:One way range. by rsborg · · Score: 1

      I though this issue was solved years ago with... and I'm not joking... towing a gas/diesel generator.

      Put a hitch on the Telsa and tow a gas generator with fuel to extend your range. When you're using the car locally or once you reach your destination you unhitch and park the generator. There was even a prototype that looked like a tiny trailer.

      Is this not an option anymore?

      Were you confused with the AC Propulsion T-Zero from a decade or so ago? Here's a pic of the tzero+trailer [1]

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Acp_tzero_DSC00467.jpg

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  24. Re:Business Model by Eskarel · · Score: 1

    Car enthusiasts think every single one of the world's top selling cars are pokey boring machines and that doesn't matter the tiniest bit to anyone else. I can guarantee that most car enthusiasts would pan every car I've ever owned. No one gives a crap about the opinion of car enthusiasts. For that matter the primary issue that car enthusiasts have had with electric cars is that they're slow, which the Tesla still is(by car enthusiast standards anyway).

    If Tesla wants to change the world, instead of targeting the dominance of the petrol powered sports car of which a few hundred thousand exist in the entire world, they should target the millions of family sedans, small vehicles and other perfectly ordinary cars. You know the ones regular folks use to drive at or below the speed limit on their short daily commutes which is the perfect market for what a Tesla can actually do. Of course then they'd have to try and sell the entire car for less than they currently charge for the battery pack, but if they stopped trying to make it do what it still can't do(be an electric Ferrari), it might actually be possible.

    The bigger question is who on earth would be insane enough to drive from New York to LA in one of these things?

  25. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Entropy98 · · Score: 1

    Third, fast charges are very inefficient by comparison to level 2 chargers-- there's a lot of waste energy.

    As much waste energy as carting around an inefficient internal combustion engine, that gets at best 30% efficiency?

    I think not.

    The efficiency of the average power plant isn't much better.

  26. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except that's not their business model because no one knows how to make an electric car that cheap. Their business model is to sell expensive cars to fund the research and development for better and cheaper cars. They have problems supplying enough cars to cover their demand, so their prices aren't too high, they just aren't organized for producing a large number of cars.

  27. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Third, fast charges are very inefficient by comparison to level 2 chargers-- there's a lot of waste energy.

    As much waste energy as carting around an inefficient internal combustion engine, that gets at best 30% efficiency?

    I think not.

    I wonder about that, because of line losses, which are significant, a lot of power is lost just sending the power to the charging station. Then you're ramping up losses further at the charging station and adding battery losses on top of that. You sure you aren't past the 30% mark by this point?

  28. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Eskarel · · Score: 1

    Well, when you consider that the Tesla engine isn't 100% efficient, that the charging process isn't 100% efficient, and the charging station is probably being powered by a 40 year old coal powered power station which is actually less efficient than an internal combustion engine in the first place, not to mention substantially dirtier(yes even coal power can be more efficient than your car, but only if you have a new plant and most places don't).

  29. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you belive that's a good idea, I'll trade you my fully charged 5 year old laptop battery for that mostly depleted new one.

  30. 30 minutes?? Are you serious? by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

    I am NOT stopping for 30 minutes every "half tank" on a 3000 mile road trip from LA to NY.

    Fuck no.

    When an EV can go 500 miles on a charge and refill in 5 minutes, then we'll talk.

    1. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even the Canonball 3000 guys stop after each leg.

      It takes me 15 minutes right now in my ICE car to fill up, longer if I have to wait in line. I also have to put a quart of oil in the engine each time too. So, if I get something quick to eat, it could easily be over an hour.

      If you live your life at such a fast pace, it is you that has a problem.

      Plus you should not be a little patient with new technology, it will take over in a few years.

    2. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple. This car is not for you.

    3. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I also have to put a quart of oil in the engine each time too.

      You have to put a quart of oil in your car every fill?

    4. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by rtaylor · · Score: 2

      Do you frequently drive 7 hours straight without a bite to eat and a pee break?

      I doubt that's very common amongst their target market.

      --
      Rod Taylor
    5. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by luckymutt · · Score: 1

      You've never driven from LA to NY, have you?
      Or do you just not have a stomach, colon or bladder?
      At least with an EV Supercharge station, you don't need to stand next to you vehicle holding a pump.

    6. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, yah, I do. This last weekend I put 2400 miles on my car in 3 days. It's mostly idle during the year, but once in a blue moon, I do a crazy road trip.

    7. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by AaronW · · Score: 1

      An easy solution is to just rent a car. Put all those miles and wear and tear on somebody else's car.

      --
      This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.
    8. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      Yes, as a matter of fact, I routinely drive from Greenville SC to Washington DC without stopping.

    9. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Yes, as a matter of fact,

      Well, basically you're a minority of drivers so small it's not worth worring about. Most people need/want to pee, eat stretch their legs at least once during 7 hours.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    10. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Or do you just not have a stomach, colon or bladder?

      What do you think adult diapers are for, duh.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    11. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      And that's exactly ALL you'll get with your 30 minute charge. Maybe not even quite that. Your first 4-5 hours will be on a full charge. After that, you're stopping for 30 minutes about every 2 hours to recharge halfway.

      For myself, the only time I ever make a stop longer than 15-20 minutes is if I'm on an all-day road trip. If it's just 6 or 7 hours I won't stop at all unless I have to for fuel.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    12. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      If it's just 6 or 7 hours I won't stop at all unless I have to for fuel.

      I still stick by my claim that you are unusual in that regard.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    13. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by dublin · · Score: 1

      Do you frequently drive 7 hours straight without a bite to eat and a pee break?

      Actually, yes. Did it three times in this month, in fact, for graduation and moving kids back home to Austin from college in Tulsa and Lubbock.

      The trip to Lubbock is straight-through, since the Pacifica has the range to make that trip non-stop - got 24/27 MPG (loaded/unloaded) at 80 MPH - not bad for a 4L crossover SUV.

      Tulsa is possible to do straight through, but it's tight enough that we do one gas stop. That stop is under 5 minutes, with another stop for food elsewhere, because really, isn't life too short, your health too important, and other food options too good to eat gas-stop swill? Do you really want to *have* to eat McDonald's or whatever's within walking distance of a Tesla charger?

      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
    14. Re:30 minutes?? Are you serious? by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      I had a friend that put nearly as much oil in his truck as gas some days. The engines seals were all bad but he couldn't afford to stop driving it every day for long enough to rebuild or replace it. He probably spent 4 months driving it like that.

  31. "Blanket" the US like wireless coverage? by PNutts · · Score: 1

    If so they'd better include a pair of sneakers with the purchase of each car.

  32. Re:Business Model by multiben · · Score: 4, Informative

    Spoken by someone who clearly has no idea what car enthusiasts think or how much influence they have on the industry. The Tesla model S goes from 0-60 in 4.4 seconds which puts it in the seriously quick category. Now, exactly what makes you think it's slow? Or are you just playing internets?

  33. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Idarubicin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Second, these things are extremely expensive to install (especially if they're not immediately next to major power lines). We're talking hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    I'm guessing that you've never had to build a gasoline station. Environmental assessments. Underground excavation. Costly double-walled tanks and plumbing. Inspections. Insurance in case you contaminate the local soil or water with spilled fuel. And it's not like you get a pipeline direct to the station--every gallon you sell has to be trucked in.

    --
    ~Idarubicin
  34. Is the charge connector and rate standardized? by asm2750 · · Score: 1

    If other car makers could license the charging connector and rate from Tesla through them or through a standards body the EV market could take off once all of these charging stations are built. Only issue then is waiting half an hour for 66% charge and waiting for others to finish charging.

  35. Re:Business Model by Z34107 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or perhaps they could disrupt a profitable market, sell at an appreciable margin, and make lots of money before trying to build massive, Toyota-scale factories out of nothing?

    --
    DATABASE WOW WOW
  36. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by kwerle · · Score: 1

    You're right that they're more efficient than combustion engines, but so are bicycles. The point is that fast charges are not the future-- they're a dead end to a technology.

    Battery swapping, on the other hand, is the most cost efficient, environmentally friendly, and quickest form of refueling an battery EV.

    I think chargers are a pretty reasonable solution to a relatively rare problem: how to recharge your car when you want to drive more than a couple of hundred miles at a stretch.

    What's more, the batteries weigh quite a bit (http://www.roperld.com/science/TeslaModelS.htm) 1200lbs for the S. Anyone can plug a car in. 1200lbs of battery would be a bit rough to handle. Even 1/10th that would be too much to deal with.

  37. Re:Business Model by EETech1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I always figured Tesla would (literally) make a model T, soon after the model S.

    The Tesla Model T, the electric car for everyone.

  38. Re:Business Model by haruchai · · Score: 1

    At some point, you can count on someone commenting that electrics cars are stupid and slow because they can't do the 1/4 mile in 4 seconds.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  39. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Entropy98 · · Score: 1

    If the company owned the batteries and you just rented them it would work. Combined with some sort of standardized battery and automated swapping system it sounds relatively fast and easy to me.

