If we have a huge number of cars plugged in every evening it's obviously going to stress the grid in some places. Question is how much power does it take to charge a car..........more than an alarm clock but less than your AC? Will some clever person invent a solar powered home charging station that charges up a power pack that would then be used to charge the car etc so that it's a moot point?
Funny enough, that "home charging station" is the major purpose of the Tesla power wall; de stress the grid as much as possible, and have the car/home/grid communicate as to what is best for all 3. Fully Charged on Youtube has done some videos showing in real time the application swapping between charging his personal S directly from panel to powerwall as clouds pass overhead. Mitsubishi is getting into that game too.
The question of "how much" comes down to a ton of factors that include both need/necessity, but also what you have it plugged into. Jacking a Tesla into your standard 120V outlet sips only 12 amps, which is about as much as a really efficient dishwasher- and as the battery fills to "full" (or whatever you have set to full, just ask Kieth) charge speed slows due to heat and internal resistance. Per a German study (I'm having trouble finding it, I'm sorry), it would take more than 25% of the nations fleet to be electric and charging at the same time before stressing the grid. Not being able to move it far enough due to physical grid problems really hurts tho.
I've made mention that for autocross if my F500 could be electric I'd be totally OK with that, assuming the performance is the same of course. The current issue (besides classing) is that doing this cheaply on a grassroots level isn't possible. If the current motor in the car goes blamo I can buy a replacement snowmobile engine for $600. If the electric car becomes more available perhaps we'll have access to junkyard motors/power units along the lines of the beloved LS swap. Granted that may take until 2045 before that's a reality.
What's sadder is most electric motors in hybrids are parts of the transmission casings and connect straight to the flywheel- you could yank the stators out to get some cheap rare-earth magnets, but re-using the whole thing to power something would be kind of a waste of time. I'm not sure of a single EV that has the motor attached to the rear end in a manor that makes swapping easy, except for maybe the rear end of the new RAV4s from toyota where it's literally bolted to the pumpkin.
Cooling is also a big factor too- Chevy Bolt batteries are used heavily in the EV Swap world because they have higher discharge rates than Tesla cells, but also because they have very clear coolant pipes and connections (Thank you GM!). Tesla's uses a square proprietary connector and uses silicone based coolants instead of metal salts like typical antifreeze. In this pic, its all the black hoses to the orange bits. There are some sites where you can buy used batteries that have been tested, but I think you're right in that it'll easily be another 5-10 years before used batteries will be easily sourced from a "yard". But the cooling problems mount, because...
Next; currently electric cars are built with commuting in mind and there are few performance applications at the moment. One of the issues I know is that on track these cars get hot quickly, will we see a switch 5 lap heat races as solution.
Batteries will soon require far, FAR more than simple water-based cooling to fast charge at the levels consumers want. This report details that they'll need refridgeration, not simply cooling. Naturally, that also depends on batteries not making jumps in dropping internal resistance (The new Tesla cell, the 4680 shown yesterday, is a "Breakthrough" in that it's internaly resistance is MUCH lower meaning less heat during charging/discharging) but temperature control is a BIG damn deal.
Another note- this applies to Lithium Ion cells, but not so much for Lithium Iron Phosphates. LiFEPO4 big selling point- and why China went with them over Lithium Ion- is because they take temperature and voltage variations MUCH better in exchange for lower cell density; they can handle temps as low as -40F and I think their high point is nearly 200F before they have problems.
Looping back to infrastructure..............if you have 100 electric races cars at a local track what does that mean to there infrastructure? Could be simple as every racer no needs to have a generator to charge up their cars between runs.
It genuinely could. I know there's already trailers that have folding panels and their own batteries (there was one until recently in Cali that did this, until it was found to be something akin to a pyramid scheme) and they were prepared to do that for Randy Probst on his mountain run a few weeks ago.
One thing I do now for sure.............some guys will figure out how to build "cheater" motors in the first ten minutes.
Hello Rich Rebuilds! Hello to the 'Ghost' motor reflash! I think EVWest has also found some S motors handle 700+ HP without much problem so long as the cooling system is up to snuff, but i'll have to check. Inverter is the real problem, that and how the Model S moved coolant around (i.e. NOT VERY SMART AT ALL).