scottf200
Well-Known Member
It appears that EVgo can get NACS cables with handles per below:... Meanwhile, you cannot even buy "NACS" ... charge handles are 'soon'. Celebrating this as a win for consumers is naive.
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It appears that EVgo can get NACS cables with handles per below:... Meanwhile, you cannot even buy "NACS" ... charge handles are 'soon'. Celebrating this as a win for consumers is naive.
They added Tesla CHAdeMO handles, hidden in metal boxes, to their chargers. They are limited to 50kw.It appears that EVgo can get NACS cables with handles per below:
The IP is already on the table and there is now overwhelming will to make it happen. The commercial agreements are depending on standardization and Wall St applauds it. No one, including EM, has any reason to block it. Yes, the functionaries must complete their procedural work, but it really is, for all intents and purposes, a done deal.I see both sides of this debate, but there's a really simple, undeniable fact - from a public standards viewpoint, NACS currently is a standard in name only. Telsa owns it, Tesla manages it, and can make any changes at any time without approval from anyone.
Until the standard is signed over to a true standards organization, it's a standard in name only. When it is signed over, it *could* be only a physical standard, or it could include voltage specs, communication specs, etc. Hopefully the latter. Until then, this is all speculation and subject to Elon's whims.
ELon backed of out the Twitter commitment at one point - anyone think he is above shenanigans with NACS?
CCS is the global standard for charging. The US Government also thinks so and is planning to invest billions in a CCS network across the US. Hundreds of thousands of chargers.CCS lobby? Do you mean German dieselgate lawyers?
Exactly. They must have a CCS connection. That is where magic dock comes into play.
I created an account just to counter this false information. There is only ~$3.5B of NEVI funding for CCS charger installation. The remaing BIL funding is mainly targeted at L2 charger installations.5.) The US government has set aside 7.5 Billion to create a nationwide charging network of hundreds of thousands of CCS chargers. Why CCS - because that is the global standard. Ford and GM sold out to Tesla for a measly 12,000 chargers when literally hundreds of thousands of CCS chargers are going to come on line in the next decade.
I'm sorry. Read the announcement carefully:I created an account just to counter this false information. There is only ~$3.5B of NEVI funding for CCS charger installation. The other $4B is mainly targeted at L2 charger installations.
And no, $3.5B isn't going to get you "hundreds of thousands of CCS chargers". Not even a hundred thousand. In Oregon the NEVI administrators are expecting each stall to cost more than $200k, and they appear to be keeping ~$20k/stall for state overhead. So, all the years of NEVI funding is only going to add ~16,000 CCS chargers nationwide. (Oregon is expecting the first year funds, ~$8M, to be spent on installing only 44 CCS chargers at 11 locations.)
And given announcements already from AmpUp, EVpassport, FreeWire, FLO, EVgo, and ABB about supporting NACS, I am expecting a lot of the NEVI funded chargers will have a paired NACS connector.
tl;dr: The government said the ~$7.5B would be used for ~500k chargers; of that less than 20k of them will be DC fast chargers, almost all of them will be L2 chargers.
While Tesla currently has ~13k chargers that GM/Ford will get access to, they have said that the network will double by the end of next year. (And that doesn't count the NEVI funded chargers that will have NACS.)
I agree, but a big issue that I haven't seen anyone bring up here: Tesla is currently in the process of suing Rivian for, alleged, IP theft. I somehow doubt that Tesla is going to be open to an agreement with Rivian until that case is settled.While that's all speculation, it's clear that Rivian needs to do something to deal with the challenge that Ford and GM have laid down.
CCS is the global standard for charging. The US Government also thinks so and is planning to invest billions in a CCS network across the US. Hundreds of thousands of chargers.
Nope.There is no global charging standard. China has their own plug. Europe has their own unique CCS plug that is not the same as CCS1 that is found in USA.
Even in the market CCS1 is supposed to be the standard in, the plug doesn’t dominant. Far more 250kW Superchargers than 250kW+ CCS chargers. Far more NACS cars than CCS cars.
CCS1 is everything but a standard, really
Nope.
CCS is the global standard and therefore focuses on international interoperability and, unlike NACS, is future proofed to support many other use cases beyond public DC fast charging. Early, unconsolidated announcements of changes create uncertainty in the industry and lead to investment obstacles.
https://electrek.co/2023/06/05/tesla-ford-partnership-charging-standard-angers-ccs-coalition/#:~:text=CCS is the global standard,and lead to investment obstacles.
All that points out is that DC fast charger manufacturers are greatly overbuilding capacity. Each one of them is building enough capacity to produce all of the CCS chargers for all 5 years of the NEVI funding every year. That isn't going to end well for them. (Maybe they mis-read the announcements to be 500k CCS chargers like you did, when it is going to be closer to 20k.)I'm sorry. Read the announcement carefully:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/02/15/fact-sheet-biden-harris-administration-announces-new-standards-and-major-progress-for-a-made-in-america-national-network-of-electric-vehicle-chargers/#:~:text=The $70 million, 150,000 square,and 700 jobs by 2030.
Funding is going to accelerate the buildout of hundreds of thousands of DC fast chargers over the next decade. Do the math on the individual manufacturers that the White House calls out.
Even if you argue the numbers - my points all still stand.