  40. Better be an open system by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If they only charge Tesla vehicles, that would be like building gas stations that only sell proprietary fuel for Ford vehicles. Maybe sell the juice cheaper to Tesla owners but they need to provide high current plugs for all of the major electric vehicles.

    Cross-country travel is still gong to be a hard sell, tho. They're talking about 30 minutes to 50% charge. So call it an hour to 90% and 1.5 hours to 100%. And I assume they're talking about the small Tesla pack to get the best numbers. And non-Tesla vehicles will have to be charged at a more conservative rate so they're going to have people hanging around for an hour or two charging their vehicles. That's a lot of time to kill.

    1. Re:Better be an open system by ikaruga · · Score: 1

      If they only charge Tesla vehicles, that would be like building gas stations that only sell proprietary fuel for Ford vehicles.

      That is something I'm not understanding either. Are those Superchargers Tesla only?
      If the answer is yes, it really doesn't make any sense to me for two reasons:

      1)Although the media is focus exclusively on them, Tesla is not the only EV manufacturer. Making a charger that ignores the most of the market sounds like lost business opportunity. There are already sub 30k EVs (Nissan LEAF being my favorite). They are not as good as the Model S, but they also cost half. There are also hybrids, which in my opinions is a much more logical step towards the popularization of EVs as they can potentially be compatible with both gas and charging stations. Specially for the first years, until the required infrastructure is here, this kind of "backwards" compatibility is a nice feature in case there are no charges nearby. Why not provide charging services for those cars for a certain "premium price" while also providing charging services for Tesla owners for a normal price so they still can have their marketing gimmick.

      2)By the time Tesla has a sub 30k model, I guarantee most all major auto makers will have their vehicles as well(as some of them already have). EVs are a hot topic in the industry and there is RD happening all over the place. To have the infrastructure and ignore this HUGE market is totally WFT!? to me. Unless they have the balls to believe that they will be the only EV makers in the future, I'm confused.

      This surpercharger topic really worries me as I hope Tesla, as a Elon Musk brewed company, doesn't become another PayPal-like costumer fuckfest. I like them and I don't want them to be the bad guys.

    2. Re:Better be an open system by adolf · · Score: 1

      It is even more confusing than you think:

      Yes, they're just for Tesla Model S cars.

      And they're free (both in terms of libre and beer) to use, forever, for Tesla Model S cars.

      AFAICT, there is no provision in place to allow a user to attempt to pay for this energy, and the Supercharge stations are unattended.

      So, yeah: The crazy runs deep. And you ain't gonna plug another EV into one of these, ever.

    3. Re:Better be an open system by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Real-live Teslas charge to 80% within 40 minutes. It makes no real sense to charge them to 100% as it takes disproportionate amount of time.

    4. Re:Better be an open system by tlhIngan · · Score: 2

      If they only charge Tesla vehicles, that would be like building gas stations that only sell proprietary fuel for Ford vehicles. Maybe sell the juice cheaper to Tesla owners but they need to provide high current plugs for all of the major electric vehicles.

      Cross-country travel is still gong to be a hard sell, tho. They're talking about 30 minutes to 50% charge. So call it an hour to 90% and 1.5 hours to 100%. And I assume they're talking about the small Tesla pack to get the best numbers. And non-Tesla vehicles will have to be charged at a more conservative rate so they're going to have people hanging around for an hour or two charging their vehicles. That's a lot of time to kill.

      They're currently Tesla only as they built out the supercharger technology. In fact, supercharger Teslas used to be an option before Elon announced every Tesla would come with it.

      I have no doubt Tesla will try to sell it to other car automakers - license the technology and benefit from fast-fill stations.

      It's also around 40 minutes for 80% charge - as these are lithium ion batteries, 80% is around where the constant-current charge turns into constant-voltage charge, thus the last 20% takes at least another 40 minutes to an hour.

      But 40 minutes isn't that long - on car trips I've seen our time spent at rest stops to easily be 30 minutes. If they put superchargers near attractions, it's possible to stop, charge and have lunch at the same time.

      Yes, I know there are many folks who see a 8 hour trip and their instinct is to just hit the interstate for 8 hours and arrive there - no breaks, no rest stops, nothing. But most people prefer a far more relaxed trip - and if you have kids, stops are necessary anyways. Take a 4 person family and spending time at supercharger stations is just convenient - between lunch, toilet breaks, fresh air breaks, stretch breaks etc, it's completely adequate.

      Heck, I believe there was a request for a station at the NJ turnpike, purely because it's convenient. Stop there, charge up and have lunch and return an hour later.

    5. Re:Better be an open system by someoneOtherThanMe · · Score: 1

      I would guess some communication goes on before the charging starts. So Tesla can license this to Nissan, who may then also have to pay Tesla for each charge (depending on their contract). Nissan can demand Leaf owners to pay for each charge (using some other channel, most probably on-line). You don't pay, your Leaf doesn't charge.

    6. Re:Better be an open system by adolf · · Score: 1

      I would guess that this would require a sea of adapters, since no single high-current charging standard actually exists: Supercharge stations are rather unique.

      I'd also guess that this isn't planned to be happening anytime soon, since one of the links in TFS suggests to Tesla drivers that they report non-Tesla vehicles in the Supercharge stations by telephone to Tesla directly, presumably for removal.

      All guessing aside: Whether it -can- work with other cars is not really the question, but rather whether it ever will.

      And all indications at the moment are "no, not gonna happen."

    7. Re:Better be an open system by bentcd · · Score: 1

      That is something I'm not understanding either. Are those Superchargers Tesla only?
      If the answer is yes, it really doesn't make any sense to me for two reasons:

      If you are a typical engineer or software developer then the current state of EV charging is going to make absolutely no sense whatsoever. It is a total mess of competing standards, confusing connectors and proprietary solutions. If someone actually designed EV charging from the bottom up it would look nothing at all like the clusterfuck we are saddled with at the moment.

      Tesla did try to participate in a joint effort between several EV makers to work on a common standard at one point, but as I understand it no one but Tesla could understand the need for e.g. 120kW charging and so it was impossible for them to work within that group. So they went their own way.

      Tesla needs to demonstrate not only to the market but also to their competitors that EVs must have long range (actually a big battery but it's mostly the same thing) to be very useful, and if they have long range they need to have very powerful charging solutions. They do this with their superchargers, and the superchargers don't include any other EV manufacturers because none of the other manufacturers see the point of them at all.

      2)By the time Tesla has a sub 30k model, I guarantee most all major auto makers will have their vehicles as well(as some of them already have).

      They don't really. The main reason Tesla is being successful is that they decided to actually take electric cars seriously. None of the other manufacturers do: they think of them as funny little toy cars to get around town with, a replacement for your bicycle more than a replacement for an actual car.

      Chances are established car manufacturers will keep putting out dinky little 100 mile range EVs for the foreseeable future, and Tesla will run away with the market.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    8. Re:Better be an open system by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      At the moment, yes. They're proprietary. However, that doesn't have to mean it'll always be the way.

      Tesla are building the SC network in part because they were tired of the constant difficulty getting a standardized connector and charging standard that everyone will agree to. Because of constant squabbling over design decisions and committee decisions on the charging itself, Tesla decided it was going to be easier to just invent their own standard and build it.

      How does that help in future? Well, Tesla is already licensing its drivetrain tech to other companies (notably Toyota; their RAV4e is all Tesla under the skin) and there's no reason to assume they won't license the charging tech to third parties when they're ready to. At the moment they're using the SC stations to sell Model S's, and using the money from the Model S's to build charging stations... until the network is significantly expanded it doesn't make sense to let everyone use the tech because your precious stations will be full of everyone else's cars... and the profits from the Model S will naturally not be quite so high and thus unable to fund network expansion. I think what they're doing makes great sense, and in the future definitely feel it's probable that we'll see Tesla turn more into a car manufacturer that makes as much money off their intellectual property (SC standards) as they do the cars they build.

      Electric vehicles have languished for years (actually, more because they predated ICE's) partly because of the slow movement of committees of people deciding what the standards should look like. Me, I like a maverick in this sort of thing who decides that the rest of the world can just damned well catch up with him rather than him put his plans on hold for others.

  41. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by lloydchristmas759 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah, that is a valid comparison, because it is well known that gasoline flies by itself from refineries to gas stations, right ?

    --
    I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous.
  42. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by haruchai · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It would be more credible to claim that the ONLY company that tried is bankrupt. You can almost always find a pioneering company that failed.
    Perhaps fuel cells are the future or maybe someone will invent the Shipstone or Mr Fusion, but battery swap, I believe, can be viable and profitable.
    Better Place was too far ahead of the curve or was focusing on the wrong niche.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  43. Smarter Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A smarter solution would be a standardized replaceable battery pack, then centralize charging.

