LightningShow
Well-known member
New England. Primarily MA/NH/ME.Your region would be the Northeast, right?
https://media.electrifyamerica.com/en-us/releases/173
https://media.electrifyamerica.com/en-us/releases/169
Sponsored
New England. Primarily MA/NH/ME.Your region would be the Northeast, right?
https://media.electrifyamerica.com/en-us/releases/173
https://media.electrifyamerica.com/en-us/releases/169
The reality is road tripping in a non-Tesla EV is an early adopter unfortunate at this stage of the game. There are plenty of merits to the Lightning but with the current state EV charging infrastructure, taking long road trips is not one of them. This will of course improve over time, but will it outpace the amount of EVs coming out in the near future?
Just look at EA’s own map. If you filter for “coming soon” they only show 7 new locations “coming soon” in the entire US. One east of the Mississippi. That one east of the Mississippi is in Hartford where they already have a station. From what i can tell EA has pretty much given up on expanding their network.
The press releases are super exciting. Kind of like Cybertruck.
EA is going to install 200 locations over the next 5 years with TA.
EA is going to double the stations at Bank of America locations. Last year they had 46 locations, by the end of 2023 will have 90 locations.
EA is going to install charging at 25 IKEA locations.
They raised $450 million from Siemens and VB added more cash to double the system between 2022 and 2026.
The press releases are super exciting. Kind of like Cybertruck.
You have nerve. Expecting people to research things before buying, understand pros and cons, make intelligent, or at least informed decisions? Who the hell do you think you are?Bwhahahahha. That is pretty funny.
I guess the trick is that if you live in a state that is not on board for EV adoption - like Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, West Virginia, Wyoming, or Louisiana - or live in a remote part of the US like the eastern Montana or the Dakotas, then you should really do your research on whether an EV is the right vehicle for you at this point in time.
On top of that, if you cannot understand how to use the tools at hand to figure out charger status, then an EV maybe not the right vehicle for you. Plugshare should be your best friend if you own an EV. A person should rarely, if ever, be surprised to know the working status of a charger in advance of arrival.
At the end of the day, charging networks place chargers in locations where they will make money. If you live in Lubbock, TX, which has extremely low EV adoption and is off any major highway, then maybe an EV is not the right car if you road trip a lot. Pretty simple.
As an example, this is the area I primarily travel in. This picture is EA stations onlyWhy do we try to hang the entire EV infrastructure on EA? Their primary business objective is to satisfy the obligations spelled out in the VW group “dieslegate” fiasco.
The Blue Oval Network has partner agreements with at least 7 different charging networks. EA is the largest, but not the only one. I would like to see EVGo, ChargePoint and Shell Recharge step up and try to compete with EA so there is competition. We don’t need EA to be bigger and more dominant, we need there to be choices in charging so we can vote with our $$$
Right now EVGo seems to be stepping it up on a regional basis. I’m hoping their partnership with GM will drive that to be a more national approach. It’s also promising that Shell recharge is buying up some smaller networks to expand their presence, they just need to step up their standard station from 50 kW to 150 kW. Chargepoint’s business model is a bit curious and doesn’t seem to ensure a uniform customer experience. They also seem to be plagued by The 50 kW station syndrome in most of the country
You have nerve. Expecting people to research things before buying, understand pros and cons, make intelligent, or at least informed decisions? Who the hell do you think you are?
I don’t have a problem with charging, i have a problem with EA’s poor (and declining) reliability and seeming lack of interest to expand their network. Around here EA is the best and only option for DCFC. There are no other operators with stations over 62.5kW. I want EA to do better.Bwhahahahha. That is pretty funny.
I guess the trick is that if you live in a state that is not on board for EV adoption - like Texas, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, West Virginia, Wyoming, or Louisiana - or live in a remote part of the US like the eastern Montana or the Dakotas, then you should really do your research on whether an EV is the right vehicle for you at this point in time.
On top of that, if you cannot understand how to use the tools at hand to figure out charger status, then an EV maybe not the right vehicle for you. Plugshare should be your best friend if you own an EV. A person should rarely, if ever, be surprised to know the working status of a charger in advance of arrival.
At the end of the day, charging networks place chargers in locations where they will make money. If you live in Lubbock, TX, which has extremely low EV adoption and is off any major highway, then maybe an EV is not the right car if you road trip a lot. Pretty simple.
What do people generally think of EVGo’s system? I’ve primarily used EA and the reliability sucks, the lockouts happen and are frustrating, but the pricing structure is dead simple to understand.I don’t have a problem with charging, i have a problem with EA’s poor (and declining) reliability and seeming lack of interest to expand their network. Around here EA is the best and only option for DCFC. There are no other operators with stations over 62.5kW. I want EA to do better.
Maybe Shell or EVgo can jump in and fill the gap but that still hasn’t started happening yet.
Get politicians involved? Seriously?when the wife says I do not trust this for long trips, then there is no going back.
I do not need to use 3 apps to be able to get somewhere. To be honest, I always viewed people complaining about this as Karens until it happened to me.
on top of it is that the alternate location had 150kwh chargers but one was maxing out at 50kwh and the second one at 75kwh.
again the truck is fantastic, but the charging network sucks. If ford really makes 200k electric trucks, the current charging network will kill the brand. They need to fix this. Talk with local politicians or whatever they have to do to fix it.