In reply to tuna55 :
n reply to Boost_Crazy :
I didn't miss it, it simply is largely unimportant. Some tiny fraction of the drivers out there will be destination charging at all, the vast majority will charge at night when the rest of the grid isn't doing hardly anything. The data on this board from real people completely supports this.
I'm pretty much done explaining this to you, though. Check back with me in ten years and we'll check on the disruptions to the grid based on EV adoption. Neither of us have any say in policy other than I've purchased an EVwhich I regularly charge and you have not.
You have explained nothing. You live in a bubble that you have extrapolated to the rest of us while ignoring fact. You are part of the less than 1% minority right now, most of which is clustered in a few areas of the country. As I have said numerous times, infrastructure needs to grow with or ahead of EV adoption, and plans are in place. So in ten years, I expect BOTH EV adoption to grow as well as the infrastructure to support it. I don't understand why that is such a hard concept to grasp. Look around you, there are a limited number of EV destination chargers sprouting up all around, just to cater to you less than 1%- who you claim to speak for and say doesn't need it. When regular people adopt EV's, you don't see that need increasing? Those that make policy, make car chargers (I've met with multiple manufactures,) make electrical distribution equipment (met with them,) disagree.
What is your argument anyway? We can move to EV's with minimal change to the infrastructure simply by charging from home? What data did you use to reach this conclusion? Just your anecdotal evidence from your experience as an early adopter? Worked for you, so we have your green light to scale it up as is? Should I tell all of the electrical engineers that are currently drawing up plans that tuna55 said we will be just fine?
Today, EV's are at the point where they make financial sense for many- maybe even most- people. Yet the take rate is real low. Billions of dollars are being invested- outside of the cars themselves- to increase that take rate. Maybe they should just hire you spread the word that home charging is all they need. Plug in as many cars as you want in your neighborhood. What difference could that possibly make? I heard the older the neighborhood, the better. Those old houses had small electrical services, so there should be plenty of juice left over. No need for any math or engineering nonsense, it will be fine. Tuna said so. He used to work in power generation, which is close enough to distribution.
You are right, I haven't purchased an EV. To be honest, I'm interested, but the operating expense would go up vs. my current ICE daily driver. It has a neat feature called a gas and maintenance card. I also don't have much say, since my company provides it. They are not about wasting money, so at some point I'd expect the to switch me over to an EV. Actually, they they are working on it now, I almost forgot. I wasn't eligible because I cover too large an area and they don't want we standing around waiting for my car to charge. My wife was eligible. They were going to give her a Bolt I believe? And pay to install a charger at our house. She declined because she likes her new Telluride and it's our family vehicle. She would have taken an EV more equivalent to her Telluride, which doesn't exist yet. So a free Bolt wouldn't work for my use, and my wife didn't want a free Bolt (she gets a healthy amount towards her Telluride instead.) How is that for a couple contrary data points to your example? Now a Lighting might be in the mix in the future.