emroch
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Eric
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2026
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 57
- Reaction score
- 95
- Location
- Austin, TX
- Vehicles
- Nissan Altima, Chevy Equinox
I'm just quoting what Tesla posted on the product page...No no no no no. They charge at the same rate in kW. Don't use "miles" as a unit, you're not filling your battery with miles.
The different range achieved with the same number of kWh is because different models have different efficiencies, so unless you actually know the efficiency number and actually do the math, you can't compare "miles".
And the 5-15 vs 5-20 will not charge at the same rate in kW, as the available amperage is different. This is supported by the fact that the 5-20 adds 33% more range per hour (on the same vehicle) than the 5-15.
I agree that mph is not a great unit for charging speed, kind of like measuring intergalactic trade runs in parsecs, but retconned or not both have reasonable explanations. MPH is useful for personal charging where you want to know "I have X minutes available to charge right now, how much range can I add in this time?" If you only think in kW, you're probably doing another conversion in your head anyway, eg mi/kWh, which is just an extra step.
Benchmarking and real-world use are different beasts, and a unit that doesn't make sense for one can work for the other just fine.
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