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.
cruisey1987 wrote: » I still think you need at least 2 Chademo plugs in each site, if one is broken then you've no backup, and for a Leaf24 that typically means you can't make the next charger
Kramer wrote: » It's doubtful 3 cars were using DC simultaneously IMO, but possible. The split Delta chargers may just show "occupied" or "unavailable", whether one or both halves are in use. Or not. It's ECars so..........:pac:. Then again, if CCS cars are on both the 50kW & 150kW Delta, no further CCS car can charge, so returning "unavailable" would be reasonable. Similarly, two Chademo cars on both units would mean no additional Chademo car could charge. A third CCS car could charge though, if physically able to reach the cable.
Kramer wrote: » OK, OK, we'll stick a 7kW Type 2 AC socket there for you too (or is the Leaf 24 Type 1?). :P.
Black_Knight wrote: » So far I've seen little signs that we need to focus on putting more than 2 units per site.
Rusky rusky wrote: » Is it just me but who designed these charging places? Basically only one space is usable. Also if someone would take the 2nd place I probably would be blocked in. And if the left one would be used that there's no hope in hell I would be able to reverse in the right one.
liamog wrote: » You may have to park facing the wrong direction, but I don't particularly see that as problematic.
Marlow wrote: » IF !!! you are able to parallel park ... Plenty of people out there, that don't even know how to reverse.
liamog wrote: » Can't blame a well spaced space just because some people can't handle basic vehicle handling skills
Donall.ID.3 wrote: » I know this was discussed before, but just wanted some confirmation or if something had changed. If I'm using an Ecars 50kw charge point. I plug into my CCS car. 10 mins later a Leaf driver plugs in what happens to my charging. I assumed the Nissan Leaf driver wouldn't be able activate the charge point and visa versa, if I came along when a Nissan leaf was plugged in? I could not activate the CCS plug?
innrain wrote: » I'm afraid by the time we get to gridserve size they will have used up all superlatives. What's next ultra?
Marlow wrote: » Ludicrous and Plaid next /M
cruisey1987 wrote: » M.E.G.A hubs
Marlow wrote: » If in doubt, you can always add a plus. So: Hub plus, superhub plus etc. /M
AndyBoBandy wrote: » Someone down in Waterford anyway with balls of steel going to this place after dark.......
Ireland was one of the first countries to have a charging infrastructure that "really put us up ahead of the pack" but "we have fallen behind from where we need to be" in 2020, Mr Ryan said
ELM327 wrote: » Yes. And at the time (2010-12) it was expected that all cars would have 22kW AC as standard.
unkel wrote: » That's funny. At the time there were about a half dozen mainstream EVs for sale in the world but none of them (apart from Zoe) had 22kW AC charging as standard. A more reasonable expectation would have been that all cars would have CHAdeMO DC fast charging as standard. Although even by as early as 2010, CCS was looking like the DC fast charging standard in the making.