  44. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Half the cost of such a vehicle would be the battery pack. A car that only goes 5 miles wouldn't sell no matter how many charging stations exist.

  45. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by haruchai · · Score: 1

    CHP / cogeneration's efficiency is pretty good; hydroelectric's efficiency is very close to awesome.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  46. re: one way range by Freedom+Bug · · Score: 2

    I think the idea is that you're supposed to charge overnight at 115V or 230V in Vegas.

    That's fine when the edge of the circle is your destination. But the fact that these are one way circles makes the map very deceptive. For example, take a look at the Fall 2013 map. It would seem that Toronto to NYC is a feasible trip, but it isn't, at least not by supercharger.

  47. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by haruchai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you improve one inefficient plant, that automatically improves 10000 EVs.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  48. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Such stations could have their own storage systems that charge when the electricity isn't as expensive, which would replace their need for generators as well if they can hook it up to their systems as a backup. Not a great cost saving measure, but it would be in the right step. That is if EV are the way of the future. Another source of energy than gasoline is needed for sure, but electric vehicles just don't seem good enough. There just isn't any other good alternative aside self-charging cars maybe or fail-safe mini-reactors.

  49. I Cant understan Tesla by websaber · · Score: 0

    Great car but they don't get it. A car isn't practical for the general public unless you can add at least 300 miles or range in under 5 minutes. What I can't understand is why they don't just make a exchangeable battery pack that fits in the trunk. For day to day use the on board battery is fine and for long trips you can just swap out a extended range battery. There is still room for luggage in the front.

    --
    "A good friend will bail you out of jail. A true friend will be sitting next to you saying, 'damn....that was fun!'"
    1. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by skine · · Score: 1

      I think that you're grossly underestimating the size and weight required of a battery to carry the 300 mile range.

      Swapping out a 600lb battery pack isn't going to be as easy as pumping gas.

    2. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      You can't add 300 miles of range with a gas vehicle in 5 minutes you assclown.

    3. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by websaber · · Score: 1

      Good point. I didn't think about that. Oh well

      --
      "A good friend will bail you out of jail. A true friend will be sitting next to you saying, 'damn....that was fun!'"
    4. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, because the solution is a trailer.

      Go to your nearest Tesla recharge point and hire a range-extending trailer. Either a spare battery pack; or even better a LNG/Petrol motor for refilling where there are no recharge stations.

      Trailers regularly weight a lot, but no one complains about it because the wheels do all the work.

    5. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      The general public has never driven 300 miles (without stops of far more than 5 minutes) in their life. Seriously... never. Most people never take road trips. A lot of them never leave a hundred miles or so radius of where they were born. If they need to go somewhere more than a couple hour's driving away, they drive to the airport and take a plane.

      When you can charge the car up to full every night while asleep (and energy is cheap), the odds are good that most Tesla owners will never even drive 100 miles - well within the range of even the lowest-tier Model S - without having at least half an hour to charge up. Five minutes for 300 miles is useful for truckers and serious road trippers, but nobody else cares. Hell, even on backpacking trips into the mountains I don't need that; the trailhead is rarely more than 100 miles away, and whiler I can't charge up there, I can recoup some of the energy from regenerative braking coming back down the mountain, and 200 miles is within the range of the larger-battery Model Ss anyhow.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    6. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Most people just don't drive that far, though. Even when I lived in the US (for 7 years or so), the number of times I drove more than 200 miles can be counted on one hand. Most of the people I knew were the same. 99.9999857% of their journeys were 15 miles or less.

      If electric cars had been around then (and I had been rich and able to afford one), for the very few times I went on a road trip I could have rented a gasoline powered car. America is just too damned big to drive most of the time, even with the TSA shennanigans, it's easier to get on SouthWest.

    7. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Elon Musk recently made a mysterious comment on twitter about how it would be possible to recharge your car in less time than it takes to fill a tank of gas. The actual announcement he was alluding to is still pending, having been pushed back by such details as Tesla raising a billion dollars in fresh capital etc.

      Quite possibly though he is referring to battery swapping, something which the Model S has been designed and built for but which hasn't seen much actual use yet.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    8. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      Yes you can. That's only 12 gallons in a typical car that averages 25mpg highway. I've done fuel stops before that took 5 minutes or less while on a trip. Yes, I actually timed some of them.

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    9. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      The general public has never driven 300 miles (without stops of far more than 5 minutes) in their life.

      Irrelevant. The vast majority of the people who do drive 300+ miles at a stretch don't stop for half an hour during that stretch. The general public you're talking about don't drive far enough to need a charging station at all. Either way, these stations are going to prove a large waste of money.

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      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    10. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by __aarzwb9394 · · Score: 1

      Even assuming your premise is correct, you forget the public relations value. Tesla will reward those customers who purchase their Model S car with apparently *free* access to fast charging facilities, for the lifetime of the car. Sounds like a good deal to me, I bet you it will tip some people towards Tesla and away from BMW/Cadillac/Mercedes Benz. It is not that uncommon to drive a long distance A to B and take a break on the way. Are there 4 people in your car? (Model S is a large car) Are there youngish children? They will want toilet breaks, drinks, snacks. If you do 3 long trips or so a year this could easily assuage fears about getting stuck, or having to hire something unfamiliar. This offer makes them seem like a really cool company, and addresses the problem of people's largely misplaced range anxiety.

    11. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're grossly overestimating the size and weight required...

      http://news.discovery.com/autos/fuel-and-alternative-fuel-technologies/aluminum-air-battery-1000-miles-1303251.htm

      Use a smaller lithium-ion pack, use the aluminum-air or zinc-air pack as a booster, refill with distilled water every couple hundred miles as needed, which is available at Wal-Mart for less than a dollar a gallon. Combine this with the supercharger network and electric vehicle range limitations are all but eliminated. Sure, you can refill the gas tank in your ICE powered car in five minutes, but you can also top off a water bottle in the same amount of time and a half hour to get 2/3 of your range back is a small price to pay. Use that time wisely. Consume a meal. Talk with friends and family. Make it a texting break since you shouldn't be doing that while driving anyway. Attend a videoconference from the charging station. Take a nap and recharge yourself.

    12. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Irrelevant. You're talking about an _unsourced_ "vast majority" of a subset of the approximatley 1.5% of people who drive more than 200 miles per *day* on a regular basis.
      Complaining that a technology is going to be a "large waste of money" because it doesn't cater to the needs of *less* than 1.5% of the general public is absurd on it's face.

    13. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      Actually, they tend to break even or even make a profit over relatively short periods of time. Maintenance is rather low, typically... and the solar panels on the roof feed back into the grid. Even if they build it and no-one comes, the cost of putting it up will pay for itself in less than 10 years just by standing there and gathering solar power.

      They're really rather cheaply built; they're big concrete covered parking with solar panels all over the roof. Sounds like a good idea to me :)

    14. Re:I Cant understan Tesla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck are you talking about? At least in the west, road trips are still a huge part of life for a great many people.

  50. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2

    and the charging station is probably being powered by a 40 year old coal powered power station which is actually less efficient than an internal combustion engine in the first place,

    Funny, I was just reading this a little while ago:

    "âoeAt the time of the latest record, wind generation accounted for 22 percent of the power demand of 34,318 MWâ¦Wind farms expanded rapidly in Texas until 2009 when production began to overwhelm the existing transmission capacityâ¦Texas is building more than 2,300 miles (3,700 km) of high-voltage transmission in a $6.5 billion plan to expand the grid by late 2013 to accommodate wind-farm growth of up to 18,500 MW" - Reuters.

    Maybe those 40 year-old coal plants won't be needed too much longer. I imagine getting 18,500MW without burning or consuming anything at all is pretty efficient.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  51. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Tesla should keep doing what they are doing - challenging the dominance of the petrol driven sports car.
     
    Oh Christ, stop treating it like it's a crusade. That makes you come off like a loon. What Tesla should keep doing is making a better car than the last car they made. If they have that in mind any other bullshit will go by the wayside and they'll be successful.

  52. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by ebno-10db · · Score: 4, Informative

    30% is max efficiency, which usually occurs at around 75% output power. You don't use anywhere near that much power cruising (with the possible exceptions of Montana and the Autobahn). Average efficiency in driving is 14-26% according to this: http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/atv.shtml That's a frustratingly wide range, but you get the idea. IIRC coal plants are about 40%. Combined cycle natural gas powered plants are approaching 60%.

  53. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good luck getting anyone to sell a $5 car.

  54. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Second, these things are extremely expensive to install (especially if they're not immediately next to major power lines). We're talking hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    If it only cost hundreds of thousands, great!

    However, it seems to me that you don't even have a basic understanding of construction costs.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  55. Backup plan for extended power failure? by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 1

    With a gas-powered car, you can drive to the next town or next state and fill up. Maybe even the next street if the gas station has backup generators. If the "gas" station relies on the same grid, you're up the creek in a really bad way that you aren't right now.

