Crissa
Well-known member
- First Name
- Crissa
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2020
- Threads
- 138
- Messages
- 19,571
- Reaction score
- 31,477
- Location
- Santa Cruz
- Vehicles
- 2014 Zero S, 2013 Mazda 3
It didn't do DC out. It did AC out.OK, I just read thru the entire Wikipedia article and I am not seeing ANY reference to this. Additionally if they did provide power DC power out why didn't they provide DC power in? You can only charge the original Roadster via up to 70a 240v AC w/o hacking your car. Calling BS
Not alot of people with sports cars need that as their backup power sources - they're the sorts that have on-demand generators and such.
Depends on how it's used. Battery cycles are counted independently in the logs anyhow, so it wouldn't be all that difficult to count. Generally backup systems are rated in years, not cycles. They're used infrequently, so it's not a big use... and an EV contains like three days worth of the average household's power.How would systems like this impact battery longevity? I wonder if they'll find some way for use to deplete battery warranty.
As grid-tied storage, you'd use only 20% of the battery, so as to not impact the availability of the vehicle to the user. And so, wouldn't do much in the way of wear to the battery.
-Crissa
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