azbill
Well-Known Member
A Rivian with a Max Pack will be too!Your Hummer was thirsty![]()
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A Rivian with a Max Pack will be too!Your Hummer was thirsty![]()
I do the opposite and it has worked on all my EVs. Select the charger on the app, then swipe before plugging in. The charger screen will then tell you to plug in, once payment is confirmed, plug in and it works.For those of you without experience with EA, a Rivian employee I happened to meet in SoCal on my first trip last summer gave this advice for the best experience. Plug into the truck. Hard close the EA app. Open the EA app, hit the charger you are at, go to the particular dispenser, and then swipe to start charging. Has worked well for me. You of course need to have the EA app downloaded and an account created first.
Absolutely the battery in the Hummer EV I owned at the time could take that, and did.That is only a 229 kw charging speed. The question is not "can they dispense it" which of course any V3+ Supercharger can do, but can your battery take that? And the answer to that is no, not on any existing 400 V pack.
I would argue that if you are opening the app you are doing it wrong.I do the opposite and it has worked on all my EVs. Select the charger on the app, then swipe before plugging in. The charger screen will then tell you to plug in, once payment is confirmed, plug in and it works.
FYI, EA told me over the phone to do it this way. Many on other EV forums have found the same result. They need to change the instructions, I do not know why they have not updated them.
I have had more success opening the app to select the charger and then swiping before plugging in. That doesn't mean it's foolproof, but I've certainly had less issues doing that.I would argue that if you are opening the app you are doing it wrong.
Plug in
Open wallet app, select EA
Tap NFC reader
The only time ever open the app to start a charge is if the NFC reader is out of order. I will admit though I don't know if this method is possible on non iPhones.
To be clear I am not talking about using a CC, no swiping is involved. I've had near 100% success rate with the EA widget in the mobile wallet app as long as the NFC reader is working and when it's not the station will clearly tell you to initiate using the app.I have had more success opening the app to select the charger and then swiping before plugging in. That doesn't mean it's foolproof, but I've certainly had less issues doing that.
I've used that method as well, but in my experience it has a higher rate of issues than the open app and swipe method. That could be based on my phone or the specific charging stations, but that's been my experience.To be clear I am not talking about using a CC, no swiping is involved. I've had near 100% success rate with the EA widget in the mobile wallet app as long as the NFC reader is working and when it's not the station will clearly tell you to initiate using the app.
If that is what you mean then confused on how your experience would be so different but if you have something that works for you then great.
Not sure why you think it is wrong, but the key is to pay first then plug in. With my other EVS I can pull up and swipe on the car screen, since I have CarPlay. Then by the time I get out and grab the charger handle, it is ready for me to plug in. Never have to pull the phone out at all.I would argue that if you are opening the app you are doing it wrong.
Plug in
Open wallet app, select EA
Tap NFC reader
The only time ever open the app to start a charge is if the NFC reader is out of order. I will admit though I don't know if this method is possible on non iPhones.
I don't think they are a -complete- waste, as I've gotten 200+ kw at least 3 or four times on EA 350kw cabinets. As you've experienced though, most of them at any given time are not working. The EA station in Alabaster AL has had both of its 350kw cabinets down since at least march, which was the last time I went through (looking at plugshare they seem to still be down). A couple of hours south in Greenville, AL one worked fine.In my experience the EA 350s have been a complete waste of time: the last 5+ I tried either failed to initiate, were broken or limited to 30kW. I have always had better luck with the EA 150s, frequently maxing at 160kW. I’ve used 4 RAN chargers on my current road trip, all jumped starting to 220-225kW — the contrast with the EA chargers is stark.
Just takes longer to initiate in my experience. Having CarPlay and initiating from the screen sounds like a wet dream but here we are.Not sure why you think it is wrong, but the key is to pay first then plug in. With my other EVS I can pull up and swipe on the car screen, since I have CarPlay. Then by the time I get out and grab the charger handle, it is ready for me to plug in. Never have to pull the phone out at all.
The other reason I open the app, is because it will tell me if a particular charger is throttled, so I can avoid it.
Never do this. I stopped at the EA at Walmart in Sequim yesterday and tried three times to download the EA app. Bumped off each time, so I swiped a credit card. The “350 kWh” charger never got above 21 kWh, so I pulled it after 34kW, enough to get home. My credit card was immediately charged $50.00. Outrageous. I went to the EA online chat and was number one in line but waited ten minutes with no chat. Hugh disappointment in EA for first time tried.
I learned the hard, frustrating way that the directions on the charger do not work. At least not at the only location I have used EA. I've never been able to get the directions on the charger and swiping a card to work. As member or guest.I do the opposite and it has worked on all my EVs. Select the charger on the app, then swipe before plugging in. The charger screen will then tell you to plug in, once payment is confirmed, plug in and it works.
FYI, EA told me over the phone to do it this way. Many on other EV forums have found the same result. They need to change the instructions, I do not know why they have not updated them.
I envision a future where folks are wandering the earth with silly baseball caps that read "But the port!"The difference between RAN and all other 3rd parties is that RAN is a walled garden just like Tesla Supercharger Stations so everything runs very smoothly. It's plug and play - even though your poor Rivian has that unmanageably large and clunky CCS port which is absolutely the problem.
Not the terrible charging platform/software or customer service.
But the port.
I really don't understand people.Never do this. I stopped at the EA at Walmart in Sequim yesterday and tried three times to download the EA app. Bumped off each time, so I swiped a credit card. The “350 kWh” charger never got above 21 kWh, so I pulled it after 34kW, enough to get home. My credit card was immediately charged $50.00. Outrageous. I went to the EA online chat and was number one in line but waited ten minutes with no chat. Hugh disappointment in EA for first time tried.