Testing $1.3 Million of Federally Funded EV Fast Charging in Ohio & PA | Quick Charge # 11

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  • Опубликовано: 2 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 245

  • @plugandplayEV
    @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +9

    NB. In case the video (and video description) wasn't clear, the $1.3M here is for two distinct charging stations, one in Ohio and another in Pennsylvania. It covers four dispensers that can each charge two EVs at one time, for a total of eight stalls funded. This is the minimum for any site with NEVI funding, which must have the capability to deliver 4 x 150 kW (or above) at the same time.

  • @usaverageguy
    @usaverageguy 10 месяцев назад +16

    I am glad to see chargers being installed in truck stops. They are the ideal location for chargers because they have food, traveling supplies, and restrooms available 24/7/365. But I can not see how they justify the high fees for charging when the government paid for a large part of the cost of installation. And I contend that the chargers bring them business in their convince stores and restaurants. Just as 7/11 added gas pumps to their stores to sell more cigarettes and soda 40 years ago.

  • @davidkreim6544
    @davidkreim6544 10 месяцев назад +13

    Thanks for the video Steve - Great to see canopies, window squeegies, etc. Price/kwh is high, but should be sorted out as more competition enters the charging space. This is getting a lot closer to what EV drivers will expect to see with charging.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks, David. Good point that the pricing could easily be a pilot (no pun intended). Electrify America started out with charges that often reached into $20-$25 for 40-50 kWh initially (2018-2019). EA has tweaked pricing several times since then and it wouldn't surprise me to see other CPOs do the same as Tesla opens Superchargers and drivers have several options on any given stretch.

  • @Allan_A
    @Allan_A 10 месяцев назад +8

    Happy 2024 Steve! Pricing seems steep, both in the installation costs and kWh! But at least they are available. The Twin Cities are still fairly barren except for Tesla, despite there being an abundance of EVs.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +2

      Happy New Year, Allan! Price for energy, yes, although I'm hoping it's introductory pricing as others have suggested (not unlike early Electrify America stations in 2018/19).
      In terms of installation, as Walter/tNAC pointed out, ~$600K is likely only a portion of the installation costs. A single networked HPC dispenser can easily approach six figures, so two sourced from the US and all of the associated installation work/amenities will quickly rack up. What will be *really* interesting is comparing sites in Pennsylvania, where a wider range of site hosts were chosen using different hardware providers. Tesla is in the mix there as well, with bids typically 2-4x lower than others, so I'm keen to see how those sites shake out. Interesting times ahead!

  • @newscoulomb3705
    @newscoulomb3705 10 месяцев назад +12

    Thanks, Steve! That first failure to connect makes me think back to some of those "reliability studies" because I know from my own personal experience that a number of failures to activate that I've encountered have been due to an improperly seated plug (this is outside of the Bolt EV's socket that requires support). At this point, I can tell at the point I've plugged in whether I got a good connection and am likely to have a comm failure, but I'm not sure whether the people conducting these "studies" would recognize that. It just goes back to my assumption that a decent percentage of failures are due to user error, though I suppose that could be blamed on CCS1 plug format, which can be hard to seat properly.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +5

      I think that's very likely the case. I must have plugged in several thousand times at this point, but there are still times I think "that feels off, but let's give it a whirl" and it's 50/50 as to whether the connection happens. Definitely user error in this case and the first time in a year that I haven't succeeded with Autocharge+ on the first attempt.
      I suppose it comes down to the fact that we're entering a period where the next wave of buyers doesn't care about the intricacies of charging and we need to design for that, whether that means automakers/dealers, charging hardware providers, CPOs with clear instructions, or even having someone on site to help with payment, as might be an option at P-FJ locations. I'm trying to reposition my thinking there, even if so much of the remedial action is relatively simple (try plugging in again, reset the app, try to reinsert the payment card etc.)

    • @newscoulomb3705
      @newscoulomb3705 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@plugandplayEV Yes, that's been my experience as well. It's typically a 50-50 shot at activating.
      My frame of reference, though, is defaulting back to gas pumps. Here in California (maybe nationwide now?), we have vapor seals on all of the gas pump nozzles. If that seal isn't properly in place and compressed, the gas pump won't operate. To my memory, there are no warnings or error codes; it just won't pump. The user needs to know that and reseat the nozzle before they can fill up.
      So in some ways, it's interesting that people are holding EV chargers to a different, higher standard than gas pumps when it comes to usability, and likewise, the expectations for EV owners to know how public EV chargers work is higher than the expectations for gas car owners knowing how gas pumps work, which is ironic considering EV owners only have to use public chargers far less frequently than gas car owners need to use gas pumps.

  • @tom_hoots
    @tom_hoots 10 месяцев назад +8

    Steve -- thanks for reporting on really important news like this, while just about EVERYONE else wrestles with each other over posting thousands of additional cybernonsense videos.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Cyberwhatnow? Never heard of it :-)
      Thanks for the support. This stuff never fails to engage me, so expect plenty more as new stations come online 👍

    • @davidmenasco5743
      @davidmenasco5743 10 месяцев назад +1

      I second that. I appreciate this coverage very much.
      Even if I do indulge in a bit of cybernonsense for the entertainment value.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Much appreciated. There's a place for both and I'm happy to occupy the infrastructure side.

  • @johncipolletti5611
    @johncipolletti5611 10 месяцев назад +6

    Notice the blue poles around those chargers. It is a great idea to stop collision damage to the chargers. However, around me, the chargers were damaged from scumbags who stole the copper out of them!

  • @BensEcoAdvntr
    @BensEcoAdvntr 10 месяцев назад +8

    Nice to see you made it down here! I'm hoping that the price will drop if usage increases since they're probably trying to pay off fixed costs and/or demand charges

    • @homomorphic
      @homomorphic 10 месяцев назад

      Price wont be dropping for any charge network. The minimum viable rate for an extremely efficient company to be profitable is around $1/kWh.
      I can count the number of extremely efficient charging network companies with the hairs on The Rocks cranium.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Just a flying visit but I'm glad to see the Midwest pushing ahead as others twiddle their thumbs. Should make Ohio and Pennsylvania rather pleasurable places to traverse for EV drivers over the next year or two, even if it drains their wallets for that convenience.

    • @thenetworkarchitectchannel
      @thenetworkarchitectchannel 10 месяцев назад

      I too am concerned the existing price structure is an attempt to dissuade non GM customers. I am not privy to their balance sheets, but it does not appear in line with what markup they put on gas for ICE.

    • @homomorphic
      @homomorphic 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@thenetworkarchitectchannel
      There is *no* markup at that price. They are losing bucketloads of money at anything less than $1/kWh.

  • @cschmitz100
    @cschmitz100 10 месяцев назад +4

    That’s extremely expensive. 😭 The only incentive for people to move to EVs is to save cost on charging, so at $13 for a 25% charge, a full tank would cost $50. That’s not good at all

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +2

      These are only for long-distance driving convenience and it's probably intro pricing, pending broader market competition. Ceteris paribus, at that price I'd use these at most 5-10% of my driving and I cover some distance.

