The key elements include six high speed charging hubs on motorways capable of charging eight vehicles simultaneously; 16 high speed charging hubs capable of charging four vehicles simultaneously; additional high power chargers at 34 current 50 kW locations; upgrading over 50 22 kW chargers to 50 kW, and replacing up to 264 locations with 528 charge points at the pre-existing pilot grade of 22 kW to next generation high reliability models.
slave1 wrote: » Ah, where you been man? That's what you get when you've a PHEV:p Charging came in August 10th'ish
cruisey1987 wrote: » At least he wasn't using one of Kramers dodgy cables
Deleted User wrote: » We should harass Elon on twitter to get V3 superchargers, tell him the longer we wait the less chance of buying a model 3 lol.
Deleted User wrote: » I don't even see any planned on the map either, all 150 kw, have any been CCS retrofitted ?
Deleted User wrote: » Bit of a joke already and still the M9 suffers.
McGiver wrote: » He should start selling those. Genuinely exclusively designed for Irish AC charger market (it wouldn't help ya in Europe with per min pricing :P).
Black_Knight wrote: » What are ye on about?
liamog wrote: » Allegedly kramer downrated the AC cable to make the car charge slower, that way you can take advantage of the free parking whilst charging for longer.
AndyBoBandy wrote: » The planned ones are there alright;
obi604 wrote: » where did yu get access to this map? What location is the one in Galway?
Mickeroo wrote: » Athenry.
obi604 wrote: » ah ok, and is this for the 150kw station?
ELM327 wrote: » Problem with the M9 is that it doesnt go anywhere super important (like Galway, Cork, Belfast, Limerick) and thus is suffering the same fate as the north west
Black_Knight wrote: » Ah, I just tune it down in the car. Lowest rate is around 16amp though, so about 70c an hour.
ELM327 wrote: » In a Tesla with a single phase cable you can charge at 5a single phase or 1.2kW
innrain wrote: » In Dublin City Center doesn't make any sense to use the few AC charges and pay the parking fee; works out something like 69 cents per kWh, charging @7kW. Cheaper on Ionity with chargepoint. In the light of these Tesco chargers make sense if you have one within walking distance.
innrain wrote: » In Dublin City Center doesn't make any sense to use the few AC charges and pay the parking fee
Deleted User wrote: » Anyone who needs a charge will be glad to pay.
[Deleted User] wrote: » The North West doesn't even have a Motorway