We Speed Tested The World's FASTEST Electric Car Charger!

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июл 2024
  • What if a charge stop could be as quick as stopping for petrol? It may not be a pipe dream - in fact, the latest chargers coming out of China suggest that that may be our reality very soon. Elliot gets hands on with the fastest charger of them all, courtesy of GAC Aion and its charming family EV, the Y.
    00:00 Like stopping for petrol!
    00:56 A very special battery
    2:16 Time for a charge
    5:08 The implications
    6:16 What about the car?
    10:20 The bottom line
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    #GAC #AionY #Charging #Rapidcharging
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @Juleye
    @Juleye Год назад +985

    This video is 11 minutes long, it would have been fun if they started the video with him beginning the charge, and then they have the charge progress running on the side as they continue the video just for a tangible example of how quick it really takes.

    • @antoniopalmero4063
      @antoniopalmero4063 Год назад +21

      Too distracting I think but interesting to see .

    • @JonathanMorris777
      @JonathanMorris777 Год назад +21

      Oppo did that for a mobile phone (Find X2 Pro) that got 65W fast charging and got from 0-100% in around 34 minutes (I forget what exactly) by having their press launch take that exact time with a meter on screen.

    • @RPRosen-ki2fk
      @RPRosen-ki2fk Год назад +11

      @R.Jack Missed opportunity that someone will steal, since your idea was ... BRILLIANT.

    • @ChristianrnstrupRasmussen
      @ChristianrnstrupRasmussen Год назад +10

      Show it don’t Tell it.

    • @mahoney439
      @mahoney439 Год назад +5

      You have no idea on how difficult shooting a video is, are you?

  • @NeilBlanchard
    @NeilBlanchard Год назад +459

    Once folks get to driving an EV, they will realize how few times that they need to use fast charging. But, of course having it is a *very* good thing.

    • @RyanWilliams222
      @RyanWilliams222 Год назад +55

      Yeah, it’s something you rarely need-at least for people who have a place to charge overnight-but when you need it, you REALLY need it.

    • @slayergut
      @slayergut Год назад +71

      In cities where majority of the population stay in apartments.. it’s a bit different..

    • @thorwaldjohanson2526
      @thorwaldjohanson2526 Год назад +27

      @@RyanWilliams222 to be honest, it is almost never really needed for personal use. Daily use you can charge at home, and for long road trips taking a 15 - 30 min coffee and bathroom break is fine. The biggest area where I can see this being actually an important factor is public transit and commercial transportation. An electric bus charging at the final bus stop for example, where they usually wait a short while anyways. This could enable electric busses without overhead power lines and no real charging downtime

    • @qilu2004
      @qilu2004 Год назад +10

      exactly. I live in a condo in a mega city and I have used commercial fast chargers no more than 10 minutes in the 20 months of cureent bev ownership.

    • @NeilBlanchard
      @NeilBlanchard Год назад +19

      @@slayergut If you own a car, then it needs a parking spot - and there can/should be charging available there. That is easier/cheaper than fast chargers. Cars spend most of their time parked - so quick charging should only be *required* for longer trips.

  • @thelaserhive3368
    @thelaserhive3368 Год назад +209

    Quite incredible. Not just the fast charging, but also the huge ranges and low prices. Surely this will be the breakthrough we all need.

    • @Bob-qz5yj
      @Bob-qz5yj Год назад +8

      If it can make it out of china

    • @ashton9699
      @ashton9699 Год назад +3

      Keep in mind NEDC range is wildly optimistic, take it with a container of salt more than a pinch. Their claimed "435 miles" is going to be more like 250 miles if you were to do real world driving and the car was in North America. Still really good especially for the price, but it really is a wonder why they haven't moved on from the grossly inflated NEDC numbers.

    • @whatsstefon
      @whatsstefon Год назад +5

      The other breakthrough will be the purchase price of car being comparable to current ICE priced cars.

    • @joost3732
      @joost3732 Год назад +3

      curious what safety standard comes with these prices

    • @gregorygreg4263
      @gregorygreg4263 Год назад +2

      If any of you think that the price will be comparable in the UK stop now it will be at least £30000 for the short range version. We are always over taxed and pay more for a product. The Chinese want to make as much profit as they can they only need to undercut the European cars by say £5000 and they will sell bucket loads. The VW id3 started at £29000 when it was launched now it £36000 and this was touted as the people's car. C Your current best bet is MG for a £26000 and that is the short range version of MG4 SE. Spec.

  • @JamesScholesUK
    @JamesScholesUK Год назад +106

    When you can charge the car in less time than the video takes to watch

    • @TheJ1s
      @TheJ1s Год назад +1

      That's what I was thinking.

    • @kennshearer526
      @kennshearer526 Год назад +2

      According to my iPad this video is over 11 mins in length so given the new battery technology we will be there in a few months. Get your check book out 😆

    • @h8GW
      @h8GW Год назад

      I'm assuming you haven't acclimated yourself to 2x speed yet.

    • @anekinoo7
      @anekinoo7 Год назад

      Its called video editing. Also he charge from 29% to 80. It took 10 mins. 80-100 its even longer.

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

  • @Athrunwong
    @Athrunwong Год назад +17

    Damn…those engineers working behind those tech have my respect.
    It evolved so fast.

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

  • @666neloangelo666
    @666neloangelo666 Год назад +64

    the AION Y is really a great (and actually not so little) car. Bought one here in Guangzhou earlier this year and very happy with it. especially the leg space in the back row is fantastic for a more compact car.
    not even considering the price, absolutely amazing, comfortable to drive with plenty little features.

    • @Pierre-Model3-TDi
      @Pierre-Model3-TDi Год назад +3

      Can you speak about electricity comsumption of this electric car?

  • @davidmorse6290
    @davidmorse6290 Год назад +34

    “Just wait 30s for the fan to warm up; then I’ll starts the stopwatch”
    Otherwise very impressive. And you don’t need to wait by the pump, holding the trigger!

    • @christianvanderstap6257
      @christianvanderstap6257 Год назад +1

      99% of the time it is "plug in and walk inside" the other 1% is basically charge at destination. With 2 or so quick charge sessions per year,.where I only charge enough to get home, about 30min or so. Btw, I can only charge up to 43kW anyway at quick charge (but 22kW at lvl2 chargers, which is more valuable for me.)

    • @ua420
      @ua420 Год назад +1

      You also often need to condition(prepare) battery If it's cold outside

    • @voltspc9394
      @voltspc9394 Год назад +1

      @@ua420 you need to precondition the battery regardless unless its like 90-100f outside, but your nav should do that for you

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

    • @user28sdfg8
      @user28sdfg8 Год назад

      That's shit. I can fill up my tank in less than a minute, and travel 900 km. Can your electric toys do the same? And who the fu** holding the trigger, there is a switch on pistol so u don't need to hold it.

  • @Loubiaaa
    @Loubiaaa Год назад +24

    I think there is a mix up in the video. The 3C with 520A at 410V results in about 520*410=220kW (already existing in several brands), not the 480kW claimed here.

    • @guidomescalito
      @guidomescalito Год назад +6

      I noticed that too, perhaps the charger is capable of 800V but the car is limited to 400V? There are definitely 800V cars around, Porsche Taycan for example.