  • @michaellippmann4474
    @michaellippmann4474 10 месяцев назад +6

    Hey Steve
    Great video...glad to see these stations rolling out.
    I presume that you are using Plug N Charge from EV GO?
    The price is a premium for sure but I factor in the reality that my at home charging is really inexpensive so in the overall scheme of things my annual cost of operation for the car is really low so the extra cost of DCFC is really not a big deal.
    We look at the fact that we have always travelled and did road trips so even with those costs factored in the overall cost is still far less than an ICE vehicle.
    Really appreciate your videos and the work you do regarding EV adoption.
    Happy New Year buddy!
    Mike and Ally 🇨🇦

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thanks, Mike, and Happy New Year!
      Yes, always Autocharge+ (EVgo lingo for Plug&Charge) these days. If it's convenient, I'll pay this and let the free EA plan and cheaper L2 destination charging soak up the expense. We're easily around 4-5 cents per mile at worst on our 50K Ioniq 5 miles, so it's not going to break the bank to stump up for a canopy charge every few thousand miles 🙂

  • @merrillsmith6778
    @merrillsmith6778 10 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for information ,added to my trip book for trip south April keep public informed of new sites
    New openings

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Hope there are several more for you to choose from when you hit the road in spring!

  • @misaelramos83
    @misaelramos83 10 месяцев назад +4

    1:20 I use a car scanner on a trip to get a sense of when the pack is warmed up. Love the '24 IONIQ 6 for its OTA updates for the nav and other systems.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      I've apparently misplaced my OBD reader, otherwise I'd be right there with you monitoring the pack temp. As a rule of thumb, though, preconditioning running for 20-25 minutes on approach to the DCFC is sufficient to get the pack to that sweet spot of 68F.

  • @SteveRowe
    @SteveRowe 10 месяцев назад +2

    Happy New Year, Steve!

  • @brianriebedriveselectric
    @brianriebedriveselectric 10 месяцев назад +4

    😂Best coffee on the interstate? Good bit. Thanks for checking out the site!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +3

      In which I discover that the Trade Descriptions Act is not a concept that followed me across the ocean from the UK! Happy New Year!

  • @MrJgibo1
    @MrJgibo1 10 месяцев назад +4

    I went to the one in Oklahoma and didn't realize it was EVGO it auto negotiated since I had it setup.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +4

      Autocharge+ has become quite a valued feature, especially as the Electrify America activation process seems to be heading in the other direction. Much easier to direct new users to just plug in and let the car/station do the work.

  • @markfitzpatrick6692
    @markfitzpatrick6692 10 месяцев назад +3

    I saw. Your post on PlugShare Steve . Millersport oh is close to my home town of Newark ohio which was settled by Newark New Jersey people. It. Would have been nice to see you in person. But I am glad you got to all the locations.

    • @markfitzpatrick6692
      @markfitzpatrick6692 10 месяцев назад +2

      Happy new year

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +3

      @@markfitzpatrick6692 Happy New Year! I wasn't certain I'd make it down this time but I managed to squeeze in an early morning visit. Literally drove, charged, took some photos/video and buggered off! It's on my resolution list to share location a bit more in 2024 and connect with anyone who wants to grab a coffee. Hope to catch you in 2024 :-)

    • @repat1000
      @repat1000 10 месяцев назад +2

      There are 2 EA sites along that segment of I70. One just West of Columbus and one just east of Dayton.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      @@repat1000 I meant to add my visit to the 8-stall EA station that's only 20 miles from the London Pilot but opted to keep it shorter. Worked well, twice as many handles, and sort-of pull through spaces that might make it a better option for trailers (although it would block a charging stall).

    • @markfitzpatrick6692
      @markfitzpatrick6692 7 месяцев назад

      That is my location in Hilliard ea. they have Tesla superchargers at Meijer down Rome Hilliard rd that can change the Mach e and lightning with adapter. And ev go has a location on same rd in strip shopping center delta units. Kyle Connor used. Them on his lucid cannonball from ny to la

  • @E_Schepp
    @E_Schepp 10 месяцев назад +4

    Informative Video, thanks Steve 👍
    I feel Pilot/Flying J should have distinguish themselves by having pull through stations - on all sites.
    We have lots of pull in chargers already (and with Tesla stations opening up we will have more) and we need to start catering to all those that want to pull a trailer.
    I looked at my local Pilot/Flying J locations that are expected to get chargers in the future.
    They are not particular attractive to a family road trip (lots of diesel trucks and not much else).
    Canopies are fantastic though (but like the pull through parking it is only available on a few selected sites).

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks, Ernst. I suppose it's a Catch 22 in the site selection process... cover the Interstate every 50 miles but it has to be right by the exit... that doesn't often leave many more options than gas stations and fast food restaurants. Toss in 24/7 amenities and you only really have the truck stops remaining in most locations. On balance, I'd accept a couple of minutes with the noise and fumes for 15 minutes in a reliably accessible and clean facility while the vehicle charges.

  • @ourv9603
    @ourv9603 10 месяцев назад +3

    A SHELL OIL exec told me once that a brand new gas station with store & car
    wash with 8 fueling positions from a lot of dirt costs them about $1.25M in
    California.
    !

    • @waynewallace2061
      @waynewallace2061 10 месяцев назад +3

      That must have been some time ago. A new Circle k on 1 acre in my town ran $5mil without ev charging.

  • @jerrymildredpetersen3177
    @jerrymildredpetersen3177 10 месяцев назад +3

    I’ve been needing to go up and down I-75 between Tampa and central Ohio several times over the past 2-1/2 months. There are four of the Pilot/Flying J stations along my route plus a couple other EVGo chargers. The crazy price is burning through my $500 EVGo credit in a hurry, but they sure are a lot nicer than the EA ones that mostly don’t work. I do wish they’d get the price down to something around or under 40 cents. If not, I’ll be avoiding them rather than preferring them when the credit is used up.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      What model do you have? There are supposed to be PFJ charging discounts for GM owners coming somewhere down the line.

    • @jerrymildredpetersen3177
      @jerrymildredpetersen3177 10 месяцев назад +1

      Good point. It's a '22 Bolt EUV. I heard about the GM discounts, but not a hint about when or how much.@@plugandplayEV

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +2

      @@jerrymildredpetersen3177 It's a project that's moving pretty fast and GM will want to stoke sales for newer Ultium models as the Bolt inventory dwindles through Q1. I wouldn't be surprised to see discounts announced by spring.

  • @homomorphic
    @homomorphic 10 месяцев назад +4

    Best coffee on the interstate (I80) between salt lake city and cheyenne? Quite possibly.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks to this comment, I've added Deja Brew in Rock Springs, WY to my Interstate coffee list ☕🛣️

    • @homomorphic
      @homomorphic 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@plugandplayEV time for the taste test!
      I have driven that stretch of road. There is pretty much nothing other than pilot stations. It's their best chance ;-)

  • @ShawnGBR
    @ShawnGBR 10 месяцев назад +3

    For the Pittston, PA location, they probably only put in 4 because of what is already in place locally. There are 8 Tesla Supercharger stalls in the shopping area near the AAA baseball stadium and 4 CCS plugs in Scranton at the Sheetz (with more planned nearby on I-84 and in Scranton closer to I-81 when the WaWa gets built in the next year). More than 4 stalls at the Pilot would be overkill.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +3

      Thanks for the context. I've used the Scranton EA site a few times and find it pretty inconvenient. Having to drive through a downtown area to get to a travel charger is a significant downside. It's also busy, at least based on the weekend travel I've done through the area.
      That said, the Pittston Pilot doesn't address all those issues either. It was a busy stretch of road when we visited last week, which I assume would be several times busier outside of the holiday week lull. No canopy makes and a small fast food/gas station option makes it essentially the same offering as the EA at Sheetz.
      Tesla has only a V2 Supercharger serving this exact area, although the V3 in Walkes Barre and Clark's Summit coming soon (also NEVI-funded, so potentially an interesting comparison point) offer some local alternatives. Rivian is also going in with its soon-to-be-public DCFC option right next to that V2 Supercharger.
      Thanks again for the thoughts. It made me realize that this segment of PA could be a really informative spot to watch with all the main players and funding flowing into one area.

