A battery-buffered DC charger is an alternative to a bank of shared AC chargers.
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and then we have no buffer for something else we might be doing like—for instance a car lift or that type of thing
Well look at that. Condo, townhome and other complexes are getting smart. So it begins...
That's for the charger ALONE.For many others, the parking spaces will be owned by the condo association or co-op, complicating the idea of giving each EV driver their own plug. Here, shared solutions make more sense, perhaps starting with one or two shared level 2 chargers as a pilot—often this won't even require extra work to the electrical panel. Costs are a little higher than for a home level 2 charger—between $7,500-$15,000 per charger, perhaps.
Outrageous idle fees, and a sign that shows "cars not charging will be towed."As long as they put an absolute tyrant in charge of getting cars that are dead-parked after charging moved, this will work.
I’m told condo boards are ideal breeding grounds for tiny dictators wielding tiny powers.
Bonus points if the same company sells you a solar integration. Local self-consumption is ideally suited to these buffered chargers.you can demand buffer the battery bank
Wait, why does a home level 2 charger cost a few hundred dollars, but a shared level 2 charger cost $7,500-$15,000?
Yeah what's the cost of the install and what's the cost per kWh? My place actually has valet parking so probably what you'd consider rich folk stuff, but I shudder at the co-op fee increase.So what are the residents at "Marina Palms Yacht Club" paying for this? HOA hike? This is a nice feel good piece but this is rich folk stuff. Regular folk apartments will not see this implemented unless someone else pays for all of it and it's ongoing support.
Not to mention duty cycle. Shared chargers can be running quite nearly all the time in high-current mode (if no one passes the 80% mark). The charger I have at home isn't designed to run full-bore all the time. It would destroy it.For the same reason enterprise hardware costs more than the stuff they advertise to mom and pop. Service contracts, and with shared chargers, you’re also paying for the backend to allow multiple users and billing etc.
I imagine they mean the kind of car lift you can use to perform service that's easier to do with easy access under the car - such as oil changes, brake pad replacement, etc. I'm pretty sure there's a percentage of condo dwellers who would prefer to do their own maintenance when possible but lack the space.I’m genuinely curious what this means in the context of a condo development. Do they mean a lift like for high-density street parking in Manhattan, a lift like at a garage, or some sort of elevator?
So what are the residents at "Marina Palms Yacht Club" paying for this? HOA hike? This is a nice feel good piece but this is rich folk stuff. Regular folk apartments will not see this implemented unless someone else pays for all of it and it's ongoing support.
I imagine they mean the kind of car lift you can use to perform service that's easier to do with easy access under the car - such as oil changes, brake pad replacement, etc. I'm pretty sure there's a percentage of condo dwellers who would prefer to do their own maintenance when possible but lack the space.
Rich folk as I call them will pay for the convenience so they will eat those coop fees without much complaint. How do you deal with those coop fees in a regular folk complex that has a small percentage of EVs? Where I live the HOA was trying to get a home owner to pay for the repairs to the hill behind them that started to move. The HOA says you own that property but you are not allowed to do anything to it. Didn't take long for a lawyer to see the fault in that rule and now the HOA is on the hook for those repairs. HOAs and complexes who try to add fees for this on residents that don't have EV's are going have a bad time.Yeah what's the cost of the install and what's the cost per kWh? My place actually has valet parking so probably what you'd consider rich folk stuff, but I shudder at the co-op fee increase.
I'm running a project to enable L2 chargers in my condo building. Early 80s building, about 70 amps of service per apartment, 2 reserved parking spots per apartment. We looked at upgrading service, but it's expensive; there's a dedicated transformer owned by the utility and then the feeds into the building, and we'd have to pay the utility to upgrade both. Then replace the meters and so on and so forth. It's a lot.
So, instead what we are doing (after consulting with the utility) is to allow 30 amp chargers, with time-of-use restrictions (overnight, basically). The headroom comes from the improvements in efficiency of just about everything over the last 40 years. Lights are now LED. Appliances draw much less power. That 70 A includes a central HVAC unit, and modern ones draw a lot less power. This allows using the existing infrastructure, and residents who want to install chargers in their spots just have to run a circuit from their meter (in the garage) to their designated spots. 30 A is plenty for overnight charging, and in the future we could revisit if more capacity is needed. It's marginal for owners that have two EVs and drive them a lot, so at some point we'll probably have to upgrade the infrastructure, but this gets us most of the way there.
Did you even read the article? It literally explains how this is cost effective versus installing ~10 level 2 chargers. Or are you also saying that "regular folk apartments" will only ever have one or two shared chargers to use even if they have hundreds of residents?
Frankly, this kind of comment is utterly ignorant. I live in a co-op of 518 units, the bulk of which are studios, 1 or 2 bed units in two high rises. We have a lot of elderly residents and it's far from a high-end development. And yet we're in the middle of a 10 year, 51 million capital improvement project. Does that make us rich folk stuff? Compared to that, $100k on an EV charger would be a rounding error.
You need to start adding two zeros to the price if you're trying to extrapolate costs from your single family home to a development with hundreds of units. If a board decides to spend $100,000 of that year's budget on adding EV charging infrastructure, you'd think that would be a good thing. But nah, start a class war instead.
Yeah what's the cost of the install and what's the cost per kWh? My place actually has valet parking so probably what you'd consider rich folk stuff, but I shudder at the co-op fee increase.
The spot is going to be right outside your house, so the solution for "do something else for half an hour" is basically "go back home and do whatever you want".So it's preferable to have to find the charging spot open, scramble your car into it, do something else for half an hour, then skedaddle out of there before the tyrant notices...
...versus just plugging in and walking away and it's charged by morning?
L1 outlets at the regular parking spaces would, as mentioned, solve 90% of needs for 90% of residents, greatly alleviating the traffic at the small number of L3 spot(s). And they're way cheaper even than L2's.
Ok, but what if instead of spending that $100k on car chargers, we used it for pickleball courts?
Here, we got asked if we could turn the rarely used south common room into a pickleball court. It's got floor to ceiling glass windows on 3 sides and it's single-pane glass from the 1960s so I think there may be carnage.
Wait, why does a home level 2 charger cost a few hundred dollars, but a shared level 2 charger cost $7,500-$15,000?
But for one, brief, shining afternoon it would be phenomenal entertainment.Here, we got asked if we could turn the rarely used south common room into a pickleball court. It's got floor to ceiling glass windows on 3 sides and it's single-pane glass from the 1960s so I think there may be carnage.
But for one, brief, shining afternoon it would be phenomenal entertainment.