
Tesla owners discover the cold, hard truth about EVs
Not all batteries like subzero temperatures
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I also think that EVs still have a long way to go. For example, there are prototypes for swappable batteries for EVs. You drive your cart into a port and it pulls out the drained battery and pushes in a fresh one, and the drained battery gets charged for the next car. For smaller cars, there are hand-changeable batteries.They're fun to drive. Some of the interior designs are really a piece of art. More and more the truth comes out about the problems with the technology including how much power they truly consume and how non "green" it is. We may replace a vehicle next year and are watching the pluses and minuses. Like @Nithavela we have some of the same things in mind. To be able to plug in at night and avoid the gas station routine seems a plus. But the state of the gas and hybrid technologies are pretty refined these days and we don't want to trade no problems for problems.
Interesting problem: The batteries seem to have to be brought up to a certain temperature in order to rapid charge them. But some of the article implies there is no power at these charging stations. If it's the former problem, then it's interesting that the Tesla or charging stations cannot bring the batteries up to temperature in this kind of cold.
My guess is pre-conditioning is something automatic. All it would take is a thermostat tied to a relay that switched electricity to warming the battery until it reached the proper temperature. If, however, the battery continues to lose heat as fast as can be gained from warming, then, based only on the article description, it could just sit there.Yes, I was wondering how much of this issue is caused by Tesla drivers not "pre-conditioning" the battery for optimum charging while parking their car's in sub-zero weather conditions.
Noting that Norway drivers, a cold country with over 90% EV adoption rate for new cars, must be doing something right....
As to Sweden, maybe they don't drive Teslas? Other than that, I do have the question of average driving distance in Sweden.
Here's a video of car guys recently testing the range of a model 3 Tesla at around 0°F. They got around only 1/2 the range (~150/~300). Of course, it is one test with one car and not statistical, but it is an indication (Pushing the car is just for the thumbnail):
That display seems a safety nightmare.
Of course if you don't like cold batteries, you could get a diesel.
Here's a video of car guys recently testing the range of a model 3 Tesla at around 0°F. They got around only 1/2 the range (~150/~300). Of course, it is one test with one car and not statistical, but it is an indication (Pushing the car is just for the thumbnail):
That display seems a safety nightmare.
You mean a charger that supplies 250 Kw? That means a higher draw for the charger itself.a 250 kilowatt charger.
Here's a video of car guys recently testing the range of a model 3 Tesla at around 0°F. They got around only 1/2 the range (~150/~300). Of course, it is one test with one car and not statistical, but it is an indication (Pushing the car is just for the thumbnail):
Unlike cars with internal combustion engines, an electric vehicle has two batteries: a low-voltage and a high-voltage. In particularly cold weather, the lower-voltage, 12-volt battery can also lose charge, like it does in traditional vehicles.
When that happens, the E.V. cannot charge at a fast charger until the low voltage battery has been jump-started, said Albert Gore III, a former Tesla employee who is now the executive director of the Zero Emission Transportation Association, which represents automakers including Tesla and has released a tips sheet for operating electric vehicles in cold weather.
The challenge for electric vehicles is the two sides of the battery — the anode and the cathode — have chemical reactions that are slowed during extremely cold temperatures. That affects both the charging and the discharging of the battery, said Jack Brouwer, director of the Clean Energy Institute and a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at the University of California, Irvine.
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Electric Car Owners Confront a Harsh Foe: Cold Weather (Published 2024)
In freezing temperatures, the batteries of electric vehicles can be less efficient and have shorter range, a lesson many Tesla drivers in Chicago learned this week.www.nytimes.com
You mean a charger that supplies 250 Kw? That means a higher draw for the charger itself.
Oh. My.
That is quite an electrical load. Granted this is at a dedicated charging stations, but that one charger has a higher load than some of our utility's commercial loads.
A charging station with multiple charging units, each drawing more than 250 KW... Oh. My.
That got me curious about home charging. With visions of upgrading residential transformers and services dancing in my head, I found this:
Standard pulls 1.3 Kw for 3 miles for each hour's charge on "standard wall outlet." In the US, call it 120v on a 15 amp breaker. Watts = Volts x Amps, so 1,300 watts at 120v = 10.83 amps. Okay. It's important to note that the continuous amps a breaker will pull before tripping is lower than instantaneous amps. Saw where the NEC requires a certain rating, but not having a copy of the code, won't quote what I saw. The wiring has to be rated for a higher load than breaker rating.
Moving up to 240v, the load increases to 7.6 Kw for 30 miles for each hour's charge. Umm....let me check my breaker box.
Okay. 7,600 w at 240v is 31.67 amps. 30 amp breakers won't carry it. I'd be uncomfortable with 40 amp. Would an electrician run a 60 amp circuit? Don't know, but it's possible.
That's all for standard. Move up to the special wall connectors, and you have 11.5 Kw for 44 miles for each hour's charge. That's 47.92 amps at 240v, so that's likely a 60 amp circuit.
All this adds to the load on the main breaker. It also adds to the load on the electrical entrance and the service wires and the transformer. If a house is pushing it at 15 KVA, then we're looking at going up to a 25 KVA for 7.6 Kw, and 37.5 KVA for 11.5 Kw.
Let's say a subdivision of fifty homes ends up with an electric car at every house. That's an increase of 380 Kw for 7.6 Kw chargers and 575 Kw for 11.5 Kw chargers. For our utility's entire system...
Oh. My.
That's not even looking at the installation of 250 Kw charging stations.
(Stares blankly into space a moment)
I'm glad I'm retiring in just a few years.