    • @davidmenasco5743
      @davidmenasco5743 10 месяцев назад +1

      Walter at The Network Architect Channel has been following a lot of GM Energy/Ultium installations at Pilot / Flying J locations. They all seem to have just 4 stalls for now (but mostly pull through for trailers).
      I'm pretty sure, within 3 or 4 years, they will all be in need of expansion. Including this one.
      By 2030, every EV driver will be demanding much larger fast charging sites, as the number of EVs on the road will be about 10x today's number.

  • @Bfranklyn731
    @Bfranklyn731 10 месяцев назад +5

    Atleast they work !!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +2

      Starting with the essentials, like actually delivering energy, is always a good move!

  • @thenetworkarchitectchannel
    @thenetworkarchitectchannel 10 месяцев назад +1

    Two-fur! Man, this is the best TV on the internet. Great 2 c these locations getting used irl. Happy NY. Thx 4 the video. I enjoyed watching

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Happy New Year and thanks for all the efforts in 2023. Very glad to get the benefit of your travel charging insights across the south!

  • @Lynyrd_Evnyrd
    @Lynyrd_Evnyrd 10 месяцев назад +5

    If they’re looking to differentiate themselves, the canopies are a big plus. As a Tesla driver I could see myself paying the premium to charge under a canopy during wet weather. It’s something most Superchargers in my area don’t have.
    I hope the canopies are the rule rather than the exception for Pilot Flying-J. It’s a little upsetting to see from the Network Architect’s channel that most of the Mercedes charging sites won’t get canopies (at least at Buc-ee’s).

    • @thenetworkarchitectchannel
      @thenetworkarchitectchannel 10 месяцев назад +1

      As a former M3LR owner, I 2 would pay for these, but the reason is the 24/7 restrooms. Too often I’ve been w/o facilities at sc stops.

  • @voldar70
    @voldar70 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great video ! It’s great to see that DCFC stations using the federal money come out in the wild.
    As for the people who complain about "taxpayer money" spent, I would like to underline that those money come mostly from the blue states, not the red states. The same "taxpayer money" repair the bridges and roads in the red states, despite the fact that their red representatives voted against the Infrastructure law. $ 1,3M is not even enough for repairing 1/3 of a mile of an interstate road.

  • @PeterMartin-qh1yb
    @PeterMartin-qh1yb 10 месяцев назад +1

    Is there a good fire suppression system?

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Two squeegee buckets, ready to roll 🪣✅

    • @davidmenasco5743
      @davidmenasco5743 10 месяцев назад

      The reason gas stations are required to have good fire suppression systems is because internal combustion vehicles catch fire quite frequently.
      According to IEEE Spectrum, the number is 1,530 fires per 100,000 ICE vehicles sold. For EVs, this number is 25 per 100,000 vehicles sold.
      Other data shows that over 4,000 gas stations catch fire per year in the US. And half of those are caused by ICE vehicles catching fire.
      Meanwhile, that data on EV fires is old. Since then, the new LFP type batteries have become popular, and they reportedly don't ignite. And manufacturing improvements in non-LFP batteries have brought the rate of fires much lower than 25 per 100,000.

  • @ScottThomasPhoto
    @ScottThomasPhoto 10 месяцев назад +3

    I would expect more stations especially being so close to a major highway. Even NY did better on the Thruway than this surprisingly. As for price, the more we get up maybe we'll start to see competition but expected for now.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      In my more generous moments, I think that they're erring on the side of spreading funds out to cover the required corridors first, with the potential to expand as more funds become available and/or EV adoption accelerates to pick up the tab.
      Applegreen Electric has at least offered four dedicated 350kW units, so power sharing isn't a driver consideration, but they missed an opportunity to really knock it out of the park for NY in my opinion. The sites were being fully renovated but no shelter, pull throughs, or dedicated walkways were added into the plan. The layout replicates a lot of problems that EA locations have exhibited, including dated hardware.
      By default, the locations are great and I applaud the power levels (while Mass is still installing 1 x 50kW on the Masspike... again!), but I do think there are aspects of the P-FJ/EVgo installs that will be more compelling.

  • @itubular888
    @itubular888 10 месяцев назад +3

    i can see... that big stop charge button will be a haven for prankter

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      I'm reminded of a book I used to read to the kids... "*DON'T* Push the Button" -- spoiler: the button is repeatedly pushed.

  • @freddiecarr7602
    @freddiecarr7602 10 месяцев назад +1

    is it possible to do one follow-up -any day to see if they are online and the connectors and cables are undamaged?

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      For sure, thanks for the suggestion. I'll most likely be back in Ohio at some point in the spring or summer, so I'll be sure to plan in a return visit to assess upkeep and performance.

  • @pgiatrakis
    @pgiatrakis 4 месяца назад +2

    It’s probably better for the time being that locations like this don’t have the NACS because these other wonderful cars may find themselves in a position of having to wait in line for Teslas that are charging up, although if memory serves the pricing at the chargers in these videos Are slightly higher than what Tesla is charging. Not far from the Pittston location in Pennsylvania our ChargePoint chargers next to Tesla superchargers and I frequently see Teslas charging at a slower pace on the non-Tesla chargers I assume because the rates are less expensive than Tesla.
    This is an example of charging slower being better and paying less is better and avoiding idle charges from Tesla. Also, the proprietor of the local store “Target” in this case benefits because the longer you are there the more money you’re spending.
    Thanks for the excellent video 🙏⚡️👍

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  3 месяца назад +1

      Right, Superchargers open to non-Tesla models do typically charge ~ $0.50/kWh but that can be lowered by the membership plan at $12.99/month. Not cheap but would pay itself back over the course of a full road trip on Superchargers or frequent local use. Pittston is quite close to cheaper CCS stations but can't deny the convenience of proximity to the Interstate. Thanks for the local perspective.

  • @CS-gg5hx
    @CS-gg5hx 10 месяцев назад +22

    $1.3 million of mostly taxpayer money for four charge points. Then on top of that they charge you $.59 for each kilowatt hour. What a bargain.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +5

      Just to clarify, the $1.3 million (rounded up) figure is across the two sites I used, which would be eight charge stalls. So approximately $650K for each station or $163K per connector.
      Not making a comment on the value or pricing as I'm more interested in hearing from others, but I didn't want the costs to be misconstrued here. Thanks for the thoughts.

    • @andrerodriguez7603
      @andrerodriguez7603 10 месяцев назад

      @@plugandplayEVI don’t know if you can find this information. But could you do a comparison to how much it costs for Tesla chargers to be constructed, and how much per kilowatt hour? That would give a good example if the tax payer is getting their money’s worth. Thank you.

    • @shauny2285
      @shauny2285 10 месяцев назад +1

      How many KWH to charge a Tesla Model S?

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      The current Model S has ~100 kWh of capacity, but you're probably only adding around 70% of the pack on a fast charger.

