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ELECTRIC CHARGING POINTS ON MOTORWAYS

If we allow fully electric vehicles on our motorways then for sure some of them are going to fail going up a steep hill.  Should the highways agency be planning to install charging points at the bottom of all hills do you think??
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  • (Think how that will affect off-peak demand and "cheap rate" tariffs - we could start a whole new topic on this.)




    I think we could also start a whole topic on the updates needed to the way we run the LV (230/400) network. At the moment the substations are all sized on about 2kVA per house, because that is the average demand over time, smoothed over a large number of houses, so a 400A substation fuse feeds 25-35 houses, each of whom imagine they have a 100A supply, and perhaps  half a dozen street lights. Adding charge points for the first 1% who would like one is easy, as the extra load is negligible.  When that becomes something like 10% all charging at once, the substation is overloaded.

    And there is a problem for all those cars parked nose to tail on both sides of terraced streets - I'm not sure we want extension leads out of every bedroom window, but at the cheap end of town it is what we will get if we do not make a formal provision.

    The average UK car does around 10k miles a year    That is  30 miles a day, again smoothed over many.  That 30kVA mentioned above, gets perhaps you perhaps100 miles so recharge every 3 to 4 days, or more likely, a shorter charge taken more often, but a similar total.


    It will sort of work, but no without a lot of careful load management, and maybe adding thermostatic fans on the substations. one of many ideas being trialled as we type..


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  • (Think how that will affect off-peak demand and "cheap rate" tariffs - we could start a whole new topic on this.)




    I think we could also start a whole topic on the updates needed to the way we run the LV (230/400) network. At the moment the substations are all sized on about 2kVA per house, because that is the average demand over time, smoothed over a large number of houses, so a 400A substation fuse feeds 25-35 houses, each of whom imagine they have a 100A supply, and perhaps  half a dozen street lights. Adding charge points for the first 1% who would like one is easy, as the extra load is negligible.  When that becomes something like 10% all charging at once, the substation is overloaded.

    And there is a problem for all those cars parked nose to tail on both sides of terraced streets - I'm not sure we want extension leads out of every bedroom window, but at the cheap end of town it is what we will get if we do not make a formal provision.

    The average UK car does around 10k miles a year    That is  30 miles a day, again smoothed over many.  That 30kVA mentioned above, gets perhaps you perhaps100 miles so recharge every 3 to 4 days, or more likely, a shorter charge taken more often, but a similar total.


    It will sort of work, but no without a lot of careful load management, and maybe adding thermostatic fans on the substations. one of many ideas being trialled as we type..


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