    • @Camnio1
      @Camnio1 Год назад

      558A x 769,6V makes 429,4kW - not the claimed 480 - even on 800V.
      ...or do you have 50kW charging loss?

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

    • @petertraveller6421
      @petertraveller6421 Год назад

      562,8 Amp at 855,6 Volts = 481 kw, that was 81%. Have to reach higher volt, that's why the system in about 900 volts.

    • @Christoph1888
      @Christoph1888 Год назад

      I noticed that, both charging figures were off.

  • @barrygiles9149
    @barrygiles9149 Год назад +107

    I 'love' all the comments that.."It's still not as fast as filling with petrol". Goodness, look how fast this technology is changing! I've had a small EV for over 3 years. Comparing charging that older car to this video is crazy. Yes costs may well dictate where and when these charging units get deployed but IMO even this fast charger will be 'out of date' in 12 months

    • @derekchapman5167
      @derekchapman5167 Год назад +10

      "...I 'love' all the comments that.."It's still not as fast as filling with petrol" - well, don't start the video saying "As fast as an ICE car". Moronic opening.

    • @bw1227
      @bw1227 Год назад +33

      once the EVs are charging as fast or faster as a gas car can fill up, people will say "yes, but it does not smell like a car", regardless what EV breakthrough are done, certain people will always find some something wrong with EVs

    • @Milkshakman
      @Milkshakman Год назад +11

      Cries in 2014 Fiat 500e maxing at 6.6kW

    • @terryjimfletcher
      @terryjimfletcher Год назад +10

      For 60% of UK households for 95% of the time they'll never visit a Rapid charger, for the other 40% this may well be a boon, although for most folk it just needs a change in mindset from "I need to fill up" to "I need to park up at a fast charger". We needs more multi-outlet 50 - 100kW chargers.

    • @jimmyryan5880
      @jimmyryan5880 Год назад +16

      @@derekchapman5167 if you include queing to pay, it is as fast as petrol

  • @cafn8ed74
    @cafn8ed74 Год назад +22

    That's impressive. It's really a massive amount of electricity flowing. Once that part of the puzzle can be reliably implemented, I wonder if we'll find the hardest part is not quick charging "a car" but supplying energy to hundreds or thousands of cars at once.

    • @NFawc
      @NFawc Год назад +1

      That would only be an issue at peak times. Eg: At 6-7pm of the drive home from work, where say 250,000 drivers choose to charge up each night.

    • @JaboodyEnthusiast
      @JaboodyEnthusiast Год назад +6

      where there is nuclear there is a way

    • @NFawc
      @NFawc Год назад

      @@JaboodyEnthusiast As long as there is the will to use it. The problem we have is too many politicians are listening to the death cult greenies.
      Hence the debacle places like Germany and other European countries are facing.

    • @F4T4L3FF3CTx78
      @F4T4L3FF3CTx78 Год назад +5

      @@JaboodyEnthusiast The time to build nuclear was 10 years ago. It's just not as fast to deploy or as flexible as renewable technologies

    • @ayebrow
      @ayebrow Год назад +8

      The vast majority of private EVs are, and will be in future, charged at much lower rates (and lower cost) overnight or when parked up during the day. This kind of extreme charging will definitely find a role, but it will be like filling an ICE car on the motorway - something expensive and to be avoided if possible.
      Commercial vehicles will definitely do more of this kind of ultra-rapid charging, and I believe Tesla is rolling out multi-MW charging units for the Semi.

  • @JohnScarrott
    @JohnScarrott Год назад +7

    The 3c battery is 522A x 414.4V = 216.32kW.
    The 6c battery is558A x 769.6V = 429.44kW.
    Where do you get 480kW from for the 3c?
    And the 60 can't be right for charging time either?
    Can you please double check and clarify the numbers, thanks!

    • @mark123655
      @mark123655 Год назад +1

      Agreed the math was totally pathetic
      And the unit as you show is kW, not Kw.
      Pretty poor for an EV channel not to get the basics right.

    • @laloajuria4678
      @laloajuria4678 Год назад

      @@mark123655 ccp says no this is right.

  • @angus9541
    @angus9541 Год назад +18

    Elliott seems more relaxed and fluid - big up yourself 🤟

    • @pottacoola
      @pottacoola Год назад +1

      Yeah i remember his reviews before he was on fully charged and the things he would say didnt always make sense but the last 2 videos iv seen of him now would make you think hes natural almost.

  • @nochreicher
    @nochreicher Год назад +22

    Great video, Elliot! Fantastic to see the fast development in charging technology. Small comment: at min 1:38 the amperage x voltage does not equal 480 kW. That's the charging power for the faster charging battery pack, isn't it? 😉

    • @serversurfer6169
      @serversurfer6169 Год назад +3

      > That's the charging power for the faster charging battery pack, isn't it?
      I thought so too, but that one only works out to 430kW. 😜

    • @nochreicher
      @nochreicher Год назад +2

      @@serversurfer6169 You are right! 559x769,6=430.206,4W
      So they'll have to be raising one or both of the values in order to reach that peak power output of 480kW.
      But still charging beyond 350kW is a fascinating speed. For me as an e-driver this will almost be too much of a hurry. A different experience having to unplug the car before you've even finished queuing for a coffee.

    • @christianvanderstap6257
      @christianvanderstap6257 Год назад

      Could be the 30c outside hampering it a bit? Cause the difference is to little, cause 3c vs 6c is double the power

    • @bilgyno1
      @bilgyno1 Год назад +3

      @@christianvanderstap6257 no. 522A x 414.4V = 216 kW.

    • @davidgould9431
      @davidgould9431 Год назад +2

      And they even put 480 Kw. They need to get someone with a science or engineering background to do the graphics proof-reading.
      Don't get me started on H20 ≠ H₂O.

  • @jimmurphy5355
    @jimmurphy5355 Год назад +29

    The minimal degradation claimed, at the charge rate we saw, and for the number of cycles they cite, is far, far better than anything from any of the other EV makers. Too good to be true? I hope it's true. I fear it's not.....

    • @scarcesense6449
      @scarcesense6449 Год назад +5

      Yes. This seems about as realistic as solar roadways.

    • @kenmcclow8963
      @kenmcclow8963 Год назад +3

      Hyundai and Kia sell cars now which can charge in 18 minutes if you are on a 350kw charger. Tesla's can charge in about 20 minutes, however I think they will speed that up when they have more experience with the 4680 batteries in the wild. They sped up the charge speeds of the 2170 battery cars in 2019. I discovered that right after I bought a car with 18650 cells. My car is from 2015 and charges at a liesurely 45 minutes, but still has nearly all it's range after over 100,000 miles. The difference is likely to come down to China building it's electrical infrastructure within the last 50 years and a lot of the US infrastructure built 100 years ago. The US infrastructure needs upgrading to take advantage of the future advancements.