    • @voldar70
      @voldar70 10 месяцев назад +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@plugandplayEV Having a Tesla, I can tell you that your data is wrong. No one charges to 85-90% his Tesla (because this is what you imply by charging 70%). No one ends right at 10% or less every time during their trip. Usually the charge is 50% SOC or less which represents about 15-20 minutes of charging and that’s enough to get to the next Supercharger. In 6 months of ownership I supercharged my Tesla 20 times, of which once I added 82% once because I was at a restaurant having lunch and once 67% because then I would spend 4 days at a place that had no charging capabilities, so I needed to have enough juice to come back to charge. The rest of the charging sessions were between adding 9% SOC to 51% SOC.

  • @thenetworkarchitectchannel
    @thenetworkarchitectchannel 10 месяцев назад +2

    One thing bout the money. Although the awards are known, the build costs are not. By my napkin math, I think if u add PFJ pm staff & OWL fees, it is a little south of mil per canopy site & more like a smigin under $800k w/o. The NEVI is just a portion of build costs with some OpEx thrown in. In the case of GM & PFJ, they r adding coins of their own to go big.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      For sure, though I do think the public nature of the awards will saddle every NEVI site with the burden of proving its worth. Fair or not, we know how much the companies involved got from the feds to get these stations online and there will be many more this year to compare how effective each provider (and state agency) was in deploying these funds.

  • @scottwilson2859
    @scottwilson2859 9 месяцев назад +1

    I just joined something called Bluedot that advertises a flat $0.30/kWh for fast charging on EVgo, Chargepoint, Blink, and EA. $0.56 is gasoline-level pricing, but 30 cents is much more reasonable. Plus, I'm taking a Bolt road trip in April, so it will come in real handy then.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for this, I'd heard about the app but assumed it was another here today, gone tomorrow EV startup. They seem to have some backing so I took another look and signed up. Will give it a whirl with to stabilize EVgo's ever -fluctuating pricing on our next trip.

  • @mikestrock
    @mikestrock 9 месяцев назад

    I think canopies are a pretty big necessity. Just for the convenience and the protection they provide from the elements. Also, they would allow lighting to be installed, which would help from a perspective of feeling safer in the late evening/night time, especially for women travelling alone. Just one man's opinion.

  • @lucistnik
    @lucistnik 10 месяцев назад +1

    Unsure about that choice of hardware. 200A on right side is clearly not compliant -- will underperform 150 kW target for 400V cars by far! - and reading that screen is that 500A cable already derating dynamically due to temperature...? Good gosh this is a miss.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      It's a concern, but would require the right mix (or wrong, I suppose) of EVs to expose the limitation. When we tried similar units in the IONIQ5 and XC40 Recharge, for example, the Volvo was still maxed out and the IONIQ 5 wasn't below 150kW for long. For individual charge sessions, these dispensers are solid in delivering whatever the vehicle requests. We'll have to see if the 200A second session limitation is much of a real-world frustration as more EVs test the stations.

  • @stevenstpeterjr8436
    @stevenstpeterjr8436 10 месяцев назад +1

    can't wait till next episode when i am on!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Possibly not next up but definitely in my January edit queue. Happy New Year!

  • @mattpen
    @mattpen 10 месяцев назад +1

    Not to be that guy or nitpick but is there a reason you chose to use the one handicap spot?

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Port placement and photo opp, as much as anything else, but I do appreciate the sentiment. It was early morning for 15 minutes and I was with the car the whole time if I needed to move, but this is a reminder to emphasize and assess accessibility more in this kind of video, thank you.

  • @WestCoastChicano
    @WestCoastChicano 10 месяцев назад +1

    Gr8 vid as usual.🚗🇺🇸🔌⚡

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the support! Happy New Year 🎉

  • @wasabi521
    @wasabi521 10 месяцев назад +1

    Tesla can put in 3x the stalls for that money. No competitor stands a chance

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      It's more about throughput. How many EGMP cars or trucks with 100+ kWh packs will a public V3 stall service in an hour? That's where we'll really see if Tesla has the chops to be more than a closed ecosystem for its own models. Beyond that, 24/7 amenities and sheltered charging add some value too.

  • @tommorgan1291
    @tommorgan1291 10 месяцев назад

    Could not get any Scottsdale chargers to work. Gave up and only charge at home.

    • @tommorgan1291
      @tommorgan1291 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@LWRC My ev is great for short travel requirements, home charging and fun to drive. I have an ICE for long trips. Works for me.

  • @newscoulomb3705
    @newscoulomb3705 10 месяцев назад +1

    In terms of being worth the money, I have mixed feelings. I know people keep referencing Tesla's V3 Supercharger bids being about 1/5th the cost per dispenser as these sites, but I don't think that's a valid comparison. Each one of these dispensers is worth four V3 dispensers in terms of power output (throughput of site), and each Delta cabinet is roughly the equivalent of a V3 cabinet. In addition, we know that Tesla is subsidizing to some level in order to gain access to sites, so their bids are likely at or below cost. As a result, my starting point is breaking costs down by site power/throughput, and then accounting for the additional amenities. So for sites like these (say $650,000 on average), they are costing just under $1,000 per kW of installed throughput, but in the case of the first site, it has a still somewhat unique to charging site canopy.
    I think that if people actually itemized the cost of an installation like this, they'd be surprised at just how quickly the numbers approach $600,000. Permitting, site design and engineering, etc. can easily exceed $100,000 on their own. When I looked at estimates for resurfacing a parking lot alone, that was close to $100,000. Likewise, an engineered canopy can cost another $35,000 to $80,000. So we're halfway to the total cost, and we haven't even estimated the cost to install the chargers themselves.

  • @TeslaRoadtrips
    @TeslaRoadtrips 9 месяцев назад

    kempower satellites would be a lot more flexible in placement and could probably put more in. prices were highway robbery. delta generally arent most robust units either.

  • @ab-tf5fl
    @ab-tf5fl 10 месяцев назад

    I recently visited a Pilot charger for the first time, and was less than impressed.
    The cables were heavy and hard to maneuver. Shared dispensers means that only 2 out of the 4 parking spaces have the charging port on the right side, and if they're taken, you're forced to stretch the cable to just barely reach the charge port. The price is also quite expensive compared to other DC fast chargers in the area. And, the activation itself was very finicky. It took several tries and several minutes to get the charger to work. Then, when I returned to the same charger a few hours later to charge up again for the return trip, the brand new Pilot charge failed me altogether, and I couldn't move to another stall because the other stalls were all occupied.
    To get home, I decided I had had enough of the Pilot chargers and would try my luck with the older 50 kW Shell Recharge a couple miles down the street and, if that failed, I'd hit the Electrify America a couple miles further down again. To my shock, not only was the Shell Recharge available (it has only one stall and is nearly always full), but everything worked perfectly. The cable felt so light and easy to plug in. After tapping my RFID card, the charge started on the first try, within seconds. The speed may be slower, but the charging experience felt so much better. And, on top of that, the price was cheaper than the Pilot, and I was in a walkable town center with better food options.
    So, newer and higher powered is not always necessarily better.
    Now, if only the Shell Recharge could somehow expand their site to have more than one stall...

    • @lucistnik
      @lucistnik 10 месяцев назад

      50 kW with 125A cable will be always lighter and easier than 200 kW with 500A cable...

