- Joined
- Sep 30, 2022
- Messages
- 82
- Reaction score
- 100
- Cars
- Lucid Air GT
Hey folks, not an electrical engineer so was hoping someone could explain this better to me. With Tesla opening their Supercharger network to more companies and as it looks like NACS will "win out" in the US, one thing that has been mentioned in these forums is that the existing Superchargers wouldn't help much for the Air (even if you could use a converter), because the Air uses a high voltage system, and the lower voltage in the existing Superchargers means you'll only get like 50 kW or so while charging.
However, I knew the Cybertruck also uses a high voltage system, so I was curious how it would work with existing Superchargers, and I saw this post online, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38480949:
"I am curious what cybertruck will charge like at existing superchargers that max out at 400V. GM's clever solution is to present the battery pack as 2 400V packs. It does pose some very tricky pack balancing requirements though. Other 800V cars charge quite poorly on 400V stations, usually with a hard cap at much lower than the potential max charge due to inverter limits."
A follow-up to that said that Cybertruck will indeed use this "pack splitting" technique, : "Pack splits into two to charge natively on existing 400V charging infrastructure, no costly / lossy booster required"
So my question is whether Lucid could do something like this, if not for existing cars than for future models, and if so (or if not), what would be the pros/cons of this approach?
However, I knew the Cybertruck also uses a high voltage system, so I was curious how it would work with existing Superchargers, and I saw this post online, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38480949:
"I am curious what cybertruck will charge like at existing superchargers that max out at 400V. GM's clever solution is to present the battery pack as 2 400V packs. It does pose some very tricky pack balancing requirements though. Other 800V cars charge quite poorly on 400V stations, usually with a hard cap at much lower than the potential max charge due to inverter limits."
A follow-up to that said that Cybertruck will indeed use this "pack splitting" technique, : "Pack splits into two to charge natively on existing 400V charging infrastructure, no costly / lossy booster required"
So my question is whether Lucid could do something like this, if not for existing cars than for future models, and if so (or if not), what would be the pros/cons of this approach?