B_Wagon136
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TLDR:
I understand Rivian's Charging Network plus the Tesla partnership provides a lot of coverage along popular routes for long roadtrips, but what kind of kW capacity do I need to be on the lookout for when I'm looking for charge from 10-20% up to 70-80% in 20-30 minutes time?
The rest:
My wife and I are inching closer towards an R1S purchase and this forum has been a great resource for us. Recently we rented a 2023 R1S Launch when we had family visiting in town and the kids and parents both loved it too. Ample cargo space and no complaints about third row legroom!
This rental experience was our first exposure to what owning an EV could be like and our biggest question is centered around "fast charging" while out on the road.
When it came time to return our rental, we had to charge back up to the 90% level we picked it up at and I feel foolish for not fully understanding the difference in all the EV stations out there.
A couple hours before the vehicle was due back our battery was around 50% and I pulled up to a Chargepoint station in my office complex (while the car was in conserve mode). I assumed this would be plenty of time to get the battery charged back up to where it needed to be -- for some reason the Hyundai Ionic 5 commercial touting 178 miles of charging in just 15 minutes was stuck in my head.
It was a 6.6 kW charger, and seeing the charging rate of "4 mi of range per hour" show up on the screen was a sobering dose of reality. I sat there for a few minutes thinking "surely the charging speed will pick up soon" but I was left sinking to a slow death in EV quicksand.
From there I unplugged, turned the car back on, got out of conserve mode, and pulled up to the charger on the next spot over. Same 6.6 kW charger shown on the Chargepoint interface, but this time the charging rate showed as "12 mi of range per hour." Better but still not anywhere close to what I needed and we ended up returning the car shamefully with quite a bit less range than what we picked it up as.
I've familiarized myself with plugshare and to my dismay there are not any "fast chargers" (say, 100+ kW) within 20 miles of me (we live between LA and SD).
We didnt do anything but city driving on this trip but if we were to eventually own an R1S it would be for the size and capability to take 7-pax roadtrips upwards of 500-1000 miles.
I understand Rivian's Charging Network plus the Tesla partnership provides a lot of coverage along popular routes for these kinds of trips, but I'm curious what kind of kW capacity I'd need to be on the lookout for when I'm looking for charge from 10-20% up to 70-80% in 20-30 minutes time? And from what I''ve gathered, some of the fast-charging stations can be limited to only a handful of actual chargers (sometimes just 6 or 8)... are these charges not always jammed full of other EV's already filling up? A 20 minute fast charge obviously isn't as great if we have to wait an hour just for a charger to open up...
What have your experiences been with these types of things out in the real world? Are crowded supercharge stations an overblown concern? And is Rivian's battery charging speed above or below standard for other EVs?
I understand Rivian's Charging Network plus the Tesla partnership provides a lot of coverage along popular routes for long roadtrips, but what kind of kW capacity do I need to be on the lookout for when I'm looking for charge from 10-20% up to 70-80% in 20-30 minutes time?
The rest:
My wife and I are inching closer towards an R1S purchase and this forum has been a great resource for us. Recently we rented a 2023 R1S Launch when we had family visiting in town and the kids and parents both loved it too. Ample cargo space and no complaints about third row legroom!
This rental experience was our first exposure to what owning an EV could be like and our biggest question is centered around "fast charging" while out on the road.
When it came time to return our rental, we had to charge back up to the 90% level we picked it up at and I feel foolish for not fully understanding the difference in all the EV stations out there.
A couple hours before the vehicle was due back our battery was around 50% and I pulled up to a Chargepoint station in my office complex (while the car was in conserve mode). I assumed this would be plenty of time to get the battery charged back up to where it needed to be -- for some reason the Hyundai Ionic 5 commercial touting 178 miles of charging in just 15 minutes was stuck in my head.
It was a 6.6 kW charger, and seeing the charging rate of "4 mi of range per hour" show up on the screen was a sobering dose of reality. I sat there for a few minutes thinking "surely the charging speed will pick up soon" but I was left sinking to a slow death in EV quicksand.
From there I unplugged, turned the car back on, got out of conserve mode, and pulled up to the charger on the next spot over. Same 6.6 kW charger shown on the Chargepoint interface, but this time the charging rate showed as "12 mi of range per hour." Better but still not anywhere close to what I needed and we ended up returning the car shamefully with quite a bit less range than what we picked it up as.
I've familiarized myself with plugshare and to my dismay there are not any "fast chargers" (say, 100+ kW) within 20 miles of me (we live between LA and SD).
We didnt do anything but city driving on this trip but if we were to eventually own an R1S it would be for the size and capability to take 7-pax roadtrips upwards of 500-1000 miles.
I understand Rivian's Charging Network plus the Tesla partnership provides a lot of coverage along popular routes for these kinds of trips, but I'm curious what kind of kW capacity I'd need to be on the lookout for when I'm looking for charge from 10-20% up to 70-80% in 20-30 minutes time? And from what I''ve gathered, some of the fast-charging stations can be limited to only a handful of actual chargers (sometimes just 6 or 8)... are these charges not always jammed full of other EV's already filling up? A 20 minute fast charge obviously isn't as great if we have to wait an hour just for a charger to open up...
What have your experiences been with these types of things out in the real world? Are crowded supercharge stations an overblown concern? And is Rivian's battery charging speed above or below standard for other EVs?
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