Dark-Fx
Well-Known Member
The real elephant here is that American infrastructure isn't ready for two digit C charging like China is starting.One really important metric that the video didn't talk about is at what average C rating they charge. The extended Rivian might charge at 500kw overall, but it also has to fill a battery that's over 3x the size of the Taycan. 500/310 = 1.61C. A max pack truck is already pretty close to this C rating: 220kw / 141kwh = 1.56C
The Taycan can charge at 320kw, and it just needs to fill a 97kwh battery. 320/97 = 3.29C! For an equivalent C rating charge, the extended Rivian would need to charge at 1 megawatt! The area under the charging curve is also what matters, but this is just napkin math. I'm not even considering the charging overhead associated with plugging into two chargers and configuring the truck to accept it. It does look like part 2 will reduce that overhead though.
They're also not getting 500-600 miles every stop, as that would require full batteries. They do get a jump ahead with both batteries fully charged though. Realistically they'd be getting up to 80% at each stop, though I'm guessing all EV cannonballs have charging cycles like this.
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