I don't think so. My point was does the dash match the truck? The dash looks like an F-150 dash unless they changed the Super Duty dash to look like the F-150?
I didn't now they were different

I thought the super duty had the same dash as the F150
I don't think so. My point was does the dash match the truck? The dash looks like an F-150 dash unless they changed the Super Duty dash to look like the F-150?
Apparently they are almost the same now. Used to be quite different a few years ago. Looks like maybe they changed it around 2016?I didn't now they were different
I thought the super duty had the same dash as the F150
I AIN USIN NOTIN DAT I CAINT POOR!When we had the tornado the other day down here in Andover a lot of buildings electricity kicked on because they have diesel generators. You can't just take electricity and pour it into a jug
2017 Model year.Apparently they are almost the same now. Used to be quite different a few years ago. Looks like maybe they changed it around 2016?
I charge in the garage and never go to a station; an ICE spends (almost) infinitely more time fueling.. Our Tesla starts every day with a full tank.I don't believe the technology can ever be developed to charge exhausted battery packs to 100% in as little as ten minutes. If that were happening now, I could see ev's outselling petrol cars and trucks. Lithium batteries have been around long enough now and if that were doable, it would have been done by now.
HA!The solution is a flatbed with an onboard inverter.
You don't need ultra fast charging when you are on a flat bed, just tow you somewhere with enough power to park and charge fast, or keep towing somewhere on diesel and keep charging at the same time.HA!
I think the onboard charger on many Tesla cars will accept about 11,500 watts or so. So my 15KW Lister Diesel should work just fine.
On a more serious note, DC charging on the Plaid is supposed to be 250,000 watts from 10% to 30%, dropping to 50,000 watts at 90% state of charge. Might be tough making a portable generator put out 250,000 watts. But I'll bet a "rescue" battery that could charge an EV, on the above flatbed truck could do it. Maybe that's the easiest way to get a stranded EV owner going again, battery to battery. And, once the job is done, charge the rescue battery back up with a diesel genset [sarc]![]()
I was wondering why I was seeing charge tapering to about 720 watts at the last 10 or so minutes of charging on level 2, or 360 watts per leg , or 3 amps at 120 v. I assume the on board EV charger tapers down gradually to 720 or so watts to protect the battery.The slowest charging rate allowed by SAE J1772 is 6 amps, and I've never seen an EVSE that supported that 6 amp charge rate. But even if they found one, it'd still consume 720 watts and charge at a rate of less than 2 miles per hour.
There is now several commercial solutions for this.
Fixed that.The slowest charging rate allowed by SAE J1772 is 6 amps, and I've never seen an EVSE that supported that 6 amp charge rate.
No normal EV can be driven while in the charging mode. Typically you switch the car off before starting charging because the charger may not initiate a session if it sees the EV is "on". Once charging starts you can't put it in back in Run mode but you can use all the facilities like AC.Is it even true a Tesla can run off a generator when it’s battery is depleted? Either from a technical standpoint or a “unplug charger” screen warning before it will even move?