HaulingAss
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You should get your facts straight.Uh, isn't there another company that was closed for about 10 years so others decided to go a different direction? They are opening it up as the others are now as well.
Tesla needed a fast-charging standard for their Model S but the standards bodies were very slow moving. Tesla didn't want to delay the release of the Model S so they designed a standard on their own dime and told everyone else they were welcome to join them. But legacy auto and crew unwisely decided to incorporate the outdated J1772 Level 1&2 standard into the new CCS fast charging standard and not to go with Tesla's standard that incorporated fast charging into the same charging pins that handled the slower Level 1 and Level 2 charging.
It was an excercise in stupidity, but it was an attempt by the legacy automakers to isolate the little upstart called Tesla (who they were sure would die out if they didn't support their standard). They also didn't want a slick charging standard like Tesla had developed because a big, bulky and unwieldy CCS standard would slow EV adoption so consumers would continue to favor gas cars.
The standards bodies did not approve a fast DC charging standard until after Tesla was already building out the Supercharger Network. Tesla continued to invite other manufacturers to join them and share the cost of building out the infrastructure in proportion to the number of EVs they had using the network, but legacy automakers were not interested in spending money on charging infrastructure. They knew a lack of charging infrastructure would keep buyers beholden to their gas cars.
In other words, it was Tesla with the first-mover advantage in fast charging infrastructure and legacy auto and crew who decided to do it differently, in a less optimum manner, to screw Tesla over. The charging chaos you see now is the direct result of legacy manufacturers anti-competitive behavior. They too could have had a sleek, sexy charging standard but they were more interested in slowing EV adoption than cooperating for the good of all.
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