In today's news seven major electric vehicle car manufacturers have formed a joint venture and plan to spend at least $1 billion to install as many as 30,000 DC fast charging stations on major highways and other locations in the U.S. and Canada. Article attached.
I hope they add a few dozen chargers on Hwy 395 in CA and NV. Also, on Hwy 70 in CA.
Their first rule should be all these new chargers must be fifty miles away from any other charger of the same type. Such as CCS being fifty or more miles away from all other CCS chargers. IMO, we already have enough chargers, but they are all grouped together in the same areas and that does little good to get to some areas.
The USA now has more than 10,000 non-Tesla DC fast chargers. But that does little good when they are all in the same areas. Like here in Auburn, a DC fast charge a few miles in every direction. I don't need any of those. Too close to home to be useful.
The other issue is the countless broken CCS chargers that nobody repairs. And most of those are broken in areas where they are very much needed. I could ride my SS9 to more areas three years ago than I can today because of broken chargers. Such as the one in Hawthorne, NV--broken for more than a year. Same with Fallon, NV and Incline Village, NV.
One problem is that often chargers are owned by the property owner such as the gas station in Fallon. When it breaks, there is no reason to invest in an expensive repair--he will not get his money back for the repairs for many years of people charging and only if no more failures.
The other issues include federal grants, where they give states the money for installation but not a cent for maintenance. So the CalTrans chargers at Donnor Summit and Hawthorne, NV are unlikely to ever be repaired. Nobody to pay for the repairs.
-Don- Auburn, CA