phidauex
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Sam
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2020
- Threads
- 17
- Messages
- 967
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- 1,843
- Location
- Colorado
- Vehicles
- 2021 MachE 4EX, 2006 Prius, 1997 Tacoma
- Occupation
- Renewable Energy Engineer
I suspect that any improvements in charge speed are going to be directed to DC fast charging stations and specialty applications like fleet vehicles.
Unfortunately at a home you aren't going to get much more than 40-50A. The most typical electrical service in a US home is 200A (38kW usable) though 150A and 100A are quite common. For 150A and 200A services you can usually add one, maybe two 60A branch circuits without having to make other major changes. For 100A services you might be able to squeeze in a 40A branch circuit. But regardless of what the battery can charge at you just won't be able to bring enough power into the service to support even 50kW charging.
But I don't think that matters much because home charging will always be of the "overnight slow charge" type - people won't need to charge super fast at home.
For fast chargers, it will be interesting to see where the voltage ranges go. Stationary applications are up to 1500V in many applications now, with a lot of systems running at 1200V. The higher you go the more power you can push through the same cable, but you also have to increase the insulation on all the components, and the consequences of a failure goes up. The NEC restricts you to 1000V on occupied structures, for instance. I suspect that the 800V standard will prevail for quite a long time, and that voltage along with the current handling capabilities of a flexible handheld cable will set the maximum charge rate available, regardless of the battery technology.
But even a battery that can't charge faster, but still maintains the full charge power through the whole curve would be a big improvement - at 150kW the ER MachE would go from 10% to 80% in only 25 minutes if the battery supported the full charge rate.
Unfortunately at a home you aren't going to get much more than 40-50A. The most typical electrical service in a US home is 200A (38kW usable) though 150A and 100A are quite common. For 150A and 200A services you can usually add one, maybe two 60A branch circuits without having to make other major changes. For 100A services you might be able to squeeze in a 40A branch circuit. But regardless of what the battery can charge at you just won't be able to bring enough power into the service to support even 50kW charging.
But I don't think that matters much because home charging will always be of the "overnight slow charge" type - people won't need to charge super fast at home.
For fast chargers, it will be interesting to see where the voltage ranges go. Stationary applications are up to 1500V in many applications now, with a lot of systems running at 1200V. The higher you go the more power you can push through the same cable, but you also have to increase the insulation on all the components, and the consequences of a failure goes up. The NEC restricts you to 1000V on occupied structures, for instance. I suspect that the 800V standard will prevail for quite a long time, and that voltage along with the current handling capabilities of a flexible handheld cable will set the maximum charge rate available, regardless of the battery technology.
But even a battery that can't charge faster, but still maintains the full charge power through the whole curve would be a big improvement - at 150kW the ER MachE would go from 10% to 80% in only 25 minutes if the battery supported the full charge rate.
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