  • @Runtythestar
    @Runtythestar 10 месяцев назад +2

    EV costs for road tripping are getting expensive. The EA in Plymouth MA is now $0.64 per Kwh. Charging at home is about $0.35 per Kwh.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +3

      It's definitely becoming something to navigate, and made all the more stark by the fact that some models will use these sites for free (as I do with the Electrify America sites going up in price, to be fair). I do expect prices to settle eventually and home charging stands to be improved by the flexibility of TOU rates, once utilities here pull their fingers out, but for now that means balancing cost and convenience when deciding where to stop.

    • @ab-tf5fl
      @ab-tf5fl 10 месяцев назад +1

      We will see what happens when Tesla supercharger sites start opening up. Already, in my area, the magic dock rates for non-Tesla vehicles are far less than this. Hopefully, Tesla will create some competition and drive prices down.
      That said, in rural areas where there is only one charger around, I would much rather pay ripoff prices and have the station remain running and profitable than have the station just disappear entirely because it doesn't get enough usage to generate enough profits to cover the operating overhead.

  • @dennislyons3095
    @dennislyons3095 10 месяцев назад +1

    I would expect more from the operator. Both sites have the chargers on an otherwise fairly useless piece of asphalt to the station(or truckstop). These need to be pull through for trailering. More & more EV's are tailoring & need charging more frequently than those not pulling a trailer. Operators make all truck 7 auto pumps pull through even when over 90% of cars are not towing. Can you imagine ICE cars being required to back in & on the proper side for refueling? I am very disappointed in the requirement from the government to fund these sites. Four stalls---only if your car is able to use a cable from either side. So far non are. That means only two sites at this location for charge ports on one side & if you have to maneuver then being in the drive through lane makes tha a real problem. PISS POOR design for locating the chargers. EV's are being treated as the bastard step child of the auto world by nearly all of the charger location builders. Yea, design takes some effort. So far no one is putting the effort into sites. NONE.

  • @doolittlegeorge
    @doolittlegeorge 10 месяцев назад +1

    Definitely waiting on massive efficiency gains from the pure BEV Industry which via Aptera is a very real prospect actually. Not offering up installed solar for the entire service station is a truly awesome disservice to the taxpayer. Might have even helped with that cup of coffee but probably not. Either way "grid reliability" should always be the goal as Tesla already does and so too will be true of Rivian. Ford and GM are rolling out product for their dealerships ... at some point even they might get rooftop solar religion. In the meantime actual fuel prices continue to plunge upon the USA which given fuel economy still rising to include far better hybrid drive systems now and i think many are asking serious questions of pure BEV in the USA given upfront expense and replacement battery costs. Still this is how USA transportation works now by and large excepting Class 8 Trucking. Buc'ees making a huge move into fuel retail to include charging stations as a consequence.

  • @dontbanmebrodontbanme5403
    @dontbanmebrodontbanme5403 9 месяцев назад

    1:51 - And that's why I bought a Tesla Model Y Long Range. I don't think it's necessarily the best EV. But last week when I was in another state and needed a quick charge, I found a supercharger with 10 stalls, backed in, started charging and never even had to take out a credit card. How damn difficult is it for the rest of these guys to get charging working???

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад

      To be fair, this is the one time I've had a misconnect with Autocharge+ in over a year. And I think it was my error. But I certainly wouldn't dispute that it's far simpler to hook up a Tesla with Superchargers. Activation time is much quicker too.

  • @arihanagibbons4485
    @arihanagibbons4485 10 месяцев назад +1

    They will work great until the money runs out and will become just like all the alternative cng stations that were built, useless. It's easy to spend someone else's money but when it's time to become self sufficient maintenance usually ends and it just becomes a tax loss write off or sold off to big oil, chevron, shell and bp are buying cng and ev stations as fast as they can get them.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Five years maintenance minimum to comply with funding requirements, which takes us through 2029 for the first wave, 2030 for most. By that point, EV penetration will be so far along that any entity failing to maintain its charge stations will quickly become irrelevant. Drivers will simply avoid that brand and head for the one that delivers. Fait accompli, at this point.

    • @arihanagibbons4485
      @arihanagibbons4485 10 месяцев назад

      And this is why I drive Tesla, Tesla is already self funded and not locked down by government and they just work. I did a lot of research before buying the Tesla a few months ago, sure I had lots of options and really would have liked the Mach E but charging infrastructure is what made up my mind. Having owned a chevy volt for twelve years I wanted to go all electric this time. I already have a CNG pick up and the local station is now owned by chevron and the low cost cng is now more costly than petrol. I've seen this before and will happen with the govt. funded stations again. It always does. Only works when someone else it paying for it. @@plugandplayEV

    • @kennethwers
      @kennethwers 10 месяцев назад

      @@plugandplayEVWith a government program. 5 year maintenance may mean that it may not work, but it is still standing there. The brand may not care if it works ,as long as they received the sweet install money.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Pilot-Flying J is building out a nationwide charging network that will cost substantially more than the amounts they receive from this funding. If you think that they're willing to sacrifice a generation of customers for a few million dollars, I'd question that rationale.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      @arihanagibbons4485 The Mach-E will have access to the same Tesla network in a matter of months. There are plenty of reasons to buy a Tesla ahead of other models, but private charging is no longer one of them.

  • @user-nl9me3er7w
    @user-nl9me3er7w 10 месяцев назад +2

    wow 23 kw is $10. for my home that is a little bit over $3...that is a hell of a markup lol

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Commercial vs. residential, of course, but yes the average price of home electricity in Ohio is $0.14/kWh, so $3.22 for the same energy is quite the gap.

    • @user-nl9me3er7w
      @user-nl9me3er7w 10 месяцев назад

      @@plugandplayEV see i have never seen a commercial residential bill. so i would have no idea. it just seems like a tad bit of greed thrown into it. i mean they are charging about 45 cent a KW. I can see double but triple. #wowwow lol

    • @user-nl9me3er7w
      @user-nl9me3er7w 10 месяцев назад

      @@plugandplayEV I know if I ever get an electric car. I need them to work out the infrastructure a tad bit more and the supply chain issues i.e. parts, out of dealership service and the right to fix.....IMO the government dropped the ball on this and elon need to take a steve jobs type of break from tesla. they need some car guys. he has had enough time to build quality vehicles by now but i digress.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Tesla was awarded funds in PA, so this really comes down to the state's individual choices for its infrastructure. For whatever reason, Ohio gave most of its round 1 funds to Pilot-Flying J, so this is what we'll see a lot in Ohio. Comparing to neighboring PA will be informative.
      Thanks for the perspective on how people outside the EV bubble see the bigger picture.

    • @philipdamask2279
      @philipdamask2279 10 месяцев назад

      The energy measure is kwh not kw.

  • @mattheiustwittyham5501
    @mattheiustwittyham5501 10 месяцев назад

    The lack of foresight in having a stall EV charger at a truck stop. There should be plenty of room at a truck stop to have pull through chargers.
    How are people pulling trailers supposed to charge their vehicles?

  • @todkapuz
    @todkapuz 10 месяцев назад +1

    only thing I hate is Pilot-FJ seems to have kept its super high price ..... since the tax payers funded all of the installation costs (especially on that non-canopy site)... and all that is left is maintenance and power.... really does feel a bit like a rip-off to still have the $0.20+ delta (or in the case of one PFJ where I stopped that was 500 ft from a EA station..... that was per minute.. making like a $30 delta in fill up)...... i dunno.... but at least it will get more chargers out there.... but still.. with gasoline at $3.11/gal ... the max the market should be is $0.37/kwh if we want price parity with gasoline.... Ohio is $2.80 today.... which is $0.33/kwh

    • @thenetworkarchitectchannel
      @thenetworkarchitectchannel 10 месяцев назад

      I agree. Should a site which received funds from the federal government for installation be allowed to price gouge?