    • @_TheElMan
      @_TheElMan Год назад

      As long as it's cooled correctly it's fine... Look at the terrible Nissan battery Deg Vs Tesla/Hyundai

    • @morganangel340
      @morganangel340 Год назад

      @@_TheElMan don't think the cable is the problem, is for the battery to support the high power and don't catch on fire. (I work with high power transformers, the cables from 40-60 megawatt traffo is not that thick. (different for the 250-400 megawatt)

  • @mikemellor759
    @mikemellor759 Год назад +1

    Great video - packed with inspiring information - thanks 🙏

  • @streetwind.
    @streetwind. Год назад +6

    Earlier this year, the "Megawatt Charging System" was unveiled, with its stated purpose being the service of emerging electric freight trucks.
    Five years from now, we might be using it for passenger EVs =P

  • @AKVLOGS11344
    @AKVLOGS11344 Год назад +3

    👏👏👏👏👏👏Love it, this gives me hope the future is brighter and cleaner.

  • @TC-V8
    @TC-V8 Год назад +7

    Am I missing something? - I see 220kW - well we already have more than that in Europe.

    • @RichardChambers
      @RichardChambers Год назад

      That was 220kw at the end of the charge. Current cars might peak at higher than that when at a low charge percentage but by the time they get near full the rate is much lower.

    • @logicalChimp
      @logicalChimp Год назад

      It *sustained* 220kW all the way up to 83%... even quick-charging vehicles like Teslas (among the most cosistently quick-charging EVs available) are typically charging at less than 100kW by 80%.

    • @samusaran7317
      @samusaran7317 Год назад

      @@logicalChimp Looks good on paper. I have my doubts on degradation and wonder about possible battery fires.

  • @mn8635
    @mn8635 Год назад +2

    Thank you for showing us the interior of the cars :p

  • @kmancrx
    @kmancrx Год назад +2

    Absolutely brilliant. Great stuff.

  • @ctcboater
    @ctcboater Год назад +41

    The average US car trip is about 15km, in the EU about 35km. These chargers have some utility on the motorways, but 90+% of charging can easily be done overnight with basic home or local chargers.

    • @charliecouzins7652
      @charliecouzins7652 Год назад +9

      Yes fine if you live in the countryside and wealthy. But China and most high population countries/cities live in high rise apartments or rent in shared flats with no access to home charging. Hell, most of my peers in the uk can't get an ev as they can't afford a house... If everyone incl lower income persons is to use ev, we need this technology & infrastructure

    • @bubba842
      @bubba842 Год назад +1

      Countryside and rich?? I live in a city and could definitely charge my car at my house. I'm not exactly rich, but I do ok.

    • @iansilver-ramp595
      @iansilver-ramp595 Год назад

      Will be great for towing and road trips, certainly unnecessary for most daily use. I’m sure it will be pricey/kWh, just useful in certain situations

    • @TaiViinikka
      @TaiViinikka Год назад +2

      @@charliecouzins7652 If you have parking and there is electrical infrastructure nearby, you can and should charge overnight. (Building codes are changing as we speak!) If you don't have parking, how do you own a car at all?

    • @jaidonrymer3621
      @jaidonrymer3621 Год назад +3

      @@TaiViinikka it's called on street parking, you have no dedicated parking spot for your house and no way to run power to whatever space you end up in when you park up.

  • @ThaedDavid
    @ThaedDavid Год назад +10

    For me fast charging is the most important factor in going electric. Currently we have to park our car on the road away from our house, and have no other charging options near work or our house. If we can charge it in under 10 minutes on the way to work it would mean we can finally go electric.

    • @ian54589
      @ian54589 Год назад +2

      You can also try to get your municipality to install something level 2 in public space near you or have your work install one.

    • @HonestWatchReviewsHWR
      @HonestWatchReviewsHWR Год назад

      Same here. This is the breakthrough I've been waiting for. Hopefully it will be available in the UK soon.

    • @JohnScarrott
      @JohnScarrott Год назад +4

      I charge on a 50kW Rapid next to the supermarket, 40 minutes shopping equals a full charge, and no standing next to a petrol pump waiting to fill up. I also sometimes charge on the public car park 22kW chargers whilst I'm at work, again no waiting around and the car is easily fully charged by the time I finish work, despite my car only being able to take 3kW AC from the 22kW feed (it's a 2018 Nissan Leaf 30kW). Sometimes I charge at B&Q or other supermarket slow chargers. You don't need this crazy speed charging to go electric, you just need to look into where you can charge when shopping or at work, or at other places (pub/restaurant for dinner, sports centre, public car parks etc). I never have to wait for my car to charge, I'm always doing something else whilst it's charging.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Год назад +1

      @@JohnScarrott I thought that all Leafs apart from the early ones had 7kw charging. My 2015 Leaf certainly does. 3kw at level 2 is hardly better than plugging into a 13 amp socket.

    • @amnottabs
      @amnottabs Год назад +1

      @@JohnScarrott we know it is doable but that 40 minutes charging while shopping can be done how often without going purposely for charging? I mean I do long shopping sessions maybe once every two weeks but only spend like 5 minutes weekly at the gas station

  • @anuraagt
    @anuraagt Год назад +2

    Astonished by this basic mistake by the "experts" - at 1:45, 522 amps x 414 volts is about 216 kW. The voltage figure is wrong, these systems are all 800 volts plus (880 - 1000 most likely). Amazed that they got this wrong.

  • @mountee
    @mountee Год назад +2

    Amazing providing the battery health isn’t damaged as a result.

    • @mark123655
      @mark123655 Год назад +1

      Agreed. It's easy to fast charge.
      It's harder to fast charge and still have the battery in good order after one million miles or 8 years.
      And I'm not sure if I'd trust a Chinese warranty.

  • @vorlon81
    @vorlon81 Год назад +5

    Missed Elliot's Videos 🤗,
    Glad to see him on fully charged and info about the Chinese ev sector. Doing any Auto shows this year?

  • @mikadavies660
    @mikadavies660 Год назад +14

    Wow... The options available in China are amazing. EV's in the UK are so far behind.... Years! Not to mention the difference in prices!!

    • @carlmathisen
      @carlmathisen Год назад +1

      In Norway we have quite a few 150kW, 200kW, 250kW and 300kW chargers. The problem is most cars can't charge at 300kW. However most chargers have two plugs, so often you'll see two 80kWh battery cars getting 150kW each, going from 20% to 80% in 20 minutes.

    • @downwind_david
      @downwind_david Год назад +1

      Try living in Australia... we are painfully behind the curve. WA has just announced with great fanfare that is installing the longest electric highway stating "Each charging location will be fitted with a standard charger and a 150kW DC fast charger". Why even bother with the standard charger (complete waste of space, time and money) and even the fast charger at 150KW will be considered slow by the time it has all been rolled out - they should be aiming for a 150KW and 300KW at each location. This video reminds me of the improvements in microchips where speed and memory were doubling every year. It won't be long before we park over a wireless pad for 60 secs and get a full charge, probably as we make our way through the drive thru fast food joint! 🤣

    • @mikadavies660
      @mikadavies660 Год назад

      @@downwind_david One thing for sure.... If I could live in Australia, it would be my No1 choice.