  56. Here's the sad and obvious truth. by houbou · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Big Oil has long gone out of its way to stifle any advances in automotive technologies which would depends on other sources of fuel than petrol. More than likely by now electric cars should be a defacto standard for urban driving. We are at least 20 yrs behind because of Big Oil. I wish it was a conspiracy theory, but its true and many people got either paid off and/or were silence all in the name of gasoline.

    1. Re:Here's the sad and obvious truth. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pure electric cars are available right now. Who the hell is going to drop $35K for a car, insurance, registration, property tax, and maintenance for a car that they can only drive around in the city in short trips? Not many people at all. The Volt and the Leaf even with their huge tax incentives are proof of that. People in the large urban areas that would benefit from a car like that can just take public transportation, scooter, motorcycle, Segway, bicycle, etc or buy a bare bones Hyundia Accent or Yaris for 1/2 the price that gets over 35 MPG and drive it to grandma's that lives in the county twice a year. Conspiracy? Maybe but practical and cost effective right now for most people? Hell NO. Is the US government and big oil hiding a cheap super capacity rapid charging battery in the same place as the aliens, UFO's and the cure for aids they have? If I and most people am dropping $30K for a car, it better damn well go where ever I want it to go and recharge in as many places as I can get gas in 5 minutes..

      Do YOU have an electric car right now? Why not?

    2. Re:Here's the sad and obvious truth. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stifle? You mean like by underpricing alternatives? Those bastards! Trying to save me money... what were they thinking....

      I know they've done some underhanded stuff, mostly through lobbyists and misinformation campaigns. But it's not like they're holding back revolutionary technology. In the grand scheme of things their tax breaks and other machinations haven't done much of anything to shift change one way or the other. Their fear is just as ill conceived as others' optimism.

      Change will come slow, through companies like Tesla enticing us one carrot at a time.

  57. Re: ... with government funds and subsidized charg by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

    Also, they can build biomass digesters near the windfarms to convert all the eagles, condors, and migratory birds being chopped up into even more clean energy. It's a win-win situation for sure.

  58. Put them at restaurants by crow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every restaurant along a major highway should be looking at installing an electric vehicle charger. If I'm taking a trip in an electric car and getting hungry, you can bet I'll choose the stop that lets me charge the car at the same time.

    Sure, the Tesla supercharger may be expensive to install due to the power requirements, but even a standard 220V charger would be enough to make me decide to eat there instead of somewhere else. Even if my trip doesn't require extra charging, having extra power in case I encounter something unexpected is a good thing.

    1. Re:Put them at restaurants by Mass+Overkiller · · Score: 0

      That's actually a really good idea.

    2. Re:Put them at restaurants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One wonders, _are_ you driving an electric car? Or are you just waiting for those diners to install the equipment first.

    3. Re:Put them at restaurants by bunbuntheminilop · · Score: 1

      Why not just swap the battery out with a fully charged one? I guess they would be pretty heavy (the leaf battery is around 300 kg), but if you get the system in place, then you can just set up a robot arm to do the changing, and setup a car wash style conveyor belt thing?

      Then, we could use the batteries that are being stored as an energy store connected to the grid (so we can make better use of some renewable connected to the grid like wind and solar), with the added benefit of only having the charge the batteries at night when power is supposedly cheaper.

      I swap my propane gas bottle in this fashion. The stations around don't bother having the large tanks to refill the bottles, they just keep a dozen or full so people can swap them. You just have to build in the depreciation of the tanks into the price of the swap.

    4. Re:Put them at restaurants by AaronW · · Score: 1

      Harris Ranch did just that. It has proven to be one of the most popular Superchargers. Tesla had to expand it and add more chargers there. The Superchargers are typically installed at malls or other areas where there are restaraunts and other things nearby.

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      This post is encrypted twice with ROT-13. Documenting or attempting to crack this encryption is illegal.
    5. Re:Put them at restaurants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THIS!
      It makes more sense than walgreens, but you have Level 2 (220V, 30A) chargers at most Walgreens now becuase they're trying to get more clientele.

    6. Re:Put them at restaurants by snadrus · · Score: 1

      Ikea has! And it contains a restaurant & often is powered by solar. Your future's already here, just expanding.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
    7. Re:Put them at restaurants by rsborg · · Score: 1

      If I'm taking a trip in an electric car and getting hungry, you can bet I'll choose the stop that lets me charge the car at the same time.

      Why choose? Superchargers could be the EV equivalent of the desert oasis - build it, and lease out the nearby highly valuable land to franchises and such. Given a 30m+ average stopover, that's a hell of a captive audience (and high-income to boot) - why not put a whole high-end strip mall there? 30m is just about right timing for a meal, haircut, or shopping stroll + coffee.

      However, it would be nice if ultimately, the entire petroleum fuel delivery system (ie, gas stations) were to go hybrid. Of course, that wouldn't be in Tesla's or big auto/big oil's immediate interest, or it would be happening already, but it would be the most convenient for consumers and let the EV revolution happen (or not).

      --
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    8. Re:Put them at restaurants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is like thinking of Linux users when developing a casual game.

  59. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You have no experience in business, do you? Tesla is taking a huge risk to develop a product that requires a major shift in consumer behavior and a major outlay for charging stations.

    These normal people you suggest targeting have budgets and already are suspicious of a technology they have no desire to be early adopters for. You even said this yourself. "Who would drive from New York to LA in these things?" If you're also selling a car that is $5-10K too expensive, you're toast, because you have no room to maneuver if the inevitable unforeseen costs give you any trouble.

    Compare that to targeting an enthusiast market with low price sensitivity by making it the best driving experience you can, and where I can easily charge an extra $10-20K if I need to without drastically affecting my demand. Plus, I likely prefer lower production runs anyway because I'm still developing my process before I can benefit from economies of scale anyway.

    This is the only way to make it happen.

  60. Re: ... with government funds and subsidized charg by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Also, they can build biomass digesters near the windfarms to convert all the eagles, condors, and migratory birds being chopped up into even more clean energy.

    They don't have to. They can use all the birds, fish and crabs that were killed in the gulf oil spill. Better than just letting them rot on the beaches all across the gulf coast.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  61. Every Tesla sold costs every tax payer money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Telsa only finally made money this quarter because of energy credits paid to it by other auto makers. That cost is passed to consumers in higher prices from those companies. The tax incentives to buy an electric car is money out of everyone pocket to make up the difference. Telsa is already losing money on every one of its cars and the market for a $60-100K car is not going to suddenly increase so demand will not go up much.

    Forbes explains the current and future Telsa situation pretty good.
    http://www.forbes.com/sites/patrickmichaels/2013/05/27/if-tesla-would-stop-selling-cars-wed-all-save-some-money/

    1. Re:Every Tesla sold costs every tax payer money. by luckymutt · · Score: 1

      Yeah AC, thanks for the link to such a crap article by a biased writer who loves to hate.
      Check out his latest headlines.
      I love this nonsensical gem in the article you linked:
      Tesla can’t increase demand by dropping the price very much. About the only way they can do this (barring some—currently remote—major battery technology improvements) is by cutting the vehicle’s range.
      Seriously? This guy is suggesting that their only hope to increase demand is to reduce performance, rather than cost?

    2. Re:Every Tesla sold costs every tax payer money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By reducing the performance (distance per charge), they could reduce the cost. Once the the effective range drops, less people will be willing to buy it reducing the demand. The Leaf was used as an example of a much lower cost car but with a much lower distance per charge that no one is buying.

      Right now they are selling because of the great distance and there is enough people willing to pay an average of $80K for it. Once those willing to spend $80K drops off, what can Tesla do to keep selling them? Even at that average of $80K selling point, they are still losing almost $10K per car. They are able to lose $10K per car and still make a profit because of green credits. None of this is a sustainable model. I'm sorry you do not see that.

  62. Re: one way range by NFN_NLN · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think the idea is that you're supposed to charge overnight at 115V or 230V in Vegas.

    That's fine when the edge of the circle is your destination. But the fact that these are one way circles makes the map very deceptive. For example, take a look at the Fall 2013 map. It would seem that Toronto to NYC is a feasible trip, but it isn't, at least not by supercharger.

    According to marketing, if you leave Toronto in the Fall of 2013 and drive slow enough that you hit new stations coming online in early 2014... then you're OK. :)

  63. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Nadaka · · Score: 1

    And a solar thermal heat engine running a turbine with 800 degree pressurized steam can get close to 60% efficient. 60% efficient of the nigh inexhaustible power of the solar systems most powerful thermonuclear furnace.