    • @kennethwers
      @kennethwers 10 месяцев назад

      @@thenetworkarchitectchannel Supply and demand.

  • @erichurst2496
    @erichurst2496 10 месяцев назад

    Seems unfair that the feds aren’t giving my local Gas And Sip the free charger. Maybe they should give every gas station in the country a FREE charger.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Gas & Sip can apply for funding, just the same as any site host that meets the criteria of being within a mile of an Interstate exit. Or if they don't, subsequent rounds will open up to non-Interstate adjacent sites. There's $5 billion in the budget, so plenty of charging stations to go yet :-)

  • @rgrost1
    @rgrost1 10 месяцев назад

    We need about 1 million chargers. Did these 2 chargers cost $1.5 million?

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      No, as the video explains each site cost between $600-650K for two dispensers with four connectors. So the combined $1.3M funded hardware that can charge eight EVs at any one moment.

  • @azmike3572
    @azmike3572 10 месяцев назад

    People nowadays will just not want to spend 15 minutes or more charging car batteries to 100%. But as this technology improves, it might not take any more time than with gasoline.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      I think it's worth considering the difference in charging as a passive process, while fueling is an active one. So yes, 15-20 minutes to charge is longer than 5-10 minutes to fuel, but you can take care of other business (restroom, coffee/snacks, groceries, sit down meal etc.) while charging happens. Fueling is something you do after those activities are done, so it represents additional time at the stop. Charging still takes longer, but it's not the voided of time that those who haven't done it assume.

  • @jimmurphy5355
    @jimmurphy5355 10 месяцев назад +1

    Expensive - and unjustified since taxpayers subsidized the installation. Also partially obsolete from day 1, as almost every EV will come with NACS inlets within another year. Authorization seems a bit slow, but at least they stations work. Bottom line: a mediocre result. Not the best deal - by far - that we could have gotten. I bet Tesla could have installed Superchargers with magic docks for less money. At this point, eager as I am to see more EV charging sites, I think the rollout should be put on hold for 6-12 months, and then only resume when new installations can include some NACS cords (50:50?) The rules should also cap (for a year or two?) the price that subsidized stations can charge.

  • @davids9577
    @davids9577 10 месяцев назад

    GM Charging.... One HIGH Price. At $0.59/kw, that works out to $19.88 for one "gallon" of electricity. 33.7 Kw = 1 gallon of gas/energy. $0.59 x 33.7kw = $19.88 !!!!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      But you also get the best coffee on the Interstate...!

  • @raypabs5374
    @raypabs5374 9 месяцев назад

    Wait until a majority portion of the US cars on the road are EVs. The state and federal levels will impose crazy additional taxes for charging the EV vehicles and even more taxes for the size of batteries in the car. That $.58 per kilowatt will double or even quadruple in no time at all. I own an Ioniq5, Model Y and Ford Superduty Diesel and a decade from now, I will look back on these days as the goid old days when electric was cheap😢.

  • @vincentrobinette1507
    @vincentrobinette1507 10 месяцев назад +1

    Too expensive. If your EV averages 3.6 miles per kWh, it costs about $0.16 per mile. ($0.58/kWh) If you drive a Toyota Prius Hybrid, even with gasoline at $4.00 a gallon, you're looking at closer to $0.08 cents per mile, roughly 1/2 the cost. To be competitive with a good hybrid, electricity needs to be closer to $0.28 per kWh. (Assuming, the hybrid gets 48 MPG, and the electric gets 3.6 miles per kWh) If you can charge at home for less then $0.15 per kWh, the EV costs half what the Hybrid does. Overall, if you do most of your charging at home, the EV is by far, the better choice. If you do a lot of travelling, or, you cannot charge at home, you might consider a good Hybrid.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Good points, thanks. Everyone's use case is a little bit different and there's a big difference between travel charging and what people would use for their daily routine. Pricing will vary accordingly and how much you can (or must) access either extreme will determine whether an EV saves money or costs significantly more than an efficient hybrid option.

  • @patriot5526
    @patriot5526 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love having chargers in truck stops so that I can stop every two and a half hours to charge and have a place to relax and spend money on food and refreshments for 45 minutes while my vehicle charges, assuming the charger is working, and then continue my journey and arrive 4 hours late than I would have, after another stop or two. Probably better to get a car made for adults.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад

      Now do local driving and how much time/money one spends at gas stations in a given year...

  • @dimasalves7079
    @dimasalves7079 10 месяцев назад +1

    Telsa 🤣🤣🤣

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      They let the summer intern type the instructional screens, it seems!

  • @Paul-cj1wb
    @Paul-cj1wb 10 месяцев назад

    Tesla should get the majority of NEVI funds so they can install as many V4s 800v chargers opened to all as they can. And they do 16 stalls build outs (and very quickly), none of this 4 chargers crap. Otherwise, all the red states will do absolutely nothing with it.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Tesla will get funds to build sites in Pennsylvania, so we'll have a good chance to compare. Remember that solicitations were underway before Superchargers were accessible in any meaningful way, so there will be a lag between what's opening now and the majority of NEVI-funded sites, many of which are likely to incorporate to the J3400 standard.
      Also worth noting, Tesla itself has precisely zero 800V Superchargers open at the time of writing, despite the fact that Cybertrucks are already hitting the road.

    • @Paul-cj1wb
      @Paul-cj1wb 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@plugandplayEV They don't even have any V4 chargers installed yet. All they have is a handful of locations with V4 stall/dispensers installed. But the chargers are still V3s. I suspect it IS due to the Cybertruck and it's 4680 batteries and their dry coating.
      Remember that the the Model Y using 4680's from Giga-Texas had a horrible charging curve and they no longer make it with the 4680's. I think that they are very concerned with the dry coating not being able to hold up to super fast charging.
      In fact, I hear rumors that the Cybertruck is not even supporting the NACs standard (which is based on the CCS standard but with Tesla's connector) yet. It's using the old Tesla proprietary standard software/firmware wise. So owners can't even try to charge it on a CCS 350kw charger using an adapter. Which tells me my suspicions are correct.
      Hopefully, as they get a little more data on Cybertruck charging in the wild (which currently appears to have not too great of a curve, meaning it's being limited) they can slowly start ramping up the curve if there are no significant issues. And then finally start to allow 350kw charging, leading them to install the 800v chargers to match the dispensers.

  • @Bryan-Hensley
    @Bryan-Hensley 10 месяцев назад

    That's unbelievable..you are paying 17 cents per mile for electricity. I'm paying 14 cents per mile for gas driving my 2002 Chevy full size conversion van.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Totally depends where you stop. The 800 miles I did to Ohio cost ~$15, or $0.02/mile.

    • @Bryan-Hensley
      @Bryan-Hensley 10 месяцев назад

      @@plugandplayEV you know the price won't decline. Just as soon as the owners of the chargers see the others charging that much, they'll increase their prices. TVA announced a price hike for this year. I think it just went into effect the 1st.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      @@Bryan-Hensley Absent price fixing/oligopoly, competittion breeds price adjustments. Columbus, OH is less than 20 miles from this station and offers 50+ alternative DC charging stations, ranging from $0 to a little more than the this Pilot pricing. Travelers can already select their preference based on location, cost, and relative convenience.