    • @aligenc659
      @aligenc659 Год назад

      ​@@carlmathisen I would like to move to Norway :)

  • @TheAzzanellese
    @TheAzzanellese Год назад +1

    Remember that the silver bullet rarely exists in this world. Ultra fast charging means huge spikes in power demant. In electric power delivery, a good measure is that everything quick and intense is very inefficient and typically that power does not come from solar or wind or even nuclear, but gas turbine that needs to quickly ramp up (again, inefficient and polluting). So if you really need this, it is better and more sustainable that you don't buy a new car and stay with your old petrol car

  • @juusinauja1688
    @juusinauja1688 Год назад

    “The car gonna fall apart before the battery” made my day!😂 at 7:30

  • @Rob_Dekker
    @Rob_Dekker Год назад +24

    These kind of videos make me happy. 5% battery degradation after a million miles is amazing. This will change peoples opinions. Thanks 🙏🏼

    • @ataksnajpera
      @ataksnajpera Год назад +9

      Keep dreaming... That's total BS.

    • @bruceritchie7613
      @bruceritchie7613 Год назад +2

      I really really doubt that claim unfortunately.

    • @Rob_Dekker
      @Rob_Dekker Год назад +3

      Even if it is half the miles and 8% it’s still better than the current battery degradation I reckon.

    • @NetraAmorosi
      @NetraAmorosi Год назад

      1 Million Kilometers not miles. That translates to about 621,371 Miles.

    • @KuramaKitsune1
      @KuramaKitsune1 Год назад +4

      I'm at 60,000 MI 2 years of ownership my model 3 currently has roughly 10% battery degradation but hasn't gone past that

  • @James_Ryan
    @James_Ryan Год назад +13

    Love the way the size of the screen scales with the charging speed. ;)

  • @rquimbayo
    @rquimbayo Год назад

    Excellent video!. well explain and presented 👍

  • @EugeneLambert
    @EugeneLambert Год назад +1

    Another great video from Elliot. Those charging speeds are crazy!

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад +1

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

  • @djayjp
    @djayjp Год назад +3

    1:44 That's incorrect. AxV = 216kW

  • @AsphaltAntelope
    @AsphaltAntelope Год назад +6

    Meanwhile in the UK we have motorway service stations with a miserable number of terrible chargers and government backed/taxpayer funded BritishVolt who don't seem to have any ambition at all. It's embarrassing.

    • @davefitzpatrick4841
      @davefitzpatrick4841 Год назад

      nearly as expensive as driving a Ice car with current rapid chargers prices as well !

    • @GudieveNing
      @GudieveNing Год назад +1

      True alas. I have had a Leaf since 2018 and looking at a new long range AWD EV such as EV6, Model Y etc. But catastrophic state of non Supercharger infrastructure is an embarrassment. The UK government are owned by big oil, and now Truss is PM there is little hope.

  • @matthiaskreidenweis
    @matthiaskreidenweis 4 месяца назад

    The power electronics involved to make that happen must be incredible 🤯

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Год назад

    Love your work 👍

  • @grahamguest142
    @grahamguest142 Год назад +6

    Using my car for 'feed in' when I'm not using it and running vertically free is why I'm going ev, speedy charging is nice to have, but connectivity is key in our energy deficit times.

  • @tesla-spectre
    @tesla-spectre Год назад +35

    It "slows down" to 230kW 😱 that is insanely fast ...
    The named battery degradation is hard to believe...
    And the car prices are incredible... if such a car comes to Europe, it would blow all others off the market quickly... because that esp the small one would open it to absolutely everybody...
    Even Tesla cannot compete with those numbers ...
    Somehow it seems too good to be true...

    • @jooptablet1727
      @jooptablet1727 Год назад +9

      That's because this manufacturer is losing money on every vehicle sold. CCP is keeping these companies afloat because they think long-term instead of quarterly profits. Not a value judgement on my part, just an observation.

    • @Ads.D
      @Ads.D Год назад +8

      Well that price is a conversion of what the price is in China where it's manufactured. For Europe & US you are then looking at import costs and tax on top too, which then increases the list price... Would probably still be cheaper than a Tesla though 😉

    • @experimentalcyborg
      @experimentalcyborg Год назад +4

      The degradation seems in line with modern lithium iron phosphate batteries. They probably achieve these charging speeds by dynamically switching the cell configuration and charging them in parallel.

    • @Moses_VII
      @Moses_VII Год назад +3

      @@jooptablet1727 that's why I like Chinese capitalism. All about improving technology. If the West was like this, then China would have no chance of competing.

    • @mark123655
      @mark123655 Год назад +4

      Tesla V3/4 superchargers can do 500-600A at 400V (so a similar 240kW speed).
      Fast charging is easy.. fast charging without reducing your range (ie. Harming the battery) is different.
      Guess we will see in 5yrs whether these batteries hold up and the manufacturer isn't having to replace batteries under warranty.

  • @olivergunn2796
    @olivergunn2796 Год назад +1

    I am amazed, imagine whats possible combining this technology with overhead electric lines for trucks, with a relatively small battery (think 50kwh) and only 10-20% coverage of the motorway system you could eliminate the need for diesel, a similar case for electric busses with opportunity charging.
    One of my biggest worries about green technologies is that we are eleviating our dependency on fossil fuels but then growing a dependency on lithium and cobalt etc. this gives me a lot of hope

  • @francoisdelestre1728
    @francoisdelestre1728 Год назад

    Mind blowing ! Thanks to the Fuly Charged Chanel.

  • @mvteh
    @mvteh Год назад +3

    Amazing developments and nice for the odd road trip. Interested to know how much electricity is lost in the process, with all the cooling needed for the cables, the plug and in the car, and how it compares to 11KW AC charging or a more leisurely 150KW rapid charge. These can be considerable as a recent publication by the ADAC has shown.

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

  • @johnnyonline
    @johnnyonline Год назад +6

    I always assumed this tech would evolve eventually, but never this quickly. well done to these clever engineers. The west really needs to pull up its socks.

    • @FeisarX
      @FeisarX Год назад

      I'm sure this is the only electronics industry in China that hasn't stolen 50%+ of what they started working with.

  • @arevee9429
    @arevee9429 Год назад

    Nice job as always, Elliot.

  • @tasomaniac
    @tasomaniac Год назад +1

    4:10 all you have to do is to change the charging station, change the cables and the car also needs to support it. Lol that's literally everything 🤣😂🤣

  • @jaymesdevine7737
    @jaymesdevine7737 Год назад +7

    Rising gas prices, not charging speed will convince people to switch to electric.

    • @jaymesdevine7737
      @jaymesdevine7737 Год назад

      @@tdh7865 Long term gas prices will rise. As more EVs are on the roads, the less gas will be used. And gas prices will go up because of the loss of economies of scale. To go along with this, electricity prices will fall long term.

  • @rlaxton666
    @rlaxton666 Год назад +3

    So a 3C charging rate for an 80kWh pack is just 240kW, a rate that Tesla have had for years and several other companies as well. What would be impressive is if they are maintaining that rate from 0-80% since it is the area under the charge curve that denotes the energy that has been transferred. A bit more technical detail of the charge curve would have been very useful. A 6C charge rate is 480kW, which is definitely a change, but once again the charge curve needs to be understood to see what this means.
    The other issue is the charging standards in use around the world. GB/T is officially limited to 250kW as far as I can tell, and CCS is limited to 350kW. MCS from CharIn can do 3.75MW but with a far larger connector designed for trucks. XPeng have a 480kW charging connector, but this gets into the same proprietary problems that Tesla have in the US and other markets where they use their slimline plug.
    There is a long way to go before really fast charging becomes a reality, but this does look like a good first step.