  64. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by timeOday · · Score: 1

    Here is a pretty neat article on how the Chevy Volt uses its battery to modulate energy production from its internal combustion engine, allowing it to run nearer its optimal range more of the time. Note it is right in its sweet spot at 72 mph. (That said the car gets 'only' 40 mpg on the highway on gas, even though it can bypass the electrical drivetrain on the highway. It does weigh 700 lb more than a Prius so maybe the problem is the weight of the batteries which aren't very useful on long trips, but could allow you to drive up to 40 miles per day in the city without ever buying gas again.)

  65. They had to call it a supercharger? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

    Regarding automobiles, the word supercharger already has a specific meaning, Find another word.

    The other day I saw an advertisement for a wireless music receiver. Back in the day, we had something like that. We called it a radio.

    1. Re:They had to call it a supercharger? by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Regarding automobiles, the word supercharger already has a specific meaning, Find another word.

      This is just a transitory problem. 20 years down the line the old meaning of the word will have been forgotten outside of niche historically interested subcultures, but of course the word itself will live on with its new modern meaning.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    2. Re:They had to call it a supercharger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What kind of Mad Max deficient world are you living in, man? I don't want to live there.

    3. Re:They had to call it a supercharger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really think people will get confused and not be able to tell the difference between the two? Lots of words have more than one meaning, get over it.

    4. Re:They had to call it a supercharger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, since the "supercharger" stations aren't part of a *car*, there's no need to find another term.

      Of course, then you went on to complain that somebody used "wireless music receiver" instead of "radio" to describe something that is distinctly different from a radio.

      Captcha: perplex

    5. Re:They had to call it a supercharger? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      It becomes a problem when the same term is used with different meanings in a related context. The same context is "cars." How does one interpret, "I'm going to get a new supercharger for my car."

    6. Re:They had to call it a supercharger? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      Well, since the "supercharger" stations aren't part of a *car*, there's no need to find another term.

      Of course, then you went on to complain that somebody used "wireless music receiver" instead of "radio" to describe something that is distinctly different from a radio.

      Captcha: perplex

      No it's not. It's a radio.

  66. I'm looking forward to this by AaronW · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm really looking forward to this. Last weekend I took my model S down to Big Sur to do some camping and used a bit more power than I anticipated while driving over dirt roads and due to a headwind driving back north. On my way back I had to stop for a bit in Monterey at a level 2 charger to add a few miles before I could reach the Gilroy supercharger. I ended up having to unplug a Volt who was taking up an EV only spot (and was apparently there for many hours according to a Leaf owner parked across from me).

    Of course their announcement shows that this summer a supercharger will be installed in or near Monterey, which would have solved that problem, and there are more on the way along Highway 1.

    In fact, it looks like they'll be building some near some of the other out-of-the-way places I like to travel around the state. It looks like at least one is going in along Highway 395 along the Eastern Sierra.

    The fact that they are reducing charging time is another bonus. 200 miles in 30 minutes for "free" is awesome. I enjoy the superchargers. It's often nice to chat with other Tesla owners there. When I stopped in Gilroy to charge I had 8 miles left. The fellow who pulled in next to me was down to 2 miles, and like me he had taken his car over a bunch of dirt roads. A standard level 2 charger gives me around 15-20 miles of range per hour. At a Supercharger I can get 15-20 miles of charge in 3 minutes!

    While charging I can go stretch my legs, get a meal, check email, surf the web or whatever so I don't consider the delay that big of an issue.

    Out of all the times I've used a supercharger I have never had to wait and there are usually plenty of places nearby to eat or shop while charging, even during Memorial Day weekend.

    The superchargers really make road trips possible with electric vehicles. Sure, it's not as fast as filling a gasoline car, but 30 minutes for 200 miles is not bad! I suspect that when Tesla comes out with their 3rd generation coupe it will charge even faster since it will be a smaller and lighter vehicle.

    Tesla seems to be well ahead of anybody else out there in terms of EV technology. Their batteries have the highest energy density for the lowest cost as well as a very compact electric motor. They spent a lot of effort on battery safety as well. I don't think synchronous motors can compete with induction motors when it comes to power density and I'm sure the cost of induction motors is also lower since there are no rare-earth magnets involved. The 420HP/445ft-lb induction motor in my Tesla is the size of a watermelon.

    The Tesla power connector design is also much better than the J1772 Frankenplug or the huge CHaDeMo connector. Both the J1772 frankenplug and the CHaDeMo connectors are the size of a softball vs the much smaller Tesla connector. They have a small J1772 adapter and I'm sure they'll come out with additional adapters in the future for the frankenplug if it becomes popular.

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    1. Re:I'm looking forward to this by dublin · · Score: 1

      The connector issue is actually a good point.

      I hadn't really looked in to the e-car connector wars before, but we have a VietNam of conflicting charging connector standards in the US, and it's even worse when you look a the global picture.

      Tesla's "supercharger" connector is just one more vendor-proprietary standard in the war.

      Choose... wisely (and some prescience wouldn't hurt...)

      --
      "The future's good and the present is nothing to sneeze at." - Roblimo's last ./ post
  67. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Ksevio · · Score: 1

    The goal is to put a solar canopy over them to help power the station. Probably once the onsite batteries are charged, they'd even be able to make money on some of the lesser used routes. It's not so bad when you're wasting solar panel since it's going to waste anyways.

    Battery swapping may seem like a common sense idea, but the technology in batteries isn't there that we can have a small enough batter package that can be robust enough to be swapped.

  68. Re: Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While the original manufacturer specs put the performance Model S 0-60 times at 4.4 seconds, that's actually extremely conservative. On a track it has been clocked at 3.9 seconds, and Tesla has updated their own specs to 4.2. Until you've driven one you have no idea how fast that is.

    This isn't just a car that appeals to sports ar drivers. It's a phenomenally safe, practical car that Consumer Reports called the best car they've ever reviewed. It's exceptional for day to day commuting, and road trips aren't out of the question. They're just a slightly more leisurely affair. We drove ours from Santa Cruz to San Diego and thoroughly enjoyed the experience.

  69. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Tesla Model S's top speed is a full 50mph less than the top speed of my daily driver. It is quick to 60 ... but with an electric motor I'd hope so! p.s. I am a car enthusiast, as you can imagine from the top speed of my daily driver! :-) I saw a Chevy Volt on the way to work today. I passed on the left.

    It's really very simple to understand how a car enthusiast thinks. An enthusiast has an enormous entertainment budget, and thinks all car costs are entertainment costs.

    Everyone else thinks the car is a utility.

    So in the end it doesn't matter that my car gets 17mpg. Because it's so much fun, it's worth it.

  70. Re:Anything to be done about the 30 minute recharg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Especially if you don't plan to eat during your coast-to-coast trip.

  71. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by adolf · · Score: 1

    Never, ever running the gasoline engine in a Volt would be a seriously detrimental thing, if for no other reason than the facts that gasoline gets a bit funky as it ages and engines are made to be run. Bad things happen to them during long periods of disuse if not properly prepared.

    40 miles a day in a Volt and never buy gas again? Good luck a few years from now when you need to go 41 miles.

  72. Re: ... with government funds and subsidized charg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Better yet; they could burn all of the birds, fish and crabs since nothing else will be happening with that oil!

  73. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if we combine a business arrangement that doesn't currently exist with a robotic system that doesn't currently exist that pulls standard batteries that don't exist from cars using the standard swapping system that doesn't exist it's easy

  74. Re:Business Model by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or perhaps they could disrupt a profitable market, sell at an appreciable margin, and make lots of money before trying to build massive, Toyota-scale factories out of nothing?

    This. Here in Norway the Tesla Model S is looking like a very compelling offer because they're getting all the tax breaks of electric vehicles and the taxes tend to be much higher on high end cars which means that here a $80k Model S Performance sells for about the same as a slightly upgraded Audi A6 that'd sell for $50k in the US. Or if you look at cars that'd be roughly even priced in the US like the $75k Audi A8 it sells for 90% more than the Tesla here. Yes, it's exploiting a tax structure that won't last but right now they're getting to sell a damn fine high performance car like it was the most environmental-friendly subcompact on the block.

    They've confirmed that 1000+ people here are now on a waiting list in a country of 5 million people, that's the equivalent of 60k+ in the US. And that was before the 99/100 Consumer Reports score which was widely publicized. It's not petrol/diesel car volume but they're getting decent volume - it's not like you're one of ten people in the country who has one, they get real people who have experience with them - most people are very conservative and true to brand when it comes to car purchases - and they get to boot a charger network. All in all, I'd say this looks like wins all around for them. So far I think they've promised the EV perks will last out 2015, if they come to an end I expect a huge rush of Tesla Model S orders before that who are still waiting for the first round of kinks to be worked out first.

    --
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  75. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one gives a crap about the opinion of car enthusiasts.

    Let me help you out here... Tesla == Porn. Major advances forward in computing tech have always been exploited by porn first.. and this is a mix of tech and car porn... sold mostly to the same sorts of people. Additionally.. there's always a market for porn.. even when sitcom level entertainment is available. Tesla has a well defined market they are targeting and starting off with the roadster was a great move. Now they are taking aim to shoot the wind out of the major car makers saddles. This is the future.. slowly unfolding.. startup car company.. electric cars.. the handwriting is in the wind for traditional car makers.