  • @thomaslemay8817
    @thomaslemay8817 10 месяцев назад

    The truth will become apparent once a large section of the public is committed to EV by purchasing electric vehicles and home charging systems. The price of electricity will go right through the roof, and they will also start applying road use taxes through these public charging stations . If the charging port allows two-way communications, it will also charge road use tax in your home.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      You just made the case for home solar ☀️⚡

  • @greysheeum
    @greysheeum 9 месяцев назад

    So funny to “see” all the clapping and squealing here. 🤣

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад

      And the moaning "my tax dollars waa waa". Good for a chuckle, for sure.

  • @billschultz7459
    @billschultz7459 10 месяцев назад +1

    I don't like my tax dollars paying for this BS !!!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      I'm not especially happy with $20+ billion in US subsidies every year to keep fossil fuels cheap and plentiful myself. But hey, we all get to choose our grumbles. Have a lovely day and thanks for the comment to bring this to a wider audience 👍

  • @WalkerOne
    @WalkerOne 10 месяцев назад

    Lol, I can't believe people think the government getting involved is a good thing.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      How about the government ponying up the dough and then letting states + local private enterprise run with it? Still not a good arrangement? Genuinely inquiring, not being flippant.

  • @webstercat
    @webstercat 9 месяцев назад

    Taxpayer funded. Living in such a corrupt world….

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад

      How do you feel about annual subsidies to stabilize the fossil fuel sector?

  • @Longsnowsm
    @Longsnowsm 10 месяцев назад +1

    Right now it is cheaper to drive an ICE 4x4 full size pickup than to charge at one of these sites. WE paid for these sites. WHY are they so expensive? Are they going to cry and say there is no EV demand now if people refuse to use them due to the stupid high costs? Money has been thrown at these sites by GM, and the public and we get 4 stalls. I would love to see the cost comparisons for other types of installs to compare the install costs. The public is gettering screwed. These are bare bones minimalist installs of just barely what we need and not enough stalls. Well at those prices only the math challenged will be wanting to use them. So maybe 4 stalls is more than enough.

    • @kennethwers
      @kennethwers 10 месяцев назад

      It's all about the government install money. It is not about charging EV's.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      If that's really the case, how do you explain the 23 other stations of the same kind that Pilot-Flying J built with no government money in 2023? Or the 200 more in their plan for this year?

    • @Longsnowsm
      @Longsnowsm 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@plugandplayEV It is true there is a lot of funny money floating around out there right now. But it is a valid point not all are part of the NEVI spending. Costs to the consumer are just too high. What they are installing is the minimum most ICE drivers would expect at a fueling stop. If they keep pushing public charging costs up consumers are going to balk at EV's for sure.

  • @aladdin8372
    @aladdin8372 10 месяцев назад

    man they just dont ask tesla to build em.. tesla build em FREE

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Tesla is building some in Pennsylvania for around $200-300K each, so we'll be able to compare what they add for that pretty soon.

  • @AlexLancashirePersonalView
    @AlexLancashirePersonalView 10 месяцев назад +1

    In that time it took to initialise I could have half filled my Jaguar 2.0i petrol car.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      And I could have walked away to use the loo (if I wasn't a saddo filming it). What's your point?

  • @dvwatts
    @dvwatts 10 месяцев назад

    What a rip off. Tesla could have added 30 charging stations for that kind of money, and charged users less for charging. Is that two chargers or four? Many of those with two cables are just there for redundancy and can’t charge 2 cars at the same time.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Four active stalls, yes. These dispensers provide simultaneous charging (in theory 150kW minimum continuous to all four for compliance, if the vehicles can accept it). The power level is significantly higher than Tesla Superchargers and the amenities are more consistent, though I agree Tesla would have squeezed in more stalls for the money. Ohio didn't grant any NEVI awards to Tesla but Pennsylvania gave them 12 contracts, so there will be more comparative "bang for your buck" stations when PA has a mix of both.

  • @richrico1
    @richrico1 9 месяцев назад

    No thank you!.... I'll stick with my ICE.... Good luck, you're going to need it!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад

      Haven't needed luck in seven years, thanks though. Enjoy your weekly gas errand! 👋

  • @tommckinney1489
    @tommckinney1489 10 месяцев назад +1

    One low price....$0.59/kWh. Hmmmm....

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      It's less egregious than it might seem, at least traveling here in the Northeast. EA has pushed up non-member pricing to $0.56/kWh or $0.64/kWh in most locations, while many interstate travel plazas cost between $0.58-$0.62/kWh. I also recall EA's pilot pricing costing me $20-$30 for a basic 40-50kWh charge in the Bolt EV five years ago, so there's room for member rates or regional pricing to be integrated as they listen to customers. "Low" is definitely the wrong adjective, though!

  • @willaimhiggins5428
    @willaimhiggins5428 10 месяцев назад

    Please stop saying government funded, the correct is taxpayer funded. The government does not have one nickel, every penny comes out of your wallet. So we had 1.3 million for this one station and they had to stop funding free meals for some of our school children. I don't object to this at all, part of future, I just hope they are charging enough to repay the full cost of building this. Some day this will be very important for EV owners.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Just to clarify, the $1.3M covers two stations shown in the video (one in Ohio, one in PA).

  • @garydzidowski1134
    @garydzidowski1134 10 месяцев назад

    Another govt money throw away...no pull thru...money better spent educating the public about how to use, drive, and charge EVs. Example; You don't have to stay with the car while charging. Car should automatically be identified and card charged; hate to say it, like Tesla. As long as govt is involved it will always be a dollar short and a day late.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Driver doesn't have to stay with the car charging, they can use Autocharge+ to plug in and walk away to use the facilities. In terms of canopies and pull through, the vast majority of Tesla Superchargers don't have those either. The government is only really involved in dangling the financial carrot at these NEVI sites, while the planning and construction is down to the site host. You can see another 23 sites much like this that were installed by Pilot-Flying J across the country without any federal funding, so this assertion doesn't really hold water.

  • @786otto
    @786otto 10 месяцев назад

    If I needed an efficient car and was looking to save money I would just buy a used diesel car.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      You'd have to deal with subpar performance and losses to waste heat, but if it works for you it works.

    • @786otto
      @786otto 10 месяцев назад

      @@plugandplayEV Thanks for reply.

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 10 месяцев назад +1

    Charging an EV while traveling is neither as quick nor as easy as filling an ICE car with gas, and it's not as cheap as one might expect. An EV makes more sense if you can do almost all your charging at home overnight.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, assuming that cost is the primary motivator. What people spend on driving an EV varies so much across different use cases and models that it's tough to apply a one-size-fits-all cost analysis to electric vehicles as a whole.

    • @ab-tf5fl
      @ab-tf5fl 10 месяцев назад

      At least with my experience, most trips that do require charging, the trip length is only a little bit more than the range of the car, so I don't have to charge on the road very much. This keeps the total trip cost pretty cheap, since most of the energy is still coming from the home charger.
      For bigger trips, public charging costs are more of an issue, but in general, the longer a trip, the less often it gets taken in the first place.

  • @scottwilson2859
    @scottwilson2859 10 месяцев назад

    I thought the NEVI sites also supported Chademo.