    • @desmoheli
      @desmoheli Год назад

      Sure, but Tesla will sustain those 250kW not onger than 30% SoC. My Model 3 LR is Miles away from the charging curve shown, everything above 60% SoC at Tesla is boring slow.

  • @neilrmcd
    @neilrmcd Год назад

    Can you imagine arriving at Oxford Services and not having to wait for the current car to finish, the chargers are all actually working and then the charge taking 10mins! It's like the stuff of science fiction compared to current world.

  • @flamaest
    @flamaest Год назад

    Spectacular video!!!! Can't wait for these EVs!!!

  • @TheofficialMegaracer
    @TheofficialMegaracer Год назад +8

    This sounds better than i think it is….. im skeptical….. but if works with all this specs from chargingtime to degradation its fantastic

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

  • @PinataOblongata
    @PinataOblongata Год назад +29

    No, we DON'T need extreme fast charging to transition people into EVs - we need EVs as affordable as cheap 2nd-hand ICE cars, like 3-5k, not bloody 23k, we need them available in other countries, we need the charging infrastructure available and we need power prices lower. Being able to upgrade the batteries on old 2nd-hand EVs to the latest tech would also be nice.

    • @WouterHalswijk
      @WouterHalswijk Год назад +1

      This exactly!

    • @porovaara
      @porovaara Год назад +1

      This vehicle is 15k USD as quoted in the video. No Idea what it would cost in the states.

    • @PinataOblongata
      @PinataOblongata Год назад

      @@porovaara I'm in Australia, and I used a straight conversion, but we simply do not have these cars or whole brands available.

    • @moonw0man
      @moonw0man Год назад +1

      How the hell do you think you get cheap used EVs other than selling them new in the first place? Or do you think auto manufacturers can produce a new car that costs $3k?

    • @PinataOblongata
      @PinataOblongata Год назад

      @@moonw0man Firstly, it's a fair point that some more expensive models will trickle down into a more affordable 2nd-hand market - no issue with that.
      Secondly, Yes, I DO think manufacturers could WORK WITH GOVERNMENTS to produce an affordable car for low-income earners if they actually wanted to do anything about climate change and quality of life for said group, rather than it really being all about profit margins fro both the companies and the politicians - in exactly the same vein you could subsidise PV panels and a battery for every household under a certain income tomorrow, if you really wanted to.
      You can see how cheaply China can make some of their vehicles - yes, that might be with lower safety and consumer protection standards (and workplace and engineering standards) but for a large proportion of people their relatively short-distance needs can be met with a very cheap vehicle, even new. Maybe it has to be a glorified golf cart or scooter or "Smart car" type of vehicle to begin with, but it can be done, and once there is a market there will be market competition that drives up what you get for your money.

  • @johndonaldson5126
    @johndonaldson5126 Год назад

    I've been saying it all along. We don't need larger batteries for longer range, just faster charge times. It solves the long distance trips, cars tying up charge stations, and eliminates the need for PHEVs.

  • @ProfessorHamer
    @ProfessorHamer Год назад +2

    We’ve had 2C since about 2017, and currently 3-4C is available. The average cell C rate from 10-80% is what counts as well, not the peak.

  • @AdrianMcDaid
    @AdrianMcDaid Год назад +4

    I would be happy just for working chargers

  • @nssimpson
    @nssimpson Год назад +56

    I wasted loads of time refueling ICE cars. With an EV it just fills up overnight so no hassle. On the very odd occasion I have to use a public charger it's really not a big deal. Obviously not the case for people with no off-road charging ability.

    • @SpottedCreeper
      @SpottedCreeper Год назад +9

      This is a very good point. I've had an EV for 3 years, have only needed to charge at a public charger 7 times, the rest of the time I charge overnight - every morning a full 'tank'.
      Obviously everyone's use case is different. I use my EV for daily commute (round trip 60 miles / 96 km). Don't own another vehicle anymore either. We thought we'd keep the ICE car for the 'long trips' but after the first year we realised it was just rotting on the driveway so we sold it.

    • @schoonerthedog
      @schoonerthedog Год назад +2

      The ONLY time an EV is limiting is a long road trip. I only can afford my PiP for now, and I hope to see more cars like this one with its kW/M range for the 70-80kWh battery pack making its way to America. The only good EVs we have are all out of most peoples budget or have abysmal range/charging speeds

    • @panopsata3038
      @panopsata3038 Год назад +1

      Also you don't even have to charge every night.

    • @bhatkrishnakishor
      @bhatkrishnakishor Год назад

      The more people can charge at home, will give people using public charging a bit of reprieve.
      Also, charging infrastructure sharing will further alleviate the problem.

    • @alanmay7929
      @alanmay7929 Год назад

      Nonsense!!!!! It works for you because you have a place at home to charge! Not everyone has your same opportunities! Also for things like towing…… and a lot of ICE have bigger fuel tanks for even longer range…..

  • @andrewhillman9632
    @andrewhillman9632 Год назад

    Wonderful video! 👍😃

  • @BryanSeigneur0
    @BryanSeigneur0 Год назад +1

    It was so fast that you missed showing us the peak kW!!!

  • @mkkm945
    @mkkm945 Год назад +3

    Wow. This is going from a meal break duration to a toilet break duration. Simply amazing.

    • @user-jh6vt8vx4v
      @user-jh6vt8vx4v Год назад

      I tell you what, 8 mins not enough for me to gobble up my lunch.

    • @mkkm945
      @mkkm945 Год назад

      @@user-jh6vt8vx4v exactly. Once the car is faster than human, who cares any more?

  • @Paul-cj1wb
    @Paul-cj1wb Год назад +12

    That's great. However, we never saw it go above 220kw. We already have several cars that charge faster than that, and a few that can do significantly faster than that. The Lucid Air does above 300kw, the Porsche Taycan does 270kw, the Ionic 5 and EV6 do 240kw, and most new Teslas reach 250kw. The Ionic 5 and EV6 go from 10-80% in 18 minutes, and those are larger batteries than the 60kw that this car you're charging has so it's adding significantly more kilowatts in that time (around 50kw vs. around 30kw here, so almost double). The Lucid adds 200 miles (322 kilometers) in 11 minutes. And those have been independently confirmed by actual owners, not a company's claims. So what is better here that is not already out? Can someone point it out to me?
    Also, I noticed that it raises the AMPs to get to the 220kw shown, not the Voltage, which is really, really bad for the battery. As opposed to raising the voltage which is much easier on the battery. I'm confused about what is being shown that is any better than what we already have.

    • @theexmann
      @theexmann Год назад +3

      Agreed. Other companies have better more proven technology to deal with superfast charging like Hyundai, Porsche, and Tesla.

    • @garyallsopp6369
      @garyallsopp6369 Год назад +2

      Bear in mind though all those vehicles are considerably more expensive.

