Tesla Supercharging ?

Luxrage

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 28, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
121
Reaction score
151
Location
Sherman, TX
Vehicles
1993 Geo Tracker, 1989 Ford Country Squire, 2007 Honda Element, 2011 Honda Fit
My work just installed a fleet of NACS chargers that charge at $.05 kw/hr. The downside is they are very strict on parking and will charge out the ears if you leave your car 'fully charged' for longer than an hour. Which is great for a factory where I can't just get up and leave at random lol

I was reading that part of the reason New Jersey was removing Tesla superchargers from their turnpike was that they wanted them to be usable without a dedicated app. I'm not against using a Tesla app for charging, but then again it's no different than me using the QT app for discount gas.
 
OP
OP
metroshot

metroshot

Well-Known Member
First Name
Pat
Joined
Apr 30, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
120
Reaction score
112
Location
CA
Website
www.kudo-ume-farms.com
Vehicles
Mach E + Honda PHEV
My work just installed a fleet of NACS chargers that charge at $.05 kw/hr. The downside is they are very strict on parking and will charge out the ears if you leave your car 'fully charged' for longer than an hour. Which is great for a factory where I can't just get up and leave at random lol

I was reading that part of the reason New Jersey was removing Tesla superchargers from their turnpike was that they wanted them to be usable without a dedicated app. I'm not against using a Tesla app for charging, but then again it's no different than me using the QT app for discount gas.
I assume it's a L2 (240V) Tesla Destination charger ?

Just like DCFC Tesla Superchargers which have a $1/minute IDLE fees once you surpass a full charge.
 

Luxrage

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 28, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
121
Reaction score
151
Location
Sherman, TX
Vehicles
1993 Geo Tracker, 1989 Ford Country Squire, 2007 Honda Element, 2011 Honda Fit
I assume it's a L2 (240V) Tesla Destination charger ?

Just like DCFC Tesla Superchargers which have a $1/minute IDLE fees once you surpass a full charge.
I looked at em up close and they're ChargePoint chargers. I did some digging around and matched it to these https://www.chargepoint.com/businesses/stations/ct4000 I thought they were NACS but I guess not. I'll have to ask the Tesla owner when he comes in next shift if he has used them yet. I see someone with one of those massive Hummer EVs using it almost daily. It looks like it only provides 7.2Kw/hr max. This is in an employee only parking area where shifts range from 8 - 12 hours so charging speed isn't really a priority.

It looks like you have an hour to get your car off the charger before the first dollar is charged, and I appreciate it's at least $1 per hour and not per minute after.
 
Last edited:

GaRailroader

Well-Known Member
First Name
PJ
Joined
Apr 26, 2025
Threads
3
Messages
74
Reaction score
108
Location
Atlanta, GA
Vehicles
2018 Tesla Model 3, 2022 Nissan Leaf
I looked at em up close and they're ChargePoint chargers. I did some digging around and matched it to these https://www.chargepoint.com/businesses/stations/ct4000 I thought they were NACS but I guess not. I'll have to ask the Tesla owner when he comes in next shift if he has used them yet. I see someone with one of those massive Hummer EVs using it almost daily. It looks like it only provides 7.2Kw/hr max. This is in an employee only parking area where shifts range from 8 - 12 hours so charging speed isn't really a priority.

It looks like you have an hour to get your car off the charger before the first dollar is charged, and I appreciate it's at least $1 per hour and not per minute after.
Most of the Level 2 ChargePoints are J-1772. I have an adapter to adapt it to use on the NACS on my Tesla. Nissan Leaf has the J-1772 natively for level 2. I think most of the non-Tesla's that have CCS can support J-1772 natively. The ChargePoint chargers at my employer are 6.6 kw and if 2 vehicles are plugged in to a post than you only get 3.3 per plug. My employer limits us to 4 hours of charging and then we have to move our car and let someone else charge. We have 34 plugs and probably 60 people on the property with EVs at one time on day shift.
 

Adam W

Well-Known Member
First Name
Adam
Joined
Apr 26, 2025
Threads
3
Messages
86
Reaction score
194
Location
Washington
Vehicles
Honda CRV
The downside is they are very strict on parking and will charge out the ears if you leave your car 'fully charged' for longer than an hour. Which is great for a factory where I can't just get up and leave at random lol
At the California offices for the tech company I do remote work for, the chargers were so popular that they ended up hiring a valet to shuffle cars throughout the workday. Fully optimizes the charger use rate, and keeps employees from having constant mid-day interruptions. They also have a mobile wash/detail service in the parking lot once a week that you could sign up for. It's the most California thing I've ever heard of!
 

Luxrage

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 28, 2025
Threads
1
Messages
121
Reaction score
151
Location
Sherman, TX
Vehicles
1993 Geo Tracker, 1989 Ford Country Squire, 2007 Honda Element, 2011 Honda Fit
At the California offices for the tech company I do remote work for, the chargers were so popular that they ended up hiring a valet to shuffle cars throughout the workday. Fully optimizes the charger use rate, and keeps employees from having constant mid-day interruptions. They also have a mobile wash/detail service in the parking lot once a week that you could sign up for. It's the most California thing I've ever heard of!
That's pretty amazing, I'll take count tonight how many chargers they put in. I'm in a factory that's still being built-out and is expecting to hire in the thousands by full build-out so I'm expecting a LOT of shuffling of chargers. I know our sister sites have group emails/chats about who's done charging when so if we start one here I'll bring up that idea and see if one of the higher ups likes it enough to make it happen LOL.
 
Last edited:
 
Top