Although electric car owners don’t have to worry about their
fuel pump and fuel injectors going bad, one of the drawbacks they face is the car
charge time. A Chevy Volt takes up to 10 hours using a 120 volt outlet, and
about 4 if you have access to a 240 volt supply. A Nissan LEAF takes about 7
hours to reach a full charge on a 208-240V home charging station. They say most
people will charge their LEAF overnight at home “similar to a cell phone”, but
in time they hope to make the process more efficient. This is one of the
reasons that German and U.S. automakers are joining forces to create a faster
EV charger.
What they are calling the “DC Fast Charging with a Combined
Charging” system, automakers are hoping to create a single plug that
incorporates four different types of charging. The four types are one-phase
AC-charging, fast three-phase AC-Charging, DC-charging at home and ultra-fast
DC-charging at public stations. The new ultra-fast DC-charging is aimed to recharge
most electric cars in as little as 15-20 minutes.

No comments:
Post a Comment