    • @logicalChimp
      @logicalChimp Год назад +5

      The difference is in the battery, I think - which means it can *sustain* that charging level from 30% to 80% (even at 83%, it was still pulling ~220kWh). Most cars currently will hit their peak at around 10%-15%, and then charging rates will drop significantly, and plateau... then drop again around 50%, etc.
      It's also likely that it did go higher than ~220kWh... but even if it didn't, that's a 50% charge (30-80%) in 10 mins... meaning it put over 35kWh into the battery in that time.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Год назад +2

      The voltage and current into a battery are inextricably linked. If you try to raise the voltage the current will go up accordingly. If the charger cannot provide the current, the voltage cannot rise.
      Perhaps you are referring to 800-volt charging. In that case the battery is split into two parts that are temporarily connected in series rather than in parallel. With 800 volt charging it is possible to charge at twice the 400 volt rate without increasing the charging current.

    • @logicalChimp
      @logicalChimp Год назад +2

      @@rogerphelps9939 Actually, if the power level stays the same, then raising the voltage will *drop* the current. Watts = Volts * Amps

  • @grahampalmer
    @grahampalmer Год назад +1

    Having fewer charging stations simply defeats the object. You will increase the waiting time for the charging station to become available for the next customer. Also these current stations are impractical for your car to park. They need to be set up just like current petrol pumps; drive in / drive out; all in one direction.

  • @g-r-a-e-m-e-
    @g-r-a-e-m-e- Год назад +1

    Amazing tech, Elliot is fab 💓

  • @djlorenz11
    @djlorenz11 Год назад +3

    I don’t switch to EVs because I have to stay all night long looking at my car charging on AC…. That is too slow! /s
    Why do we need these speeds? For once a year trips? My EV is already faster than ICE, it takes 5s to plug it in and it charges by itself, and I never have to visit dirty pump stations anymore!

    • @Somebody294
      @Somebody294 Год назад +1

      A decent amount of people around the world don't have a way to plug their car into AC overnight

  • @LeicesterMike
    @LeicesterMike Год назад +17

    As 80% of cars will still charge at home the infrastructure required will be radically smaller than that of today.

    • @curtisbme
      @curtisbme Год назад

      The majority may charge at home currently but that is simply because buying an EV is generally only a reasonable choice if you have a home and a garage to charge from.
      Only 63% of owners of housing units, and 37% of renters have access to a garage or covered parking (2015 data) and likely very, very few of those spots have charger access.
      While, theoretically you won't need nearly as many public chargers as we have gas pumps, given a notable percentage of owners that will be able to charge from home or office, there is still a insanely massive increase in fast charging units needed to get to where electric cars are an option for all.

  • @mrmawson2438
    @mrmawson2438 Год назад

    Great video mate

  • @truecolors5413
    @truecolors5413 Год назад +2

    I Live in a gas car and can't run A.C. all day on hot summers but with his set up I could easy and charge battery to new in minutes. Truly a Game Changer

    • @tren133
      @tren133 Год назад

      Fast charging is expensive though, basically the same price as filling up with gas. If an EV is just sitting there with the AC on, the battery is so big it could run for several days straight with the AC without needing to recharge. If you really were in a situation where you need to run the AC during the day, just go park at a public level 2 charger for a few hours twice a week, which would keep the car fully charged and be much cheaper than DC fast charging.

    • @truecolors5413
      @truecolors5413 Год назад

      @@tren133 WoW that's NEWS to me that Fast charging costs the same as Gas. Wowsers unreal. Thanks for tip. I'm to poor to buy a E.V. now but that Truly SUCKS that you say fast charging is on par with Gas. What a scam

    • @tren133
      @tren133 Год назад

      @@truecolors5413 How is it a scam? DCFC charges faster, requires more expensive equipment, is located in prime real estate, and this type of charging is usually done at daytime peak demand hours. Of course it costs more, compared to charging in your own garage/driveway at off peak hours in the middle of the night using a cheap $500 level 2 charger. But if you commute daily, buying a Chevy Bolt that costs as low as 25k USD and being able to charge at home every few nights is absolutely cheaper than owning an equivalent compact gas powered hatchback after just a couple of years.

  • @jordskates
    @jordskates Год назад +8

    This is amazing and game changing in terms of charging speeds and I personally think it's great - but I still know that there will be people that would still moan about waiting for 8 minutes. I guess there must be a limit to how safely you can charge a large capacity EV battery though

    • @colingenge9999
      @colingenge9999 Год назад +3

      They should be moaning about how much time it takes to fill with petrol since the typical EV driver will spend Less than 1/10 of the time charging as they do filling with gas because you charge at home.

    • @ab-tf5fl
      @ab-tf5fl Год назад +1

      For personal car travel, this doesn't actually matter much, as the vast majority of charging takes place slowly at home.
      Where I think this ultra-fast charging tech can really shine, though, is long haul trucking. In a business where time is money, charging speeds have to have times comparing with pumping diesel in order for electric semi-trucks to take off.

  • @ichheissedamian
    @ichheissedamian Год назад +7

    that range to price ratio is insane, i would buy one immediatly if they were available in germany

    • @BlingJ.
      @BlingJ. Год назад

      and i thought tesla and mercedez and corrola are good lol lmao

  • @paulw575
    @paulw575 Год назад +1

    Thank goodness Elliot was holding a banana at the beginning so that we could get a good idea of the charger size 😆

  • @SirCrashaLot
    @SirCrashaLot Год назад +1

    Being into FPV I never understood the approach to batteries for electric cars. Stuffing 7k cells into pack means that we cannot monitor all the cells separately, It would be quite an undertaking to match them as well. Not sure if matching is being done, should be as industry standard. With larger cells as shown we can actually monitor each cell, whats more we can match it.
    For people wondering why it bothers me: Not matched cells, where resistance differs too much mean more stress on unmatched cell leading to premature failure. I fly high performance racing drones, currently setups using single 6 cell batteries and I have seen many fires over the years. Lots of first hand experience, class D fires are fun as well. Anyways, both matching and monitoring matters.
    Good move from this manufacturer.

  • @karthik4711
    @karthik4711 Год назад +10

    Personally i don't mind 30+ mins charge time if the rage is 700+ kms

    • @jimmyryan5880
      @jimmyryan5880 Год назад +5

      We must be the only ones who stretch their legs on a long drive

    • @logicalChimp
      @logicalChimp Год назад +1

      I think is more for the people who don't remember to get petrol until the 'empty tank' light goes on when they're on the way to the office, and need to refill fast... they'll do the same thing in their EV, and if it takes 30 mins to recharge, they'll be late... they're also (typically) the folk that prefer to charge to full, rather than just putting enough in for now, and charging 'properly' later - because that takes foresight and planning :p

    • @amnottabs
      @amnottabs Год назад +1

      @@jimmyryan5880 I would take a +700km range EV over a fast-charging ~350km any day, specially considering I could top that at home during the time my car is parked and then ignore the battery level during any single-day trip I could do

  • @m3photo726
    @m3photo726 Год назад +8

    We’ll be laughing at this in just a few years’ time when EV range is measured in months …

  • @briannewman6216
    @briannewman6216 Год назад +2

    High speed charging is not as important as some people may think since at least 90% of charging is done while a car is parked somewhere, like at home, work or a shopping centre.

