eleven24
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Rob
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2023
- Threads
- 14
- Messages
- 339
- Reaction score
- 613
- Location
- Doylestown, PA
- Vehicles
- 2023 MME GT
- Thread starter
- #1
Had a long road trip this past weekend, and with it several DCFC stops. It was a nice day, so people were outside their cars chatting. Being I had to wait for slot to open up, I walked over and joined in.
First was a really nice woman who just got a new Chevy Bolt. Seeing that she was at 88%, I casually said "oh good, looks like you're almost done". She said "Yep, another 12% but I can't figure out why it's going so slow when I'm on a 350 charger". She had no idea her car had a maximum charge speed because, as her salesman told her, she can use any speed charger.
This is when the driver of a Mach-E walked over and said "hope you don't mind, but I heard you talking about slow charge speeds on the 350 charger. I'm getting the same thing - it started off great but now I'm down to around 30 kw."
He was at 84% SOC.
I then spent a few minutes explaining how each car has a specific max charging speed and that it wouldn't matter if they plugged into a 150kw or 350kw charger. Then explained the whole charging curve, and how to best manage it when on a road trip - as in stopping the charge when you have enough to get to your next destination. Especially when there are other cars waiting.
I was telling the driver of the Mach-E, who was probably somewhere in his 70's, that the best way to minimize charge times is to look at the estimated battery percentage on arrival at your next stop, and then unplug when you feel it's a safe buffer to continue. I told him that for me, I base it on how many options to charge there are on the route ahead & make sure I have enough charge to go to the second charger down route in the event there are issues with the first one. This is when I hopped in his car and showed both he and his wife how to add chargers, see percentages, and plan their route home.
Here's the kicker - his car was a demo car from the Ford dealership he owns. They were both super appreciative of my help, and jokingly asked if I could follow them home.
The point of this post is this - if you pull in to charge and get aggravated by someone sitting at 90% and still charging while people are waiting - it could simply be they believe they have to charge to 100%. Dealerships are not educating the consumer at all, and for that matter neither are manufacturers. It certainly wouldn't be hard to display info in the car as people are charging explaining things like max charge speed and the charging curve. Offering tips on screen on charging.
In this case, the woman in the new Chevy Bolt lived less than a mile away - yet she was charging to 100% with 3 cars waiting. When I told her that the max charge speed of her car was 50kw and a half mile away was a ChargePoint 62.5kw charger that she would probably never have a wait for and would still get the same charge speed, she was ecstatic. Said she always came to this one and waited.
All of the people I chatted with were extremely nice and personable people - they just had no idea on how EV charging worked.
Adding chargers to the infrastructure is great, but education of the public on EV charging is just as important.
First was a really nice woman who just got a new Chevy Bolt. Seeing that she was at 88%, I casually said "oh good, looks like you're almost done". She said "Yep, another 12% but I can't figure out why it's going so slow when I'm on a 350 charger". She had no idea her car had a maximum charge speed because, as her salesman told her, she can use any speed charger.
This is when the driver of a Mach-E walked over and said "hope you don't mind, but I heard you talking about slow charge speeds on the 350 charger. I'm getting the same thing - it started off great but now I'm down to around 30 kw."
He was at 84% SOC.
I then spent a few minutes explaining how each car has a specific max charging speed and that it wouldn't matter if they plugged into a 150kw or 350kw charger. Then explained the whole charging curve, and how to best manage it when on a road trip - as in stopping the charge when you have enough to get to your next destination. Especially when there are other cars waiting.
I was telling the driver of the Mach-E, who was probably somewhere in his 70's, that the best way to minimize charge times is to look at the estimated battery percentage on arrival at your next stop, and then unplug when you feel it's a safe buffer to continue. I told him that for me, I base it on how many options to charge there are on the route ahead & make sure I have enough charge to go to the second charger down route in the event there are issues with the first one. This is when I hopped in his car and showed both he and his wife how to add chargers, see percentages, and plan their route home.
Here's the kicker - his car was a demo car from the Ford dealership he owns. They were both super appreciative of my help, and jokingly asked if I could follow them home.
The point of this post is this - if you pull in to charge and get aggravated by someone sitting at 90% and still charging while people are waiting - it could simply be they believe they have to charge to 100%. Dealerships are not educating the consumer at all, and for that matter neither are manufacturers. It certainly wouldn't be hard to display info in the car as people are charging explaining things like max charge speed and the charging curve. Offering tips on screen on charging.
In this case, the woman in the new Chevy Bolt lived less than a mile away - yet she was charging to 100% with 3 cars waiting. When I told her that the max charge speed of her car was 50kw and a half mile away was a ChargePoint 62.5kw charger that she would probably never have a wait for and would still get the same charge speed, she was ecstatic. Said she always came to this one and waited.
All of the people I chatted with were extremely nice and personable people - they just had no idea on how EV charging worked.
Adding chargers to the infrastructure is great, but education of the public on EV charging is just as important.
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