  76. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Entropy98 · · Score: 1

    So if we combine a business arrangement that doesn't currently exist with a robotic system that doesn't currently exist that pulls standard batteries that don't exist from cars using the standard swapping system that doesn't exist it's easy

    Exactly! Could I borrow a few billion dollars?

  77. Superchargers don't work with electric engines by locopuyo · · Score: 1
  78. Re:Anything to be done about the 30 minute recharg by luckymutt · · Score: 1

    So, you plan on doing a coast to coast road trip and only plan to stop for 6 minutes each time the tank is running on empty?
    I suppose you plan on packing all your food to eat on the road as well as a bunch of empty bottles to piss in (please throw them out at the filling station, rather than dropping a pee bomb on the highway.)
    What is your plan for doing #2?

    Seriously, for long road trips, waiting 30 minutes is not a big deal.
    For local driving, you have more than enough charge until you get home to charge over night.

  79. don't care by l3v1 · · Score: 0

    From the article - and I agree - "ranges limited, charge times long, and prices high". Nuff said.

    --
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  80. Woooo, cheapness! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am all for this new cheap motoring, it sits well with my almost free household electricity that comes from nuclear plants and my existing diesel car which uses almost free byproducts from the petroleum production process. I also have broadbandwith whichi can download as many terabytes as I like for pennies a day.
    The best part is that this situation will continue forever.

  81. Re:Business Model by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

    Until there is a MAJOR advancement in batt. tech(as in away from lithium with charge times at least an order of magnitude shorter) as well as a VERY well entrenched nationwide charging system gas and diesel ain't going anywhere except for the upper middle class to rich in major metro areas.

  82. Re:Business Model by wjh31 · · Score: 1

    all electric motorcylces have already beaten the 7 second mark at over 200mph http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_drag_racing

  83. But why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Electric cars don't require forced induction.

    1. Re:But why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  84. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It would be more credible to claim that the ONLY company that tried is bankrupt. You can almost always find a pioneering company that failed. Perhaps fuel cells are the future or maybe someone will invent the Shipstone or Mr Fusion, but battery swap, I believe, can be viable and profitable. Better Place was too far ahead of the curve or was focusing on the wrong niche.

    It's not. Electric cars have batteries form fitted as part of the chassis. To have them in a standard form easily swappable outside the bearing structure would be a dramatic design limitation (as in functional design, not just looks).

  85. Re: one way range by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or take the northern route.

  86. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by AaronW · · Score: 2

    Actually the fast chargers should be more efficient. They're basically pumping DC directly into the battery, bypassing the car's built-in charging circuit. They're fed directly with 480V 3-phase power from a high voltage source. The two that I have seen are right next to a big HV power transformer. The Supercharger units themselves are about half the size of a refrigerator witha large fan on the side.for cooling. Lithium Ion batteries are typically quite efficient when charging as well.

    Each Supercharger cost around $250,000 to build which isn't all that bad. So building 100 of them is only $25 million dollars, which is not all that much. They will more than pay for themselves in terms of added demand for their vehicles due to them.

    They also have announced that they haven't ruled out battery swapping. There are inherent problems with battery swapping. Let's say your car has a new battery. What will be the condition of the battery that is swapped into your car? I could see it if you're leasing a battery instead.

    The Tesla model S battery can be replaced in under 5 minutes. Better Place tried battery swapping and just went bankrupt. Perhaps Tesla can do it more successfully if they choose to do so. I would prefer to keep my battery and just wait the 30 minutes to add 200 miles of range.

    As for a proprietary charging payment system, there isn't one. Tesla has promised that they'll be free to use forever, though cars with the smaller battery size will need to spend $2000 to activate that feature (the 85KWh battery cars don't have to pay to activate it). They are offsetting the electricity usage by installing solar (through Solar City, one of Elon Musk's other companies). If they wanted to do a payment system it would be easy. As a Tesla owner I have an account set up through their web site and the car is connected to the Internet. It wouldn't be that difficult to implement, no more so than ChargePoint or Blink, who have billing systems for using their EV chargers.

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  87. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by AaronW · · Score: 1

    I have heard from multiple sources that each Supercharger cost around $250,000 to build. Out of curiosity I looked up the price of a 1000KVA transformer for 480V 3-phase and it was around $26K for a refurbished one. I know Tesla is very cost conscious from my tour of the factory. They were showing off one of their ceiling mounted cranes. They bought 10 of them for something like $60K when they were normally $100K each new.

    The construction costs should not be that high from the two Superchargers I have been to. They basically poured four concrete peers where the posts with the cables are installed and a concrete pad off to the side which contains a large transformer and a couple Supercharger towers, each about half the size of a refrigerator. The transformer takes high voltage in and steps it down to 3-phase 480V which is then fed into the Superchargers. Each one is capable of outputting 120KW split between two vehicles. The wiring to each post needs to handle up to 255 amps so I'm guessing it's likely 1 gauge wire.

    There's nothing fancy at the Superchargers I have been to. No big obilisk or solar covered roof like they show in the pictures (maybe some have that, but neither the Gilroy nor the Folsom ones have that). I understand later they plan to build out the solar panels which will add more cost, but the cost is supposed to offset the power used and then some.

    I think the Superchargers will more than pay for themselves by increasing demand for their cars. Once they build out their network some more it will completely elimintate the need for my gasoline car for 99% of my driving. If I really need a gasoline car I can just rent one.

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  88. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're right that they're more efficient than combustion engines, but so are bicycles. The point is that fast charges are not the future-- they're a dead end to a technology.

    Battery swapping, on the other hand, is the most cost efficient, environmentally friendly, and quickest form of refueling an battery EV.

    There are plenty of super capacitors and similar improvements in battery technology coming that will you to charge your car in 2-3 min..

  89. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by bentcd · · Score: 2

    and the charging station is probably being powered by a 40 year old coal powered power station

    Tesla's superchargers are powered by solar cell farms operated by SolarCity.

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  90. Looking forward to it, but... by MTEK · · Score: 1

    Waiting in line at these charge stations is going to suck.

  91. phenergy battery by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    So I guess this means they don't have much faith in their new battery. The Al/AlO battery from phenergy I mean. The one they somewhat recently acquired the patent to.

    1. Re:phenergy battery by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      It takes an awfully long time to go from prototype to production... particularly since anything using this tech in a car would have to go through the NHTSA hoopla.

  92. Re: Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fun? You're delusional

  93. Re:Business Model by tgd · · Score: 2

    Car enthusiasts think every single one of the world's top selling cars are pokey boring machines and that doesn't matter the tiniest bit to anyone else. I can guarantee that most car enthusiasts would pan every car I've ever owned. No one gives a crap about the opinion of car enthusiasts. For that matter the primary issue that car enthusiasts have had with electric cars is that they're slow, which the Tesla still is(by car enthusiast standards anyway).

    Are you high? The Model S is one of the fastest production sedans on the planet, and far and away the fastest you can jam five or seven people in.

  94. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Tesla Model S's top speed is a full 50mph less than the top speed of my daily driver. It is quick to 60 ... but with an electric motor I'd hope so! p.s. I am a car enthusiast, as you can imagine from the top speed of my daily driver! :-) I saw a Chevy Volt on the way to work today. I passed on the left.

    It's really very simple to understand how a car enthusiast thinks. An enthusiast has an enormous entertainment budget, and thinks all car costs are entertainment costs.

    Everyone else thinks the car is a utility.

    So in the end it doesn't matter that my car gets 17mpg. Because it's so much fun, it's worth it.

    Don't knock the Volt until you've driven it. Or the Model S. They're deceptively quick, and top speed means pretty much nothing unless you're a one of those "track day" fools who think they're cool driving their street car around a track at 120mph. And even if you are, you'd know top speed means nothing in that situation either. Just like it means nothing in quarter mile time.

    - someone who has owns the Volt, is waiting on a model S and owns a low 10 second street car that can do a 3 second 0-60.

  95. Re: by kurkosdr · · Score: 1

    Define "rapid" in "rapid charging stations" please. It could still mean something like 45 minutes, which is "rapid" compared to the 5-6 hours needed to normally charge a Tesla. Assume you have to cover 700km. If you must do 400km, then wait 45 minutes sitting in a charging station before you continue your trip, I am not interested. And that is assuming they can work out the cost problems. The total cost of ownership of a Tesla for 10 years is still higher than the one of a gasoline powered hatchback or sedan.

  96. Re: by Endo13 · · Score: 1

    You have a good point, but you should have RTFA. It says the rapid charge stations take 30 minutes to charge the battery halfway. Which is why my money says this is all a huge waste. No one wants to sit at some station half an hour to be able to drive another hour and a half.

