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  • Could Electric cars kill the petro car with a $50-80 dollar fill up in less than 2 min? Can Tesla make good on their claim? Find out what Tesla believes will jump start the move to pure electric auto's.

G. David Felt

Staff Writer Alternative Energy - CheersandGears.com

Industry change is never easy or fast and yet Tesla has introduced their 2 minute fast charge system. From $50 to $80 dollars a robotic system would allow you to pull in after 200 miles and in approximately 90 seconds swap out your depleted battery pack for a fully charged pack beating the average fill time of 4 min for a petrol powered car.

See what the news and industry is saying about what Tesla is planning and believes they can make a profit on.

CNN Money

http://money.cnn.com/2013/06/21/autos/tesla-battery-swap/index.html

Daily Mail

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2346204/Tesla-Motors-introduces-robot-mechanics-replace-batteries-electric-cars.html

Wall St. Cheat Sheet

http://wallstcheatsheet.com/stocks/tesla-introduces-faster-gas-station-system.html/?a=viewall

Tesla Motors

http://www.teslamotors.com/supercharger

User Feedback

Recommended Comments

regfootball

Members

stupid, might be appealing to some but really work on a fast charge system instead.

pow

Members

stupid, might be appealing to some but really work on a fast charge system instead.

They have that, too: http://www.teslamotors.com/supercharger

Personally I don't see the appeal of battery swapping. It exists just so Tesla can say that "refueling" with their car (90 seconds) is quicker than with an ICE car (4 minutes). I'd rather charge for free and spend the 20 minutes on a coffee and restroom break. After 3 hours of driving, you'd want to stretch out anyway.

Robert Hall

Premium Subscriber
(edited)

I wonder if they are building on the battery swap technology that Better Place was working on...

Edited by Cubical-aka-Moltar

pow

Members

Also, I'll be test driving a Model S on Monday. Any "interactive review" pre-questions? If you do, I'll keep them in mind during the drive.

pow

Members

grumpy-cat-8141_preview_zps9177ab07.png

lol ok

ZL-1

Members

Also, I'll be test driving a Model S on Monday. Any "interactive review" pre-questions? If you do, I'll keep them in mind during the drive.

I guess what interests me the most is real-world driving range and how does the driving compare with an ICE-powered car. Of course that the "usual" test drive notes on driving dynamics, comfort and amenities would be interesting too :)

And be sure to post a picture album too :AH-HA:

Interesting all the terms that are getting twisted around. When was an Electric car ever supercharged?

Robert Hall

Premium Subscriber

Interesting all the terms that are getting twisted around. When was an Electric car ever supercharged?

Increase the voltage?

Also, I'll be test driving a Model S on Monday. Any "interactive review" pre-questions? If you do, I'll keep them in mind during the drive.

I guess what interests me the most is real-world driving range and how does the driving compare with an ICE-powered car. Of course that the "usual" test drive notes on driving dynamics, comfort and amenities would be interesting too :)

And be sure to post a picture album too :AH-HA:

Real-world drivability is what interests me...does it drive like a normal car? Real world practicality and usability...

Guest potluck

Guest potluck

Guests

Interesting all the terms that are getting twisted around. When was an Electric car ever supercharged?

When it was hit by lightning?

ZL-1

Members

Interesting all the terms that are getting twisted around. When was an Electric car ever supercharged?

When it was hit by lightning?

:roflmao:

stupid, might be appealing to some but really work on a fast charge system instead.

Fast charging is out there already, but it is really hard on the batteries.

CanadianBacon94

Members

This is what interests me, i had been talking about an idea like switchable batteries in cars a while back with some friends. To me it seems like the most sensible way to recharge one, none of the multi hour charging. Although battery distribution could be an issue, as when would be the appropriate time to retire batteries and what if you switched from a new one to one that was just above this interval, limiting range.


Now in this real world use, how much is the cost of the electricity going into the battery?

I doubt it's being put into the plan yet, but the battery's capabilities for holding charge could be measured when it is being recharged out of the car and then the battery "fillup" could be priced accordingly. Since it is a measurable item (in KwH capacity), the price of the battery would decrease slowly over time as the capacity of the battery decreases.

Nub_Cannon

Members

That kind of takes away from the money you would save from going electric. But for people who are really pressed for time this would make sense.

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