  • @mufflejoy
    @mufflejoy Год назад +1

    How much energy does the cable cooling system on the charger use?

  • @GarzaB
    @GarzaB Год назад +22

    I’m getting ready to buy my first EV. Let’s save this planet!

    • @RyanWilliams222
      @RyanWilliams222 Год назад

      Yes!

    • @farodopi5170
      @farodopi5170 Год назад +11

      there is a terrible misconception
      0 local emisssion (which is actually not even true since tyres also produce very harmful emissions) doesn’t mean 0 global.
      You would not save anything if you buy an EV. perhaps saving a 10 to 20% global emissions but that’s all.
      you want to save the planet go by bicycle … maybe a small electric kick scooter to the maximum.
      But if you think that EV is ecologic you got it all wrong.

    • @thorwaldjohanson2526
      @thorwaldjohanson2526 Год назад +7

      @@farodopi5170 either side of this argument often have misconceptions and bad data. At the moment I agree with you about the order of magnitude, however EVs have the huge potential when coupled with renewable / non fossil fuel power generation, at which point it will be a Lot better than Ice. But yeah, ev alone is not much greener globally. But less air and noise pollution locally, charging at home (not having to go to gas stations) and much better driving experience (especially in cities) are very significant advantages on their own in my book

    • @andreiionescu205
      @andreiionescu205 Год назад

      @@thorwaldjohanson2526 remember they have to mine for the baterry materials,people are too greedy to really save the planet,saving IT from,changes are inevitabile,all we can do,îs adapt to them

    • @huepix
      @huepix Год назад

      I walk
      lol

  • @stevenbarrett7648
    @stevenbarrett7648 Год назад +12

    I filled our PHEV with petrol recently, 20 mins to drive to the petrol station, 6 mins queuing, 5 mins to fill, 8 mins to queue to pay (only one cashier at lunchtime) then 20 mins drive home so we were ready to go early doors next morning….nearly an hour to ‘charge’ with petrol. Meanwhile our EV was plugged in at home and charged on cheap rate power overnight for pennies, no drive no queuing and they say charging takes a long time ….really ??

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Год назад +2

      Queue to pay? What country still has that? Last time I had to do that was over 20 years ago in some small French village.

    • @yehudagoldberg6400
      @yehudagoldberg6400 Год назад

      You need someone to plan your day buddy.
      Why are you leaving your house just to fill up? Everyone I know fills up when they 1) are low on fuel, 2) passing a station.
      Wait times, queue to pay... hmm.

    • @stevenbarrett7648
      @stevenbarrett7648 Год назад

      @@zapfanzapfan I needed a VAT receipt and the pumps printer was out of action so had to go to the shop and queue. It’s like that every single time I go, never find a pump with a working print-out and usually a mile long queue to pay. It’s faster if you fill up on the motorway….if you can afford to !

    • @stevenbarrett7648
      @stevenbarrett7648 Год назад

      @@yehudagoldberg6400 3am start, didn’t fancy prattling around looking for an open station, didn’t fancy paying top dollar on the motorway either. It’s called ‘planning’

    • @zapfanzapfan
      @zapfanzapfan Год назад

      @@stevenbarrett7648 Ah. The shop part is usually never open when I fill up anyway, luckily the printers tend to work.

  • @ferkeap
    @ferkeap Год назад

    Elliot has the best subjects.
    And good presentation.

  • @Jens.Krabbe
    @Jens.Krabbe Год назад

    "This is all we have time for today." That's such a flow-TV thing to say, rooted in previous millennium 😀

  • @matthias4
    @matthias4 Год назад +4

    I once calculated the ‚charging‘ speed of our local gas station with our Opel/Vauxhall Astra. The result was about 19 Megawatts, so nineteenthousand kW. (8.5 kWh per liter)
    In my opinion EVs don't need to get there, we just shouldn't claim they can be charged as quickly. I absolutely prefer EVs, but even if they're charged in the same time, that would be an apples to oranges comparison due to the different energy amount.

    • @ayebrow
      @ayebrow Год назад

      I think you are forgetting two things. ICE technology is hopelessly inefficient, so the fact that fossil fuels are energy dense is largely cancelled out by the fact that you throw away 70-80% of that energy as heat.
      Secondly, filling an ICE car requires a special trip EVERY time, which nearly always requires longer to pay than to actually fill up the fuel, whereas the vast majority of EV charging is done on a “park, plug-in, go and do something else” basis.
      One of the greatest pleasures I have as an EV owner is that I almost never have to rapid-charge it, so the days of standing next to my car holding a stinking fuel hose, and then going into a building to pay are history.

  • @hugovale6360
    @hugovale6360 Год назад +16

    Holy crap, 15k for a new electric car with 400km range is quite amazing. Something tells me that soon electric cars will be kicking ICE cars ass

    • @NetraAmorosi
      @NetraAmorosi Год назад +1

      Well 15K in china anyway.

    • @Thatsme849
      @Thatsme849 Год назад +2

      yeah probably without all the safety requirements that we have to have in Europe. Saves quite a bit of money i guess

    • @brandywell44
      @brandywell44 Год назад +1

      You forget, for example UK, Government interference that will expand the price considerably for no benefit to the end user.

    • @theolich4384
      @theolich4384 Год назад +3

      ​@@Thatsme849 More like it's because the Chinese EV scene being ultra competitive. Huge market filled with players that're just beginning to venture into rest of the world. Even Tesla has to sell for less there just to keep the edge.
      Not just cars. Oh, I forget that everything in Europe naturally get expensive for...like no particular reasons.

    • @qilu2004
      @qilu2004 Год назад +1

      @@Thatsme849 lol, what safty measures did u have in mind? they are all common nowadays.

  • @kennyfordham6208
    @kennyfordham6208 Год назад +1

    Right, everything is just dandy, when the sun is shining and the birds and singing.
    What about, when it's ten below zero, or topping a hundred degrees? 🧐

  • @gabe415
    @gabe415 Год назад

    Xtreme fast charging and long range! This is what I need! Bring GAC cars in Canada!

  • @prerunnerwannabe
    @prerunnerwannabe Год назад +5

    Very impressive, but I'm just not sure I believe those battery life claims when charging so aggressively.

    • @AdrianMcDaid
      @AdrianMcDaid Год назад

      Even it was 200k miles most cars don't see that

    • @AdrianMcDaid
      @AdrianMcDaid Год назад

      Even it was 200k miles most cars don't see that

    • @noseonscent1935
      @noseonscent1935 Год назад +1

      Life4Po (lithium Iron Phosphate) batteries have next to zero degradation, on top that semi-solid state and solid state is coming literally in 2-3 years tops. Future is bright.

  • @davidf2281
    @davidf2281 Год назад +3

    1:37 522A at 414V is about 216kW. If those numbers are correct then charging this thing is, on the face of it, less than 50% efficient.
    Edit: The display at 4:24 makes a lot more sense.