    I think putting in such charging stations is pointless, unless you have the battery tech to the point where they're actually useful for the average driver. And that would mean charging 3-5 hours worth of driving time in 15 minutes or less. Personally, I don't think we're likely to get there any time soon, if ever. I think we're more likely to find ways to increase the total capacity of car batteries so you can do a day's worth of driving on one charge, then charge overnight.

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  97. Re:Business Model by Darth+Snowshoe · · Score: 1

    Henry Ford knew that for his business to succeed, his workers would have to become his customers, so he made sure they were paid decent wages. When Tesla's line workers can afford to buy a Tesla automobile, then Elon Musk will have succeeded.

  98. Re:Business Model by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

    I don't know about you, but there is actually an electric charging station next to where I live.

  99. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

    No, you don't swap out the battery. It's too build into the car to easily remove and would take a lot of structural integrity out of the chassis to make one removable.

    Instead, what you do is swap out the whole car. Drive to the next station, move your luggage and CD's and change, and everything into another car and continue on your way. That sounds about as reasonable as battery swap. And much more easy to do.

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  100. Free Electricity? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So they can charge their car for free. Nice, people living close to the interstate can just go there all the time to charge their car.
    However, this poses some interesting side effects:
    Even with solar power there is still a maintenance cost involved. Sure the electricity they can generate for free, but solar panels and inverters cost money.
    What happens if they blanket the US? Will people need to pay then? Will people accept or will it be considered 'normal' that an electric car can be recharged for free.
    Basically i'm interested on Tesla's mid/long term plan (for global domination).

  101. Re:Anything to be done about the 30 minute recharg by mark-t · · Score: 1

    Bathroom breaks don't take half an hour. And meal breaks are taken when the location and time of day is agreeable, which *MIGHT* be, but is not particularly statistically likely to be at the exact same point or time that you always need to recharge.

  102. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Politburo · · Score: 1

    The engineers at GM are well aware of this, and the Volt's computer is subsequently aware of it. If you have not filled in ~6 months, it will alert you to add fresh gas. If you don't, it will start burning off the old gas to force you to do so.

    But thanks for this perfect illustration of the "But what about [problem that everyone knows about]? You'll be fucked!" comment.

  103. Re:Anything to be done about the 30 minute recharg by Endo13 · · Score: 1

    That 30 minutes only gets you half a charge, which amounts to barely 2-2.5 hours of driving time. That means if you wanted to spend the day driving (10-12 hours) you'd spend over two hours sitting at charging stations. That's absolutely terrible.

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  104. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Politburo · · Score: 1

    "especially if they're not immediately next to major power lines"

    None of those on major roads, no..

    (And no, these do not need to be near 'major', i.e. transmission, lines. Any 3-phase primary is sufficient, same as most commercial customers)

  105. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by timeOday · · Score: 1
    I just wish the cars with batteries would let you unload the extra batteries when you don't need / want them. Unloading 4-500 lbs from a Volt for a road trip (just leaving one or two for its basic energy management needs) would greatly improve mpg and free up lots of space too.

    Same with the Tesla. Going 300 miles without a recharge is useful occasionally, but how light and quick would the same car be with just enough to easily get me to work and back, some 20 miles.

  106. turn in your geek card by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    superchargers are widely used on locomotives, ships, generators, the term will be around for many decades

    1. Re:turn in your geek card by bentcd · · Score: 1

      superchargers are widely used on locomotives, ships, generators, the term will be around for many decades

      But now you're talking highly technical terms, which will very often tend to overload other more popular meanings and which the general public will always not know of or care about.

      The supercharger as a cool thing to have on your car to make it go faster, is a meaning that will die out in general use. Other more narrowly technical areas will keep their superchargers of course.

      A link to Tesla superchargers is already the #3 link when I search for "supercharger" on Google (and it's not because Google knows who I am); after Wikipedia's (traditional) supercharger article and supercharger pictures.

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  107. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Volt engineers thought of that and the Volt asks to run the gas engine every now and then if you aren't using it, just to make sure it is ready when you do need it.

  108. doomed to fail by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    Environmentally toxic, short lived and manufacturing energy intensive battery power is not the way forward, biofuel from plants grown on scrubland (e.g. sagebrush) is the sensible carbon-neutral solution for long range vehicles such as we already have.

  109. Re:Business Model by RoTNCoRE · · Score: 1

    I think what the poster is trying to say here is that car enthusiasts are a bit myopic with how they rank cars. To me (and I suspect many consumers), an efficient, reliable, low total cost of ownership car with respectable safety ratings is the pinnacle of cars. I don't define my worth by the machine I drive. Enthusiasts don't get excited about these things, and likely don't drive Civics or Corollas.

  110. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    All hybrids do that. Even my cheap insight keeps the engine RPMs in the most efficient range.

  111. Re:Business Model by dublin · · Score: 1

    Quick in a straight line maybe, but always obese and wallowing in the corners.

    The roadster offers a perfect comparison: Drive a Lotus Elise (essentially, a modern gas-driven version of the Tesla Roadster's platform), then drive the Roadster and feel how the excess weight absolutely kills the sporty character of the car by butchering its performance and handling envelope. The only reason it works at all is because the Elise is such a light car to begin with.

    Electric only offers good performance in a straight line, and then only for a few runs - I don't expect a Tesla of any kind would make it through a night of drag racing. And I don't expect we'll see electrics in any kind of road racing anytime soon. The lowliest Corolla would run away from the electrics after their batteries begin to flag just a few laps into the race...

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  112. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by swb · · Score: 1

    It sounds strange, but maybe the answer isn't a swappable battery but a swappable passenger compartment.

  113. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by eepok · · Score: 1

    Note that if the photovoltaic farm is being installed to power the chargers, then the cost of the photovoltaic farm should be included in the cost of the charging station.

    Also consider the amount of electricity per square foot that can be generated even by some of the higher end panels today. How much area would be needed to charge a single Nissan Leaf @ level 2 versus a Tesla at level 3/fast charge? Enough to charge 2 cars simultaneously? If not that, then the sheer amount of batteries required to store the power until needed.

  114. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's see...
    1 battery @ 1200 lbs - too heavy to swap out without significant mechanical help
    2 batteries @ 600 lbs each - still to heavy
    3 batteries @ 400 lbs each - no dice
    4 batteries @ 300 lbs each - might be able to do this with mechanical assistance
    5 batteries @ 240 lbs each - same
    10 batteries @ 120 lbs each - can do this with mechanical assistance, but changing 10 batteries is going to take almost as long as charging would
    20 batteries @ 60 lbs each - still need mechanical assistance, or you'll throw out your back
    40 batteries @ 30 lbs each - can be done *eventually* without mechanical assistance, but again, you'll charge faster than you can swap them all
    50 batteries @ 24 lbs each - almost anybody could do this swap. In about an hour and a half.

    And, you'll end up with more space/weight per unit of energy, because now you've got *multiple* batteries which need charging circuitry, casing, etc.

    Battery swapping might be practical on smaller vehicles, like motorcycles, but it's unlikely to be practical for cars and trucks any time soon.

  115. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by eepok · · Score: 1

    I never said it was cheap to do anything with gasoline. Instead, I quite directly say that installing fast chargers are so cost-prohibitively expensive that it's likely that they're being subsidized by the federal government to serve expensive, wasteful electricity to the very, very few people who would actually use them.

    At the very least, gasoline stations are paid for by private industry and will be able to pay off their own expense. These fast chargers are just getting people used to sub-market value fuel prices.

  116. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by eepok · · Score: 1

    My comment here spurred fantastic conversation. How in the world did it get modded "troll"? Is this a case of "disagreement modding"?

  117. Can LEAF charge at Tesla? by Kevoco · · Score: 1

    It's great for Tesla owners that SuperChargers will be blanketing the nation, but I have a LEAF and wonder if, when SuperChargers start appearing near me, will I be able to charge there - paying for it as I would with Blink or any other EV charging network.

    I see mixed news on this. My LEAF SV has two charging receptacles: a standard SAE J1772-2009 connector for level 1 and 2 charging (120/220 volts AC) and a JARI high-voltage DC connector designed by TEPCO for DC fast charging (480 volts DC 125 amps) using the CHAdeMO protocol.

    The Tesla S uses a proprietary connector. The connectors are not the issue, as they can be added quite trivially.

    It is Tesla's business decision to either permit or forbid competing vehicles to be customers of their charging facilities. Does anyone know of "other" vehicles can or will be able to use the Tesla facilities?

  118. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Petrol has an incredibly energy density, it's why there are no alternatives that can scale. Telsa's vehicles are just gimmicks. Carrying around a ton of laptop batteries is pathetic design, and just wait until all these fashion statement cards need $15,000 battery packs on the second owner's bill.

  119. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

    First, 100 fast chargers does not a nationwide blanket make.

    It doesn't have to fully blanket the nation, just enough to get you from one station to the other.

