That is interesting, thx. The picture seems to imply the customer/car driver has to show up with the chord/plug for both ends, and then leave it there to charge for 4-10 hours.
Separately, the 'Ordinary Citizen' comment is also interesting:
Given the crime rates in NYC/Manhattan, I would certainly not think many people would feel comfortable leaving it unattended without the plug/charger cord getting stolen for the precious metals inside. Am I missing something though?Quote:
It's Electric is focused on building so-called Level 2 chargers, which use comparatively little electricity but take between 4 and 10 hours to fully charge a vehicle. These are ideal for neighborhoods where people plan to charge their car overnight.
Level 3 chargers, like the ones at the newly opened hub from startup Gravity on 42nd street, can fully charge a car in less than an hour but require far more energy which is why the Department of Transportation's Office of Energy and Transportation are pushing for seven times more Level 2 than Level 3 chargers to be built.
It's Electric has raised a total of $11.8 million from major venture capital firms like Brooklyn Bridge Ventures and Uber, which is betting the company can help it get more electrical vehicles into the ride-share business.
Separately, the 'Ordinary Citizen' comment is also interesting:
None of the math on this stuff adds up in my mind, and that's before adding in BEV self-driving taxi's, etc. Maybe BEV's just are that much less practical in highly congested urban areas because the charge time:location calculus means it is a real problem to risk running low within these areas, as adoption rates increase (if so).Quote:
The math in this article does not add up.
Info from the article:So in 2030, we will have 1250 L3 [fast] chargers and 8750 L2 (4-10 hr) chargers in the city to charge 3 million vehicles. Let's assume 1 hr/charge for L3 and 6 hrs/charge for L2, a fully utilized L3 charger can charge 24 cars a day. That's 30,000 total / day with 1250 of them. A fully utilized L2 charger will charge 4 vehicles per day - that's another 35,000 vehicles. NYC will, according to this article have 3 million EVs and the ability to charge only 65,000 / day....and that's not even accounting for broken chargers, time with nobody charging, times with double parked trucks blocking chargers, people plugging into the L2s overnight even though they're fully charged.....
- New York City alone expects EV registrations to jump from today's 62,000 to about 3 million in that time frame. [by 2030]
- It's Electric ... is aiming to help NYC's charging network grow from 1,400 EV chargers to 10,000 by 2030.
- Department of Transportation's Office of Energy and Transportation are pushing for seven times more Level 2 [between 4 and 10 hours to fully charge] than Level 3 chargers to be built.