Elcon charger,
optionally controlled via CANbus
Orion can
Also:
Emus
Elithion
EPS
optionally controlled via CANbus
Orion can
Also:
Emus
Elithion
EPS
Could you explain what that would look like?Orion was thinking about implementing CCS
in the case of elcon at least, it seems their beefiest charger is only 6.6kw capacityElcon charger,
optionally controlled via CANbus
Orion can
Also:
Emus
Elithion
EPS
Since the handshake includes the EV telling the charging station what rate is allowed, any battery can handle a rapid charging rate... it's just a question of exactly how rapid. You don't have to accept the highest possible rate that the station can handle.in which case what i'm looking out for is a bms which can handshake with the ccs protocol at public charging stations, and a battery which can take that kind of rapid charging (which i think the Volt batteries can, given sufficient cooling)
that's the open question, how hard can you slam amps into the volt cells?On the other hand, if the station charges by time rather than by energy, you want to charge at the highest power that your battery can safely handle in order to get as much energy as you can for your money.
I had not heard this news yet, but it is interesting:Chademo is losing ground to CCS, Nissan just accelerated that
It seems like that would be something that's hard to put a value on. It's essentially the same thing that Tesla is providing to their Model S/X owners in Europe (plus the CCS plug adapter), and I believe they're charging less than €200. Similarly, the Power Line Communication module for the Chevrolet Bolt EV is only about $150.I have some experience with CCS. I have used one such module from Auronik (they were bought by Akka a while back) but it worked terribly and the price was about 1500 EUR for <10 pcs.
Supposed one could make a CCS module, how much would you guys be willing to pay for one? Would you be open to supporting a crowdsourcing project for it?
Well there are a few key components:It seems like that would be something that's hard to put a value on. It's essentially the same thing that Tesla is providing to their Model S/X owners in Europe (plus the CCS plug adapter), and I believe they're charging less than €200. Similarly, the Power Line Communication module for the Chevrolet Bolt EV is only about $150.
How much more would a crowd-sourced version cost?