    • @Lynyrd_Evnyrd
      @Lynyrd_Evnyrd 10 месяцев назад

      Only CCS1 is required but other connectors can be added. The other connector will eventually be mostly NACS.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      If anything, they're actually avoiding CHAdeMO. Most of the EVolve NY locations have at least two CHAdeMO connectors but the one that received NEVI funds is the first to be CCS1-only.

  • @tomking1890
    @tomking1890 10 месяцев назад

    I'll stay with gasoline.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Sure thing, have fun with that.

  • @dwnrange7812
    @dwnrange7812 10 месяцев назад +1

    $33??? Filling up on a gas sedan is cheaper

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      It may well be, especially with some hybrids on higher MPG at current prices. The difference is that gas prices are much the same within a defined area, whereas electricity ranges from complimentary to $0.64 per kWh. Home or workplace charging is typically where the savings are, then it's down to the driver to decide between cost or convenience on trips away from home.

    • @dvwatts
      @dvwatts 10 месяцев назад

      The Tesla Supercharger network is much cheaper. Where I travel it is usually 35c/kwh for a Tesla Supercharger vs when I take the same trip in a CCS car it’s 50c/kwh or more if there are connection fees. Additionally the SC network is more plentiful so I can arrive a home with close to 0 charge and charge at home for 12c/kwh.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      @@dvwatts The value here is that the customer can decide. If the price or stall count wins out for their journey, they may choose the Supercharger. If they're traveling on a rainy evening late into the night and the alternative is a Walmart EA station or Supercharger is behind a hotel with questionable amenities, they can choose the convenience of a 24/7 facility with a canopy an guaranteed restroom access.

  • @lazerusmfh
    @lazerusmfh 10 месяцев назад

    This is why Tesla owns the EV space.
    Charging any other EV just licks cockroach poo
    .59c/kwh makes the car as expensive as a gas car to drive, maybe more.
    Why go through the trouble?

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад

      Superchargers will be open to everyone this year so drivers can choose the model they prefer and charge where they want. Choice and competition is a good thing and I thank Tesla for driving the market forward.

  • @JacksonRedstar
    @JacksonRedstar 10 месяцев назад

    taxpayer funded 'gas stations' - what's next? lol

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +2

      "Calculating the cost of U.S. subsidies for the fossil fuel industry is complex because the incentives stretch across the U.S. tax code, but estimates range from $10 to $50 billion per year. The oil industry counters that the support is needed to ensure ongoing investment and reliable supply." (Reuters, March 2023)

  • @stevebaker8966
    @stevebaker8966 9 месяцев назад

    Who puts up with this

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад +1

      Emissions and engine noise? Yep, they were pretty noxious but we'll gradually phase them out over the next decade or two.

  • @markst.germain9286
    @markst.germain9286 10 месяцев назад

    The best time to buy a electric car is never.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Says the fellow commenting on an electric car video in 2024, after sales the previous year hit 10% of the market and growing.

  • @jimhazlett305
    @jimhazlett305 10 месяцев назад

    I'd like to know how many miles you got for $13.00? In Ohio at $3.00 a gallon and a car that gets 35 mpg you can get 140 miles and about 3 minutes time to pump it !! Thanks but no thanks !!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Would you also like to know about the 850 miles I did to Columbus for less than $10 thanks to three years of complimentary charging? Seems like that might offset this $13, somewhat.
      Pumping gas at whatever price they force me to pay that day, to fuel a vehicle that can't put down power immediately? Thanks but no thanks!

    • @jimhazlett305
      @jimhazlett305 10 месяцев назад

      Complimentary 🤣= free right !! NOTHING IS FREE !! Someway we ,the tax payer ,paid for this AND the rebate for buying an EV !! As soon as you had to actually pay to charge that thing all you did was complain about the cost !!🤣🤣🤣Stop every two hundred miles for an hour to go another two hundred miles ,,,,NO THANKS I'll keep my gas guzzling, polluting poor little corvette that puts down enough power when I want it !! And another question ,what happens to those batteries when you have to replace them ? Just throw them in a dump ?? What about if they catch on fire ? Can the local FD use water to put the flames out ?? And where do they get the crap to make those batteries ?? China ??@@plugandplayEV You drive what YOU want but you are not saving the world by driving an EV !! Enjoy driving your appliance!

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Tens of thousands of miles for free, yes. Courtesy of the Germans/South Koreans, as it happens, but ignorance runs rampant in that's comment so why stop there? Salty, perhaps, as I'm sure the gas pump has never read $0 when you fill up every week (which you have to waste time on, while I can wake up to a full charge).
      The further keyboard diarrhea of anti-EV bollocks says more about your thought process than any fact-based rebuttal to the grab bag of wingnut talking points. Drive what you want but know that it's a relic that won't be around much longer. 👋

  • @brucemartin2882
    @brucemartin2882 10 месяцев назад

    How inconvenient this must be knowing gas is $2.65 in Pensacola.. i can get forty dollars gas in fi e minutes and make 200 miles

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +1

      Most charging happens at home, overnight. I don't need to think about it, just wake up to a full charge. Wasting time on a weekly trip to the gas station around home isn't on my to-do list.

  • @markst.germain9286
    @markst.germain9286 10 месяцев назад

    I live in toledo and have never seen an ev charging station.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +2

      62 stations in the Toledo Metro area and multiple under construction. Pilot at 5820 Hagman Road will have one just like this before the year is out. Enjoy!

  • @teams3345
    @teams3345 10 месяцев назад +1

    I will never own one of these EVs. I just purchased a new ICE SUV that should last eight years and then I will get another. After that one is ready to retire I will retire my keys. Plus America will just get fatter eating junk and drinking sugar water while charging.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +3

      Sounds good. Happy retirement.

  • @brusewayne2032
    @brusewayne2032 10 месяцев назад

    THATS ALOT OF TIME AND MONEY. AT LEAST WITH GAS YOU PAY AND ITS 8 MINUTES

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +3

      COOL STORY. ALSO, YOUR CAPS LOCK APPEARS TO BE STUCK.

    • @brusewayne2032
      @brusewayne2032 9 месяцев назад +1

      @plugandplayEV . Ya sometimes that happens . Lol

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  9 месяцев назад

      You're a good sport 👍 Thanks for the comment.

  • @shanonqual759
    @shanonqual759 10 месяцев назад +1

    what a waste of tax payers money!!!!!!!!!

    • @joshreed1216
      @joshreed1216 10 месяцев назад

      Agreed. This stuff should be left to the private sector to figure out. This is a great example of how inefficiently the government spends money. Thats a lot of money for only 4 stalls. The tax payers pay to install the things. Then they give you the middle finger and slap some of the highest charge costs on them so they pay more than gas.

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +3

      This is a public-private funding mix. The NEVI award most likely is not the full cost of the site(s), so Pilot-Flying J is putting in a portion as well... and PFJ also sets the prices here, which is nothing to do with the government piece.

  • @timthetoolman223
    @timthetoolman223 10 месяцев назад

    If EVs are so great then why in the world does the government have to use my tax dollars to pay for chargers and bribe individuals with tax incentives to purchase the vehicles?

    • @plugandplayEV
      @plugandplayEV  10 месяцев назад +5

      Same reason they use my tax money to spend $20+ billion a year shoring up the supply of fossil fuels, probably. To foster innovation and incentivize multi-national corporations to invest in sourcing from places that don't want to destroy us. Hang on, that only applies to one of our scenarios...