unkel wrote: » Agree with that too. If I plug my Tesla in when near empty, it starts charging at 130kW but that speed starts dropping immediately. If you are not an EV nerd, this must looks very worrying. VW have done that much better with the etron which has a decent flat charging curve which makes a lot more sense if you want to get people to adopt to EVs As McGiver rightly says, we are still only in the innovator stage in this country, not even early adopter yet.
Black_Knight wrote: » From what I've seen of the id3 and 4, VW have done poorly with coldgating so far.
ELM327 wrote: » Hard to believe it's still in innovator stage, 10 years after the delivery of the first leafs here.
McGiver wrote: » Innovators are the first 2.5%. What's the EV prbetration here? Definitely no more than 1%. I don't count PHEVs Wasn't it some 11k EVs... Out of 2M+ cars.
ELM327 wrote: » I agree Unkel. I think we need to shift the focus from adding super fast charging at the start of a session, to maintaining high speeds throughout - albeit slightly lower than peak.
liamog wrote: » I agree with this, the downward march of battery prices and the increase in energy density have got us to where we are. I think that's at least one more cycle of both required (taking us to 2025) before we start to see a stabilisation of EV range. Personally I think it's going to be somewhere between 80kWh and 100kWh to give a reliable range of 500km.
McGiver wrote: » Yes but that's all due to electrochemistry to protect the cells from thermal and other damage during fast charging. That's why the tapering, current tech can't sustain and maintain high C charging for long. That's why all these new superfast charging cells are being developed, they could do what you say. Say a cell like the StoreDot is designed for 10C superfast charging. With some safety margin etc your 50 kWh pack will be able to charge 7C on a 350 kW Ionity charger within minutes - e.g. 35 kW from 10% to 80% in 6 minutes. And you really wouldn't need super large packs then.
McGiver wrote: » The trend has slowed down and the current Li-ion tech has not much further to go really in terms of capacity and lower price. 2010 - $1191 per kWh 2015 - $384 2016 - $295 2017 - $221 2018 - $181 2019 - $157 2020 - $137 So it could be both. Larger “slow“ charging packs and medium fast charging packs may cost the same, eventually. Up to the consumer to pick the one suitable for them.
McGiver wrote: » from 10% to 80% in 6 minutes. And you really wouldn't need super large packs then.
McGiver wrote: » The trend has slowed down and the current Li-ion tech has not much further to go really in terms of capacity and lower price.
unkel wrote: » Yes, we are in a small minority here, McGiver, but I also believe there is no reason why a cheap city car in future should have a 60kWh battery. 20-30kwh is plenty, these cars rarely do big trips and if they do, they need to stop once or twice for 10 minutes. That's perfectly acceptable if that would make their car cost €15k instead of €20k
MJohnston wrote: » I'd go further — there should be no cheap city cars in the not-so-distant future. If we can cleanse our city centres of private cars, there would be a real opportunity for a fleet of self-driving pods to ferry people to their in-city destinations. Anyway...
ELM327 wrote: » Private car ownership being removed is a step backwards. Consumers want convenience and despite go car being here for years, the shift has not happened. It won't happen as nothing beats the convenience of owning your own car.
McGiver wrote: » Yeah of course, we the innovators (not really early adopters yet), agree. We are OK to wait 15-30 minutes with kids for loo, coffee etc. General population - not much so, they're impatient. I tried to explain this to many people, to show that EVs are very well doable in today's Ireland, that you should/need to take a break anyway and the car can charge, but generally it's not getting a positive response. Now, saying that was talking about the ID3 with one fella from Donegal and he asked me - can the ID3 get from Donegal to Galway City and back on one charge? It's a route he would be doing weekly or twice a month. It's 400 km round trip. You could maybe do it in summer, can't do it most of the year and needs 45 min stop for charging at 50 kW DC somewhere along the way. If there was a DC 100+ kW capable charger somewhere on the route then you could cut it to 25 minutes. I think it's still more than most people are willing to accept - people are impatient and always in a hurry. Obviously, we know that no one is (or should be) undertaking any such journey without any sort of a break, and you could of course charge 11 kW AC for few hours while the car sits idle! But let's assume it's a roundtrip with minimum break, and then you see the issue is the infrastructure on all primary motorway and national roads - it doesn't exist in most of the country. Ionity is simply not enough as it stands - you would need at least 10 more hubs like these to make any sort of journeys possible and you'd still need to wait 20-ish minutes to charge on 100 kW+ DC. So yeah, fast charging is really needed - Tesla know it that's why they've been doing what they've been doing.
liamog wrote: » Personally I won't give up private transportation until there is a solution for mobile personal storage
Silent Running wrote: » When I lived in Dublin I probably could have given up car ownership, but didn't want to. Now I live in rural Ireland, there's no way in hell that I could get by without owning a car.
ELM327 wrote: » From my cold dead hands will they pull my private car ownership.
Kramer wrote: » The way the world is going, that could become a reasonable possibility in the near future .
liamog wrote: » I agree with you, the space that small cars fill with approx 30kWh is a really good niche. It's the family hatchbacks where I think we're close but have one more round of battery increases before we see a wholesale move to primary car as an EV. It's a real shame as I think most people's needs are covered. If the winter range (and charging ability) of the ID.3 58kWh was its current summer range I'd be recommending them without caveats.
KCross wrote: » Are you basing it off Bjorn's Norweigan test at -25°C! The ID cars have battery heating hardware included, its just the software isnt properly utilising it yet. There is a software update coming that is supposed to address some battery heating stuff in the ID cars so we need to see how the tests fair out once thats applied... unfortunately we will be rolling into the summer by then so it could be next winter before we really find out.
Black_Knight wrote: » Moreso the coldgating id4 after a 90km/hr run.
cruisey1987 wrote: » Ah you see the ID.4 is designed for the autobahn, you need to drive at 120 to avoid cold gating. Slow drivers will be punished with slow charging Hopefully I'll have mine in time for NEXT winter, so I'll keep ye posted on how the charging speed goes
Black_Knight wrote: » Sorry Garda! Battery is cold, just warming it up
innrain wrote: » Should this be worrying? Are this large SUVs going to be plugged in or is just a tax scheme?