Not all of what I mentioned happens always but sometimes you have an issue with the charger, sometimes you stop for a bit longer and it all adds up. I mean, I’m not making this up. I did the same routes multiple times with my ICE and electric car and charging easily adds 20-30% to the time. With bigger autonomy it would be less of a problem (you stop for longer by less often so all the little things are a smaller problem) but I think the article is trying to prove that we don’t actually need bigger batteries (and I agree that 90% of the time we don’t).
As for the route planning it’s definitely not easy in Spain. I think right now it kind of getting to the point were you should be able to find a charger every 50 km but only on some highways. Very often the shortest and fastest route will take me through secondary roads but there’s only one charger along the route and if it’s not working when I get there I’m fucked. Last time I did a longer route I got to one charger and it simply wouldn’t initiate charging (the app claimed it’s working). I got to the next one (again, app claimed it’s active) but all the fast chargers were disabled, only the slow one was active. The third one worked. Looking at your map I can see some places were broken charger could leave me stranded so I would definitely spend some time trying to figure out alternatives. If some day the chargers will work 100% of the time it will be a different story.
As for the route planning it’s definitely not easy in Spain.
It’s getting even easier in the US with Biden’s initiative to “Electrify America”.
Oh wait, that’s cancelled.
It’s an interesting discussion, and I think all of it is valuable reading for people who might be on the fence or skeptical. And of course I’m not as familiar with Europe, but I expected you’d be farther along than Kansas when it comes to this green anything. On the other hand, our car culture in general is much larger, and highway culture in Kansas surely plays a bigger role than Spain.
It’s a complicated topic in general. In my apartment building there are many families with two cars (because both parents work). They are in a perfect situation to get an EV because then can simply keep the other car for longer trips and in the last year I saw many new chargers appear in the garage. In other places people don’t have a private parking spot to install a charger, have just one car and drive more. For them EV will still be a big inconvenience. The infrastructure is improving quite fast and you can definitely drive anywhere you want but it still not as convenient as gas stations.
Not all of what I mentioned happens always but sometimes you have an issue with the charger, sometimes you stop for a bit longer and it all adds up. I mean, I’m not making this up. I did the same routes multiple times with my ICE and electric car and charging easily adds 20-30% to the time. With bigger autonomy it would be less of a problem (you stop for longer by less often so all the little things are a smaller problem) but I think the article is trying to prove that we don’t actually need bigger batteries (and I agree that 90% of the time we don’t).
As for the route planning it’s definitely not easy in Spain. I think right now it kind of getting to the point were you should be able to find a charger every 50 km but only on some highways. Very often the shortest and fastest route will take me through secondary roads but there’s only one charger along the route and if it’s not working when I get there I’m fucked. Last time I did a longer route I got to one charger and it simply wouldn’t initiate charging (the app claimed it’s working). I got to the next one (again, app claimed it’s active) but all the fast chargers were disabled, only the slow one was active. The third one worked. Looking at your map I can see some places were broken charger could leave me stranded so I would definitely spend some time trying to figure out alternatives. If some day the chargers will work 100% of the time it will be a different story.
It’s getting even easier in the US with Biden’s initiative to “Electrify America”.
Oh wait, that’s cancelled.
It’s an interesting discussion, and I think all of it is valuable reading for people who might be on the fence or skeptical. And of course I’m not as familiar with Europe, but I expected you’d be farther along than Kansas when it comes to this green anything. On the other hand, our car culture in general is much larger, and highway culture in Kansas surely plays a bigger role than Spain.
It’s a complicated topic in general. In my apartment building there are many families with two cars (because both parents work). They are in a perfect situation to get an EV because then can simply keep the other car for longer trips and in the last year I saw many new chargers appear in the garage. In other places people don’t have a private parking spot to install a charger, have just one car and drive more. For them EV will still be a big inconvenience. The infrastructure is improving quite fast and you can definitely drive anywhere you want but it still not as convenient as gas stations.