sly_karma
Crew Member
Some places I've charged would be ok with trailer attached. Ford has its charge port forward of the drivers door, so you nose in. Provided there's some room behind, you can usually get in there, sometimes would need to slew the trailer around some to leave access behind for others. Teslas have their charge port at drivers side rear corner, meaning you reverse in to charge; obviously not good if towing. You'd think they'll do it differently for Cybertruck, but who knows until it's released to customers. Most Tesla sites I've seen do have a couple of pull-through setups. More and more EV chargers going in at gas stations, so you'd think those folks already understand the concept of the pull-through, or at least leaving space behind so a longer rig isn't blocking everything.
50 kW is pretty slow when you have the big battery pack needed for a tow vehicle. Mine is 98 kWh, the extended range is 131 kWh. Silverado and Hummer have 200 kWh. So for a big unit like that, a typical highway charge from 20% up to 80% is 120 kWh, on a 50 kW that would take 2.5 hours! It was good that BC Hydro took the initiative and put DCFC in small places like Woss and Lillooet and Hixon, places where even the vaunted Tesla network hasn't bothered with yet. Now that EV is really starting to grow, and offering trucks, it sure would be nice to see them upgrade some of those 50 kW units to 150 kW or faster.
Oh, and by the way, since you asked about the cost of a charge in Woss....
It wouldn't be busy either. Lightly traveled highway to begin with, and faster units in McNeil and CR for those in a hurry.
Just looking... chargers in Port Hardy and at Sayward Junction too. North Island is reasonably well served considering the small population. I could do the trip to WH in mine easily enough, provided my buddies didn't mind adding an extra hour to a trip that is already 14 hours. I guess if I showed them the math on costs compared to $250 for gas each way, they'd probably sign up for the extra hour. Can plug in at the lodge in WH, even on a 110 plug it would be full after 3 days.
50 kW is pretty slow when you have the big battery pack needed for a tow vehicle. Mine is 98 kWh, the extended range is 131 kWh. Silverado and Hummer have 200 kWh. So for a big unit like that, a typical highway charge from 20% up to 80% is 120 kWh, on a 50 kW that would take 2.5 hours! It was good that BC Hydro took the initiative and put DCFC in small places like Woss and Lillooet and Hixon, places where even the vaunted Tesla network hasn't bothered with yet. Now that EV is really starting to grow, and offering trucks, it sure would be nice to see them upgrade some of those 50 kW units to 150 kW or faster.
Oh, and by the way, since you asked about the cost of a charge in Woss....
It wouldn't be busy either. Lightly traveled highway to begin with, and faster units in McNeil and CR for those in a hurry.
Just looking... chargers in Port Hardy and at Sayward Junction too. North Island is reasonably well served considering the small population. I could do the trip to WH in mine easily enough, provided my buddies didn't mind adding an extra hour to a trip that is already 14 hours. I guess if I showed them the math on costs compared to $250 for gas each way, they'd probably sign up for the extra hour. Can plug in at the lodge in WH, even on a 110 plug it would be full after 3 days.
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