TRP
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My opinion, nothing more.Really?1 This falls under the category of "shut up" he explained.
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My opinion, nothing more.Really?1 This falls under the category of "shut up" he explained.
I think this is the point of contention.lots of horror stories about stranded Mustang Mach-Es and Taycans, with 50%+ failure-to-charge experiences where they arrived at high speed EA CCS chargers.
Really dude? - you should see what they say about me on the Tesla forums. I am most def NOT a Tesla fanboi, major Elon critic and have big issues with the company. I am a longtime Ford owner, have a three Ford pickups now including a 2021 PowerBoost King Ranch, and a Lightning on order, low reservation number, #1 at Grieco in Delray Beach, so active here. NOT a Tesla fanboi but definitely an EV fan. Definitely WANT EA to work. Definitely seeing it not work, but WANT to use it to go from Delray Beach FL to Huletts Landing NY next June in my new Lightning towing my boat. Right now that's not likely. Right now there isn't a single EA charger anywhere near my farm in Pungoteague, VA, or even on the entire Eastern shore of DelMarVa - and NONE is planned. Hell, there are four Tesla Superchargers on DelMarVa right now (and many more Tesla destination chargers), but NO EA chargers even in planning. So how the hell do you get from Norfolk to Newark while towing - even assuming they work ? I can do so easily in my Tesla. I cannot in a Lightning, and given no plan, apparently won't be able to do so.If you have such a problem with anything Non-Tesla, why are you even here.
Clearly you are a Tesla Fanboy, no judgment. Just stating the obvious.
I've used EA exclusively in my Mach E and have NEVER had to leave an EA station without getting a charge. When I used Plug and Charge it worked every time for me. I now use the EA Plus+ membership plan and it works great as well.
You are one annoying SOB, IMHO of course
Agreed, the reported failures are likely overstated, but it is what some major publications have indicated when doing their road trip testing - but ANY failures while road tripping are nightmares when at low state of charge. Yes,, folks here will criticize the idiot testers and stupid routing choices, as though THAT should be a ritieria - the POINT is that EV driving should be on parity with ICE driving in order to engender broad-based public acceptance and adoption - it should NOT require significant advance planning, using a bunch of apps (which I still do personally because I know the issues exists, despite telling regular non-EV folks how normal EV driving is).I think this is the point of contention.
Is the Tesla network/reliability/experience better than CCS, on average? Absolutely.
Is "50%+ failure-to-charge" at EA accurate? No. Maybe the percentage of first-attempt-to-plug-in hiccups are that high, but I haven't seen any data that indicates actual failure to charge at an EA site is anywhere near that high. Estimating from videos and complaints that are going to inherently highlight issues isn't convincing data.
To expect EV to be on parity with ICE at this stage of development is to have very unrealistic expectations. EV's are still pioneer status in the US. You may not live in a spot that is supportive of EV's and it may not work for you. That is why those who are considering EV's especially where travel and range are issues need to look at the network around them.the POINT is that EV driving should be on parity with ICE driving in order to engender broad-based public acceptance and adoption - it should NOT require significant advance planning
I think you mean atypical. I helped this Porsche owner with his first charge at EA. Had I not been there, he might be one of the "admittedly small sample" who had issues. Always refer to this OutofSpec motoring (arguably the best EV testers in world) video where on long distance runs with Taycan (their favorite EV) they had EA issues initially but then learned how EA and Porsche worked and then had no issues.Typical Taycan owner
That article is from 2 years ago--I'd be interested in seeing updated stats. My recent experience with EA has been great, but things were still a bit spotty in early 2020.So apparently plushare comments indicate EA's failure rate is ~20%ish, not 50%. Still a huge problem. And they know it, are working on it. https://electrek.co/2019/11/26/interview-electrify-america-chargers/
I generally agree with these comments, but Out of Spec did have EA on speed dial for that trip. I think they actually called before some of their charging stops so EA could make sure the chargers were working.I think you mean atypical. I helped this Porsche owner with his first charge at EA. Had I not been there, he might be one of the "admittedly small sample" who had issues. Always refer to this OutofSpec motoring (arguably the best EV testers in world) video where on long distance runs with Taycan (their favorite EV) they had EA issues initially but then learned how EA and Porsche worked and then had no issues.
"Kyle Connor, from the Out of Spec Motoring YouTube Channel, took a Porsche Taycan across the country on December 31 and set a new electric Cannonball record with a time of 44:26. This beats the previous record set by Connor and his team in a Tesla Model 3 by almost an hour."
You don't do that without good public charging base.
Indeed as the EA/MachE program was just getting started and their MachE was the first to MachE to use them.Out of Spec did have EA on speed dial for that trip.