I had a tire that needed air in my tire, so I went to the gas station with my EV and got some in there.
That’s great for now, but what happens in several years when the number of Gas stations declines? Gas stations have been great resources for air, bathrooms, and snacks on road trips. What is going to replace it?

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    I’m confused-- You said “The majority of people with EVs are going to do the bulk of their charging at home,” but now you’re suggesting that the vast majority of people (maybe you meant apartment-dwellers specifically?) will charge at the mall or grocery store… Those ideas seem to contradict.

    In my experience, charging at home (if you can) is super convenient, but when I lived in an apartment, keeping the car charged was excruciating: It’s either queueing for one of the L3 chargers, going at some weird hour of the night/morning, or spending hours at the mall or whatever every few days to use the L2… If I was relying on public L2’s only, I’d need to spend something like 6+ hours every 3 days at the mall to charge-- And that’s if the L2’s are even available, which they often aren’t! Not practical.

    Now if apartment complexes and/or employers could all get on board with providing lots and lots of L2’s, we’d be set: It’s not an imposition to spend 6+ hours every 3 days at work or at home :) But that’s a huge amount of change to ask for, and I can imagine EV-focused service stations being a boon for folks whose residence/employer aren’t stepping up.

    • Hello_thereOP
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      11 year ago

      Eventually, I’d imagine that they just buy every stall a cable, and there’s a smart charger that delivers charge to each stall in turn. Yes it’s extra copper expense, but that’s the only way that charging in a garage becomes convenient

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Maybe one day, that’d be great! Especially if that applies to parking stalls at work as well.

        We’ll still continue to have the problem of people who don’t even have access to a parking stall where they live, though. In some buildings that I’ve lived in, if you have roommates, one of you probably pays extra for parking privileges and the others have to figure something else out… Plus, not every unit even gets a stall to begin with.

        So even if we get this “cable in every stall” ubiquity-- already a massive project-- there will still be lots of people who can’t “just charge at home.”