OtterJohn
Well-known member
- First Name
- John
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2023
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 152
- Reaction score
- 187
- Location
- Philomath, OR
- Vehicles
- 2023 Ford F-150 Lightning Lariat ER
Thank you!250 kW or more
Sponsored
Thank you!250 kW or more
My understanding was the only reference was by a Tesla Charging representative at a Municipality planning meeting or something like that. All of the Media communication has always said Spring 2024. I take that to mean, June 20th at best.It was mentioned at a Tesla event that the network opens up to Ford in February.
Hopefully, Ford and/or Tesla, have had these in production for awhile and they can get them out in batches quickly.
We can already charge at MagicDock stations for $0.47/kW and $0.35/kW with a $12.99 subscription.Let's not get too excited about the free part yet folks.
It might just be paid for through a "special Ford Network" price of $ 1.50/kWh.
Yeah. I went back and edited my post to include the source I found it at.My understanding was the only reference was by a Tesla Charging representative at a Municipality planning meeting or something like that. All of the Media communication has always said Spring 2024. I take that to mean, June 20th at best.
Remember Ford stated we would receive Bluecruise 1.4 before the end of year 2023?!? I dont trust their timelines.
To be fair, Bluecruise 1.4 is Ford Engineers and the I'd suspect the delay is probably safety related. Tesla network integration, I'd imagine, has a healthy mix of Engineers from both teams.Remember Ford stated we would receive Bluecruise 1.4 before the end of year 2023?!? I dont trust their timelines.
It was noted in the original presser when first announced last year.I'm still confused (doesn't take much these days)...how do we know that only V3/4 chargers will be usable by us? V2 at 150kW is still more throughput than a lot of other charging stations...
Ah, thank you. I can't remember that far back.It was noted in the original presser when first announced last year.
Specifically:I'm still confused (doesn't take much these days)...how do we know that only V3/4 chargers will be usable by us? V2 at 150kW is still more throughput than a lot of other charging stations...
Additionally, it's my understanding that the V2's aren't capable of handling the CCS communication protocol. I'd have to dig around to see where I read that.I'm still confused (doesn't take much these days)...how do we know that only V3/4 chargers will be usable by us? V2 at 150kW is still more throughput than a lot of other charging stations...
I think a big "COOL IT" to all the folks dissing people who got the A2Z adapter, etc. For all the fanboys of the Ford adapter know, it might be as unreliable as Ford's Home Integration System. And compared to all the other expenses of owning a $60K to $100K+ EV, what's a measly $200 to find out what Tesla Supercharging is like and possibly open up your range options months before Ford delivers? The best hope for the Ford adapter is that Tesla had a significant hand in designing it (hopefully). Putting down someone else is for the little people in life.A big F in the chat to those who bought the A2Z and Lectron adapters.
I'm no Tesla expert, others can affirm or correct me, the V2 has a non compatible communication protocolI'm still confused (doesn't take much these days)...how do we know that only V3/4 chargers will be usable by us? V2 at 150kW is still more throughput than a lot of other charging stations...
I bet a donut, they will not be interchangable.So if someone owns both MME and Lightning, will get 2 adapters. Expect to see a whole bunch on eBay.
I don’t know of a quick way but if you click on a site it will show the power level. V2s are limited to 150kW. On PlugShare you can choose the Tesla (Fast) connector type and set the power filter to a max of 200 to see V2 and a min of 200 to see V3.Can someone remind me how we tell V2 from V3/4 on the Tesla DCFC map?