When we think of recharging a Tesla, we generally think of the company’s network of Supercharger locations, those attractively styled high-power facilities where Tesla drivers can get free electricity to extend their range while traveling.
But Tesla has another arrow in its quiver — destination chargers. Those
are lower-powered units roughly equivalent to DC fast chargers.
Tesla Electric Car Charging Station Deployment
Superchargers are intended to let you get where you are going with
the shortest possible charging time along the way. Destination chargers
are intended to recharge the battery when you get where you are going
and the car will be stationary for an hour or two (or overnight). They
are normally found at hotels, upscale B&B’s, restaurants, ski
resorts, and the like. The company added 107 Supercharger
locations throughout the US in the past year, bringing the total to
224. But it added 851 destination chargers in the same time period,
bring the total in the US to 1,122. All those destination chargers show
up on the car’s onboard charger-location software.
Smart business people are eager to add a destination charger or two
in order to attract business from Tesla owners in the area. Tesla has a
number of cooperative arrangements with local merchants. Sometimes it
provides the charger free of charge and the destination pays to install
it. The local business is permitted to assess a fee for use of the
charger, but many merchants quietly absorb that expense in order to
attract new business. People who drive $100,000 cars usually are the
kind of customers any business would like to have, after all!
Tesla is continuously improving the performance of its Superchargers,
which are typically located along major transportation routes and can
restore a battery to an 80% charge in 30 minutes or less, with charging
rates range from 90 kW to 135 kW. Tesla has plans for Superchargers that
can charge at 200 kW. In fact, it has pioneered liquid-cooled charging cables to handle the heat that such high-powered equipment will generate.
Destination chargers usually have 50 kW of power, considerably less
than the Superchargers but more than enough if a car is going to be
parked for a couple of hours or overnight. While other manufacturers
fiddle and fret about who is going to pay for electric charger
infrastructure, Tesla is just going ahead and building the most
comprehensive charging network in the world. One would expect nothing
less from Elon Musk and Tesla.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/11/25/tesla-superchargers-grow-200-in-usa-in-1-year/
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