A corridor of Tesla Supercharger DC fast-charging stations along Interstate 5 and Highway 101 is complete, allowing owners of the company’s luxury all-electric sedan to drive from San Diego, California to Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada for free.Rico says he's still hoping his father buys the Model X, the SUV version, when it comes out in 2014:
More than 99 percent of Californians and 87 percent of Oregon and Washington owners now live within two hundred miles of a supercharger.
Tesla’s 120 kilowatt superchargers, which only work with the Tesla Model S, provide half a charge in about twenty minutes. The chargers work by delivering direct current power to the battery using special cables that bypass onboard charging equipment. And using them is free for all Tesla Model S owners.
To commemorate the completed West Coast Supercharger Corridor, two Model S sedans left San Diego for a 1,750-mile DriveFree road trip to Vancouver.
There are 31 stations in North America, with plans to expand to most metropolitan areas this fall. By winter of 2013, enough Tesla superchargers will be installed to enable coast-to-coast US travel. Tesla plans to to have superchargers within reach of eighty percent of the US population and parts of Canada by 2014.
Tesla is building a similar network in Europe. About ninety percent of people in Norway now live within two hundred miles of one of its six “supercharger” stations.
The electric car maker plans to open superchargers along a corridor from the Netherlands to Munich, Germany by the end of 2013. By the end of 2014, Tesla superchargers will be installed along major travel corridors throughout Belgium, France, Austria, Italy, Spain and the UK.
31 October 2013
Tesla for the day
Kirsten Korosec has a SmartPlanet article about the Tesla:
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