Sponsored

Tesla charging article

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
148
Messages
13,589
Reaction score
27,456
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
TL, DR: cable too short and not well-positioned for Rivians...but I wasn't sure whether Rivian's would have the 400v vs. 800v issue he mentioned, which caused him to top off at only 42kwh?

https://www.yahoo.com/autos/charged-non-tesla-supercharger-heres-100000904.html
The platform those vehicles use are a native 800V battery system and they have to use their motor inverter to step the voltage up from what Tesla can provide to what will actually charge the battery. I believe it's limited to 50kW. They wasted their time on this because it's already been reported on quite a few times.
 

Autolycus

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 2, 2021
Threads
15
Messages
2,234
Reaction score
3,430
Location
ATL
Vehicles
ICE only :(
The platform those vehicles use are a native 800V battery system and they have to use their motor inverter to step the voltage up from what Tesla can provide to what will actually charge the battery. I believe it's limited to 50kW. They wasted their time on this because it's already been reported on quite a few times.
Ouch! I guess that's a big downside to any 800V system. I know most newer chargers will be fine, but a lot might not offer 800V, so that's gonna be awkward at those stations, apparently including Tesla's.
 

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
148
Messages
13,589
Reaction score
27,456
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
Ouch! I guess that's a big downside to any 800V system. I know most newer chargers will be fine, but a lot might not offer 800V, so that's gonna be awkward at those stations, apparently including Tesla's.
Porsche has the same problem in the Taycan, but you can option an upgraded system to be able to charge at 150kW instead of the standard 50kW. Worth doing IMO.
 

CrazyOne

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 30, 2021
Threads
3
Messages
1,360
Reaction score
1,158
Location
WA
Vehicles
R1T
On a related note, 800V will allow faster charging, but the wear on individual cells would be much worse. 800v architecture changes how cells are connected, but they are the same cells.

I do not understand what the benefit is, when Rivian and other current EVs can't charge at peak rate with current architecture.
 

Sponsored

OP
OP
jbronkoR1T

jbronkoR1T

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeff
Joined
Nov 30, 2021
Threads
16
Messages
141
Reaction score
165
Location
NJ
Vehicles
R1T Adventure
Occupation
Music&Tech
so what does all of this mean for us Rivian owners at Tesla Superchargers? We're capped at 50?
 

emoore

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 29, 2020
Threads
4
Messages
3,815
Reaction score
4,240
Location
Colorado
Vehicles
2022 R1T
so what does all of this mean for us Rivian owners at Tesla Superchargers? We're capped at 50?
No Rivian's aren't 800v systems. More like 450v. And there have been videos of Rivians charging at 125-150 kw at superchargers
 

Autolycus

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 2, 2021
Threads
15
Messages
2,234
Reaction score
3,430
Location
ATL
Vehicles
ICE only :(
On a related note, 800V will allow faster charging, but the wear on individual cells would be much worse. 800v architecture changes how cells are connected, but they are the same cells.
OK, you're going to have to explain this assertion to me like I'm 5. I'm not 5, but I'm really struggling to see how 800V will make "the wear on individual cells [be] much worse."
Sponsored

 
 








Top