Charging Specs

Discussion in 'R1T' started by Hawgwld, Apr 19, 2020.

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  1. Hawgwld

    Hawgwld New Member

    New to EV and Rivian. Just preordered a R1T. Finally found what we were looking for in EV. Wondering what are the charging specs of the R1T? What will I need to install at home...what will I have to look for as I am traveling? Side thought....any solar or portable generator discussions for extended off grid trips?
    Thank you for the feedback!!
     
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  3. ajdelange

    ajdelange New Member

    For at home charging you will need a 48A (or smaller) charger with an SAE J1772 connector on a 60A 240V circuit. There are a several of these available including the Tesla HPWCs (but you will need an adapter http://www.umc-j1772.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=50 to use the Tesla chargers_). Note that this maximum sized charger (11.5 kW) puts 20 - 25 miles into the truck for each hour connected to it.

    When it comes to solar or generators for charging the main consideration is that each mile you drive the vehicle is going to mean approximately half a kWh must be delivered to its charging port. Thus a 7 kW contractor's generator will increase range by about 14 miles range per hour it charges the battery. The typical solar panel seen on a residential roof delivers about 0.25 kW (when the sun is shining on it at its maxiumum) and so each panel would add about 0.5 mile per hour. Thus portable solar solutions aren't really practical but if you have a cabin with a 5 kW solar system you could charge 10 miles per hour when the sun shines.
     
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  4. Wineguy

    Wineguy New Member

    I have my reservation in and will be ordering a charging station later this year. As we get closer to delivery will we get specs on charging options and adapters? Power is not a problem as I have 480 at our winery. I am in the middle of New Mexico with I-25 as my neighbor and would love to be a charging platform for other Rivian users.
     
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  5. For AC charging, the Rivian vehicles have an 11-kW onboard charger, so you need the circuit ajdelange mentions in the post previous to yours.

    Not sure if you'd want to invest in a DC fast charger. I suspect they'd be pretty expensive to have set up.
     
  6. EyeOnEVs

    EyeOnEVs New Member

    I also suspect it would be IF they did it on their own. But couldn't a business make a request to one of the charging networks (Electrify America, ChargePoint, etc.) to install a DCFC at their location, say, in exchange for the property (or lease it?) or how ever they typically draw up those arrangements? Certainly the location of the business would play a huge part in determining if it makes sense to install a DCFC there. These charging networks need to install them somewhere, which it seems they typically end up on property owned by a business or municipality. If a business presents a case where they have an ideal location and land for a DCFC, then they're providing something the charging networks need. Seems like in my naive impression that this won't cost the property / business owner as much but I could be totally off base as I'm just spit-balling here.
     
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  8. Yeah, if they're in the right sort of location, they may be able to offer land use to a company for an installation. A bit of a long shot, but for the right destination it could work.
     
  9. ajdelange

    ajdelange New Member

    Well it might be. There are no Level 2 chargers that I know of that will work on that or the 277 V that comes from the Y connection. They all take 120 or 240 (practically speaking, 240). So you will have to convert from 480 to 120/240. Presumably you have office space with computers, copiers etc. so that there is a transformer somewhere. But does it have capacity for an extra 11.52 kW load?

    Brace yourself if you need a separate transformer. Those things are expensive!

    Lots of businesses put in what Tesla calls "Destination Charging" to attract customers. This is one or more Level 2 chargers installed for their use. If you put in a separate transformer you could make it big enough to support a mix of J1772 and Tesla HPWC chargers and perhaps draw a few more customers your way.
     
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  10. Blu Angel

    Blu Angel New Member

    Does anyone know why Rivian chose NOT to join the Tesla Supercharger network.
    Imho, this would be perfect for the Rivian demographic to piggy back with the US supercharger network.

    As a Tesla owner, I would pay a premium, up to $5,000, to join the Tesla SC network

    As of March 2020, Tesla operates 16,103 Superchargers in 1,826 stations worldwide; these include 908 stations in the U.S., 98 in Canada, 16 in Mexico, 520 in Europe, and 398 in the Asia/Pacific region.
     
  11. MarcyB

    MarcyB New Member

    I agree - we're traveling around the Southwest and there are a ton of Tesla charging stations we'd love to use if we could.
     
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  13. laniru

    laniru New Member

    I don't believe that Tesla has offered any car maker excess to their charging network.
     
  14. Sten Mark

    Sten Mark New Member

    Hey all it seems time to lobby hard the new Secretary of Transportation to make all super charging stations compatible with all electric vehicles.
    Same standards similar to the gasoline industry, VHS, ski bindings...
    Government standards will promote the development of more and better super chargers.
    Let’s all push the Biden administration to make this happen.
     
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