Looks like the Gravity will truly be a charging monster... Looking forward to seeing the entire charging curve!
That's what she said (sorry that's for you Kyle - couldn't resist)what a minute!![]()
Still watching but a bit of interesting info in that it looks like all vehicles going to NACS are under a requirement to go native by 2027. For me anyway, that is new to know what time line they are building.Tom M released his charging video this morning. Very interesting
I have not been following this issue the last year or so, so my info may be a little out of date. BUT, when Tesla first announced the network would be available for non--Teslas , such charging would only work on NEWER chargers. V3 and up I think. so, the chargers where Teslas can charge and other brand cant should just be the older installations.I have a question. I was checking the Supercharger locations on the Tesla website, and I found this filter:
View attachment 27933
If you check "Tesla" for vehicle type, you get considerably more Superchargers identified than if you check "NACS Partner" or "Other EV". Why is that? Will the Gravity not be able to use any Tesla Supercharger?
For instance, if you check "Tesla" for NYC and Long Island, you get this:
View attachment 27934
But if you check "NACS Partner", you get this with far fewer charging locations tagged::
View attachment 27935
The Tesla V2 chargers (older) are not Plug and Charge compliant and will not work with the NACS partner cars. The electronic handshake between the car and the charger meets the ISO standard for V3 and V4 chargers but not V2. The older stations are unique to Tesla so those stations are not compatible with any other cars.
Why does that matter? People could always authenticate through the app like we have to do with some EVGo and other stations.The Tesla V2 chargers (older) are not Plug and Charge compliant and will not work with the NACS partner cars. The electronic handshake between the car and the charger meets the ISO standard for V3 and V4 chargers but not V2. The older stations are unique to Tesla so those stations are not compatible with any other cars.
I have heard that the route planning does filter correctly. You can also look at PlugShare and see the old V2 sites are labeled Tesla only where the V# and V4 are not.Bummer, but thanks. I did not realize that would remain the case with native NACS ports as opposed to using adapters.
I assume that when you use the Gravity's route planning and ask to include Superchargers, it will filter out the V2 charging stations?
Rivian and Ford also will not charge on V2 chargers even when using the Tesla app to initiate the charge. The ISO 15118 standard includes the protocol for how the vehicle and charger exchange capability information and how the vehicle requests a specific voltage from the charger. Hence, the need for ISO15118 compatibility.Why does that matter? People could always authenticate through the app like we have to do with some EVGo and other stations.
Lots of Rivian/Ford owners authenticate with Tesla superchargers through the app because of the discounted membership prices.
Good question. There are V3 sites that are not NACS partner sites. For example my favorite charger in Bishop, CA is Tesla only. The other newer Supercharger in town is a "NACS partner" though. I'm not sure if the station would need to be upgraded or if they just want more people going to the less popular Supercharger.If you check "Tesla" for vehicle type, you get considerably more Superchargers identified than if you check "NACS Partner" or "Other EV". Why is that? Will the Gravity not be able to use any Tesla Supercharger?
Yeah, no, charging is gonna suck for a long time because all NACS chargers are equal but some are more equal than others (aka they are newer/older).Bummer, but thanks. I did not realize that would remain the case with native NACS ports as opposed to using adapters.
Yes.I assume that when you use the Gravity's route planning and ask to include Superchargers, it will filter out the V2 charging stations?