  • @jonathantaylor1998
    @jonathantaylor1998 Год назад

    I have a question, though, Elliott...
    Why the banana...?
    I kept waiting for the 'punchline'... 🤣

  • @59BigWalt
    @59BigWalt Год назад

    Finally! Great review. Do they have a delivery date for the states?

  • @yips_way
    @yips_way Год назад +3

    Charging isn't my problem, over priced EV's is much more of a concern. Sell those Chinese cars around the world for the same price & the ICE would die a vastly quicker death. Can I see that happening soon, no, likely never. And if energy prices keep rising so fast there may even come a time where EV's cost more to "fill up" too if you don't have any other options to charge.

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 Год назад +1

      The industry is feverishly trying to build the cars quickly enough to meet demand.

  • @pasad335
    @pasad335 Год назад +4

    Very high speed charging is only possible if you have very large amounts of power available at the location. That seems obvious, but is always overlooked in the discussion which seem to focus only on the battery technology. If you want to put 50 kWh for example into a battery, whatever battery that might be, the power requirement gets huge as the time goes down. To do that in 2 minutes as you suggested in the video requires a power of 1.5 MW. If you have 3 charging stalls all of the sudden that site needs almost 5 WM of power capacity. That's the same as a large factory or a huge office building. Current petrol fueling stations only have power capacities of around 200 kW, so you aren't going to be converting those into fast charging sites.

    • @ash_pro_2000
      @ash_pro_2000 Год назад

      Battery buffers can be used in such situations. Something like a tesla powerpack or a megapack.
      They can continuously 'trickle' charge in the background with the pre existing electric infrastructure, and provide a higher power output while charging EVs

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +1

      As an urban and rural planner, I think the reason it's not focused on is because it is so obvious, by the time these are being rolled out the amount of power generation in nation will have increased as we plan ahead. In my planning job not just do we know exactly how many of these stations are being built, because they have to apply for permission, we do future estimate assesments with ranges that show what the power generation is needed in the future.

    • @davepermen
      @davepermen Год назад

      that's why charging stations more and more are battery-buffered for those charge bursts.

    • @Neojhun
      @Neojhun Год назад

      WRONG! Thus why energy storage is soo important. I think more 100MWH scale mechanical / pneumatic energy storage system should be developed for big Charging Stations. That way they can stockpile energy during off peak and dump it when there is demand. 200kw is plenty

    • @pasad335
      @pasad335 Год назад

      @@ash_pro_2000 Yes, but that will dramatically increase the station cost.

  • @havencat9337
    @havencat9337 Год назад

    nice to see Elliot back!

  • @skip181sg
    @skip181sg Год назад +2

    Wow pouch cells...scary!! Interested how they've overcome the thermal limitations of pouch cells

  • @_BlackSpectrum
    @_BlackSpectrum Год назад +3

    Extreme Charging plus super efficient cars equals to dream come true!
    (3~5min from 30 to 80%)

  • @seismikman21
    @seismikman21 Год назад +6

    Err is it me or is that no where near similar to filling a car with petrol?? By the time it took to warm up you'd be nearly completed

    • @LiquidPinky
      @LiquidPinky Год назад +1

      He should have started the timer right at the start, but on the other hand you can take time off for walking into the shop to pay and being stuck behind someone doing their Markies food shop in front of you. 😆

  • @frankdefeyter4893
    @frankdefeyter4893 Год назад

    The reference is the Km load rate of a traditional petrol pump. This is +-500 km/minute (or 35 l/minute) for a 7 l/100Km car. The equivalent for a 20 Kw/100Km electric car is +-6 Megawatt (netto) charger. There is still room for improvement.

  • @RayMak
    @RayMak Год назад +1

    Does it harm the battery

  • @nevillepass
    @nevillepass Год назад +3

    At the moment my solar panels are charging my home batteries all the time I wonder what this means for home solar systems?

  • @ALMX5DP
    @ALMX5DP Год назад +6

    What is the perceived impact to battery longevity using this with any regularity?

    • @JamesScholesUK
      @JamesScholesUK Год назад +2

      Elliot talks about this at 7:00

    • @marvintpandroid2213
      @marvintpandroid2213 Год назад +1

      Its not ideal for battery life but away from home charging is not the regular way a car is charged for most people, if you only slow charge at home the occasional fast charge can actually be good for the battery.
      7:20

    • @ALMX5DP
      @ALMX5DP Год назад

      @@JamesScholesUK yeah just got to that part, though I’m still skeptical. They can claim there is warranty and claim how much deg there will be but kinda a grain of salt type situation in my mind until a reputable third party can verify that.

    • @ALMX5DP
      @ALMX5DP Год назад

      @@marvintpandroid2213 totally, I just like thinking about worst case scenarios as a way to judge how well they’d perform for most use cases below that. Even here in the US with great consumer protection laws many have had issue with warranty work. Wonder how easy or convenient it is to do similar in China.

    • @hugovale6360
      @hugovale6360 Год назад +1

      It's a non issue, for cars at least. Let's say it shortens the batter life by 2/3, which is quite pessimistic, it would still make it to 500 cycles and that would be 200k miles. Few cars reach that mileage.
      For trucks though, it could be a problem, but then again, trucks should be charging at night so the driver can rest. And by then it doesn't need such fast charging.

  • @davidhiley3040
    @davidhiley3040 Год назад +2

    Great video but the charge rate overlays aren't quite right. 522A @ 414V = 216kW not 480kW. For 558A @ 769.6V = 429kW.

  • @MegamanTheSecond
    @MegamanTheSecond Год назад

    this is great i cant wait to see these everywhere in.... 20 years

  • @evilutionltd
    @evilutionltd Год назад +7

    Once the charging speed is on par with fueling up a regular car, the ICE-holes will just complain about something else.
    You can't take the caveman out of the cave.

    • @GreenDriveIndia
      @GreenDriveIndia Год назад +3

      Yes, they will fall back of having no soul in EVs due to no noise

  • @id104335409
    @id104335409 Год назад +3

    Wouldn't that just stress the battery and shorten it's life cycle?
    They states some very optimistic numbers. I hope their technology is real, but I am also sceptical.

    • @v795619
      @v795619 Год назад

      Hey, not sure if you missed it but the battery is guaranteed for 1,000,000km and has tiny degradation even if always super fast charged. Sounds too good to be true I agree, check the guarantee small print 😉

    • @tesla-spectre
      @tesla-spectre Год назад

      Well he answers that later in the video, I was also wondeirng.
      To me it is still too good to be true, because if they have all that together why do they not come to Europe and beat the shit out of all legacy carmakers? Even T3slamwould be under huuuuge pressure

  • @Viperlover-cw2qx
    @Viperlover-cw2qx Год назад

    Great video. Any idea what the music is at 5:00 ?

  • @whatsstefon
    @whatsstefon Год назад +1

    That’s pretty amazing. I’m not an expert, but the chemical reaction of a battery recharging that fast is both welcoming and incredible.

    • @Piccyman1
      @Piccyman1 Год назад +1

      It looks like a capacitor

    • @whatsstefon
      @whatsstefon Год назад

      @@Piccyman1 if it’s a capacitor, that’s going to be unusual as a cap isn’t really a viable energy storage solution. Very interesting to see what they’re doing.