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If you are doing "What ifs" then in a blackout electric pumps at local gas stations are also off, so unless your ICE "has a full charge" you are also stuck
In our current supply system, if the power goes out long term, everyone is S.O.L. regardless of what powers their vehicle.
Unless you have Solar power stored, not sure any one(even Calif.) has figured out a way to block the Sun
Much like having stored liquid fuel, but its replaced daily and doesn't "go bad", so quite different in long term use
But if you have firewood you could try wood gas system for ICE
If you have seen Men In Black. Those grocery checkout tabloids are the only real true source of news.I get all my news from the headlines in the tabloids in grocery check out line, I don't actually buy them and read the articles, I am not an idiot, duh
Headlines are enough
Elvis was spotted driving an EV, good enough for me, I am switching to EV(Elvis's vehicle)
Facts are facts
The roads and highways are pretty beat up too. I feel bad for the truckers, those right two lanes are more potholes than not.The power grid across the nation is antiquated and needs upgrading and/or replacement. All for similar reasons in California. Sooner or later the customer base is going to say they have had enough and do something to the power companies for not meeting the demand. Especially if they only have until 2035 to get the grid ready for when all those EVs are going to be on the grid.
It might be time for people to start figuring out how they are going to get power to their house independent of the grid. Whatever is likely to be more viable, wind, solar, hydroelectric. Which ever system or systems make more sense for where they live.
I can give a personal example. My buddy went on a trip and left his Tesla parked at my house for a week in july. I have a solar trailer that doesnt like the heat as well. The Tesla charged a little bit slower in the heat, but I didn't really notice. The solar trailer however, the inverters would shut down mid day, I would have to fire them back up when it cooled down in the evening. I'm gonna build some shade over the batteries and panels, maybe add fans. I think the Tesla throttles itself down.Clarification - I was just asking if the heat was still a concern when doing the typical daily charging at night/at home since that would be done on a slower charger that would also be throttled down since you're only adding a few percent anyway. Why is that harmful?
I forgot to add, yes its harmful...Not detrimentally, but the same way heat affect engines. They don't like too much of it. Batteries and also inverters don't like excessive heat (or cold).I'm not sure how to rephrase my question, but that's really not what I was asking.
Interesting, I would think the contrary, fast charging is harmful. I know its good for batteries to cycle, but not fully drain. My power tool batteries seem to have built in protection for overcharging, over draining, or overheating.I get that.
My question is about the idea of low level daily charges specifically. Ron referred to that being harmful, and I was looking for clarification on that. There are definitely some implications to keeping the battery at 100% or full discharge, and to charging too rapidly. What I'm not clear on is the problem with adding back small amounts like 10-20% at low rates during at home overnight charging when there should be minimal heat created in the process.