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Interesting experience here:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brooke...ercharger-after-model-3-dies/?sh=71bb0188473c
They quote site darling Sandy Munro:
Dr. Bharat Balasubramanian, who worked R&D at Mercedes:
This is one fundamental difference between fuelling an ICE and charging a BEV. No matter how fast you put fuel in the tank of your ICE, you aren't risking damaging it. On the other hand, the pursuit of faster and faster fast charging has significant negative repercussions for the battery, but it is being pursued regardless, because people are impatient and want it charged NOW.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brooke...ercharger-after-model-3-dies/?sh=71bb0188473c
Backdrop: The driver, Dobson Omene, runs a transportation service in Atlanta, Georgia. His Model 3 battery died after 120,000 miles. At the time of the failure, he typically used a Tesla Supercharger — generically referred to as a fast charger — twice a day.
Omene knew something was wrong when the range on his Model 3 dropped suddenly from 170 miles to 35 miles. Long story short: Tesla replaced his battery but at a cost of $9,000 because he was out of warranty.
“The problem is you have a lot of rideshare drivers who have switched from a gasoline car to a Tesla because of the promise of saving money on gas", Omene told me in a phone interview.
They quote site darling Sandy Munro:
Sandy Munro said:“That type of cycling will definitely kill a battery,” Munro said, referring to constant discharging and charging of batteries.
“Battery degradation happens for a lot of different reasons but mostly it’s cycling,” Munro said. “I think he cycled it to death.”
Home charging is best, Munro says. “Charging at home with a Level 2 charger...batteries like that the best,” he said. Level 2 is a slow charge and it typically takes several hours or more to charge a battery using level 2 chargers.
“The higher the charge is, then things start to happen,” he said. Fast chargers used by Tesla and Electrify America can charge at rates above 200kW while a level 2 charger typically charges no faster than 19kW.
Conditioning is also important.
“Conditioning the battery makes a big difference,” Munro said. In extreme heat or cold a battery needs to be preconditioned before charging. Not doing this could eventually cause problems. “It’s just like the guy who doesn’t want to change his oil.”
Dr. Bharat Balasubramanian, who worked R&D at Mercedes:
“Somewhere around 4c [charging rate] the battery starts getting permanent damage,” Dr. Balasubramanian said. The rate of 4c refers to fast charging rates where a car gets a full fast charge quickly.
“If you charge it at 110 kilowatts, you will be charging it at 1c. If you charge it at 220 kilowatts, you're charging it at 2c...and so on,” he said.
Balasubramanian said EV owners today rarely charge above those rates. But in general constant fast charging is not a good idea, he said.
“No one really knows how much damage the battery is going to take if you constantly fast charge but certainly it is going to get damaged,” Dr. Balasubramanian said.
Another problem when trying to pinpoint charging damage is that the evidence is, on the whole, anecdotal, Balasubramanian says.
“No one is going to be able to offer you real scientific evidence because if you want to do all these degradation studies, you have to do it scientifically in a large statistical patch,” he said.
“And by the time you finish all this, the battery chemistry has moved on to something else. So whatever you produce, someone else is going to say, no, we have changed the chemistry.”
“But, again, if you fast charge twice a day, I can certainly say you are asking for trouble,” Balasubramanian said.
This is one fundamental difference between fuelling an ICE and charging a BEV. No matter how fast you put fuel in the tank of your ICE, you aren't risking damaging it. On the other hand, the pursuit of faster and faster fast charging has significant negative repercussions for the battery, but it is being pursued regardless, because people are impatient and want it charged NOW.