    Once you do that, there's a chance you'll have towns and cities begging Tesla to install them as well - similar to how the old rail system used to work when rail transportation was king. The towns used to fete the railway executives into building a stop in their town because it attracts people there, and with people comes money.

    And since a Tesla is a luxury car, even if a station cost $1M to build, just having it could easily bring in tons of itinerant Tesla owners willing to spend some dough in town.

    It's like how advertisers pay more for iOS eyeballs than Android eyeballs - because IOS users tend to buy stuff they sell. Your own little Leaf or Volt customer won't bring much money in, but richer Tesla owners?

  120. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    ...and then there's that first leak.

    Relax. It's the first customer to ever use the men's room. Sheesh.

    --
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  121. Re:Business Model by gplus · · Score: 1

    You should work in advertising.

  122. Re:Business Model by chihowa · · Score: 1

    The Tesla Model S's top speed is a full 50mph less than the top speed of my daily driver. It is quick to 60 ... but with an electric motor I'd hope so! p.s. I am a car enthusiast, as you can imagine from the top speed of my daily driver! :-) I saw a Chevy Volt on the way to work today. I passed on the left.

    I'm impressed. You appear to be the sole owner of a fast car who actually drives fast (on the street). Typically, if you see two cars at a stoplight and you're trying to decide which lane to pick, you avoid the lane with the fast car. The faster the car, the slower the owner will drive it.

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  123. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're, the Tesla, the charger, and the power plant aren't 100% efficient. But as an aggregate, they're significantly more efficient than the typical ICE-powered automobile, which gets roughly 16-20% power efficiency from tank to road. That's right, the typical ICE-powered car loses *more* than 80% of the energy stored in it's fuel to various inefficiencies in it's engine, transmission, etc.

  124. Re:Business Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Car enthusiasts think every single one of the world's top selling cars are pokey boring machines and that doesn't matter the tiniest bit to anyone else. I can guarantee that most car enthusiasts would pan every car I've ever owned. No one gives a crap about the opinion of car enthusiasts. For that matter the primary issue that car enthusiasts have had with electric cars is that they're slow, which the Tesla still is(by car enthusiast standards anyway).

    If Tesla wants to change the world, instead of targeting the dominance of the petrol powered sports car of which a few hundred thousand exist in the entire world, they should target the millions of family sedans, small vehicles and other perfectly ordinary cars. You know the ones regular folks use to drive at or below the speed limit on their short daily commutes which is the perfect market for what a Tesla can actually do. Of course then they'd have to try and sell the entire car for less than they currently charge for the battery pack, but if they stopped trying to make it do what it still can't do(be an electric Ferrari), it might actually be possible.

    The bigger question is who on earth would be insane enough to drive from New York to LA in one of these things?

    As with any technology, costs start high and then come down as you build volume.

    Nissan (Leaf) and Ford (Focus EV) and other manufacturers have tried to build mass-market-class EVs, but with current tech, the cost is just too high. So they cut corners as much as they can, but you still end up with a car that's 2x as expensive to buy, and still has poor performance. Naturally, nobody buys them and the volume never builds to where the cost starts to come down.

    At the high end, things are a little different. By not compromising on the technology (using LiIons instead of Lead-acid or NiCad, using a custom platform instead of taking the engine out of an internal combustion car) Tesla has made a car that's competitive with IC-powered vehicles in the same price range. Yes, it's a high price range (we're talking Mercedes S or Audi A8 prices) but that's the point where current internal combustion technology is also at its absolute limit. You just can't build them any quieter or smoother or more powerful. And the Tesla demonstrates that, when it comes to performance and refinement, the best EV tech can beat the crap out of the best IC tech.

    So now an EV maker has a product that's competitive. Which means it will sell, and volume will build, and costs will come down.

  125. free charging? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are there adapters for these superchargers so one can charge up other vehicles or devices? I can just see people hooking up their campers for free electricity at some of the low traffic supercharger stations. lol

  126. What does the air conditioner do to range? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In some places in the Southwest, it's over 110 degrees F for most of the summer.

    I have yet to hear any specific details about how running an air-conditioner affects range on full-electric vehicles, especially when sitting in rush-hour traffic. It might not be as much of an issue if HOV lane rules were enforced, but it seems that only 3 out of every 5 vehicles in that lane are legally allowed to be using it and shouldn't be clogging it up -- so it sucks just as much as every other lane.

  127. And absolutely at hotels by crow · · Score: 1

    Of course, it should be even more obvious to put electric car chargers at hotels. When spending the night, you don't even need the high-speed superchargers. And as we're seeing more plug-in hybrids showing up, these won't just be used by pure electric cars. It's another way for a hotel to differentiate themselves and attract more business.

  128. Re:Business Model by Whorhay · · Score: 1

    That's not a very good comparison because they don't share a lot outside of the body and chasis. There is about a 700 pound weight difference which of course means they handle differently, but the Roadster is still under 3000 pounds. I drove a Porsche 944 for years that was heavier than that and was renowned for it's handling characteristics. For handling weight distribution is far more important than absolute weight. One of the reasons the Model S apparently handles so well is that the battery pack is under the floor boards which gives it a very low and well balenced center of gravity. Anyways in real races cars aren't classed by their appearance but instead by their performance.

  129. Re:Anything to be done about the 30 minute recharg by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

    I live in St. Louis. That means that on a long road trip the supercharger stations I am most likely to use are in Bloomington, IL... Columbia, MO... and Springfield, MO. That'll get me as far as Kansas City, Tulsa or Chicago at which point I can charge again.

    Quite frankly, when I drive to Chicago (about once a year), I typically stop in Bloomington for about half an hour to an hour anyway. It's a nice break point in the drive, and they have a lovely downtown. I know exactly where the Supercharger station is going in and it's within walking distance to some great restaurants and cafes.

    Columbia, MO is a similar story... I don't know where the SC will go in but it's a college town with some fabulous eateries and cafes. No complaints there.

    Springfield... ditto. I don't drive down that way as often as the other two, but again there are some nice places in Springfield. Nice area of the state.

    All three of these places are often where I stop for gas, too. Even though I don't need it, I like to stop and fill her up. While doing so I tend to park the car and wander around a bit to keep blood flowing and stop being such a damned couch potato. Sitting still for 6 hours with only a 5 minute break doesn't sound like fun to me.

    If I were to own a Tesla Model S, I would have to change precisely nothing about my lifestyle in terms of driving today. I would not have to particularly put any great planning into it, and in fact I might find myself with more time to myself because I don't have to detour a mile out of my way on the way to work in order to make sure I hit a gas station. Believe it or not on my daily commute there are ZERO gas stations by the side of the road... they're all quite a ways off. Minimum detour is just under a mile by the time you get off the highway, get gas and get back on. If my car is "fueled" in my garage every night then I'll never have to do this detour again. My life would be made better by a Model S or similar vehicle even without the SC stations... the SC stations just mean that I can take trips in that vehicle that I currently can't. Having said that, I don't often take my car to KC or Chicago, either... Chicago is the more frequent of the two but even then I usually fly.

  130. Re:Business Model by haruchai · · Score: 1

    I'm aware of that but I'm talking about cars. Personally, I don't care as I've never lived anywhere that you could legally drive that fast or would need to.
    I would love a Model S but it's well outside my budget but could do alright most of the time with a LEAF.

    If the Volt gets the promised price cut of $7-10k and either a larger battery or an increase in DoD from 65% to 80-90%, it would definitely make my shortlist of cars to buy.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  131. i'm sure they'll have sure degree of success by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

    But they're far too late to the game to be a major player. Natural gas has the same infrastructure obstruction they've been slowly overcoming, a far more cost competitive product, and a solid established user base in industry and public transportation. NG is the immediate future. Solar might follow it.

  132. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by haruchai · · Score: 1

    Renault was able to do it with the Fluence ZE - the only physical differences from the ICE version are the greater curb weight and an extra 5 inches length.

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  133. Re:... with government funds and subsidized chargi by adolf · · Score: 1

    And thanks for this perfect illustration of the "but I didn't even follow the context!"

    OP was expressing that a Volt owner driving the car less than 40 miles a day would never need to buy gas again.

    Which I'm sure we can both agree is utter bullshit in practical terms.

    (And, no: I didn't know that the Volt had such functionality as automatically burning off old gas. That's a neat trick, even if it doesn't invalidate anything I said. But what happens when it lives in a garage?)

  134. Reduce driver fatigue by saveferrousoxide · · Score: 1

    This might cause a major culture shift in road trips. One, forcing a 30 minute rest every 3-4 hours will do wonders for driver fatigue and provide an easy opportunity for driver swapping. Second, when you can't iron-man a 1,400 mile trip in less than a day, it becomes more probable you'll take a second to stop and take in the local scenery and culture of the area of the US you're driving through. This could do wonders for bringing the country back together since people won't be traveling from one microcosm to another without interacting with all those in between.