1. The Empulse charging cordset is designed to be plugged directly into a household outlet, without the use of an extension cord.
Ahh, you will supply a cable with j1772-adapter on one end, and some std household outlet on the other? I always wondered about that part (I thougt you still need some j1772-station at home). You might wish to supply more information about that on the Empulse-specification-website.
It's buried at the bottom of the
Empulse specifications page.
Recharge J1772 Level I and II
110V AC to J1772 Level 1 Adapter included
I agree re: wishing for an easily-stowable NEMA plug on the Empulse.
J1772 is an excellent (if bulky) interface, and rollout is already in progress. Huntsville has 6 publicly accessible J1772 outlets that I'm aware of, up from 3 last year. But this is dwarfed by the number of publicly accessible 110v outlets.
NEMA (as on the Enertia) may not be an ideal interface. But a general truth is that the best tool is the one that you have. If you don't carry the J1772 cable with you, then it is useless if you need to charge in the field.
A current-limiter on the charger would be a helpful feature when plugging in to a suspect outlet, regardless of whether the NEMA plug comes from the J1772 inlet or an IEC inlet - I tripped a breaker once with the Zero charger, and that will only pull around 8A.
Something else, as I am speaking to the one responsible directly: May you consider a CHAdeMO plug (in the future? possible optional?)? As far (hint: not very much) as I understand it it could/should be considered superior to j1772 in most ways, not only the maximum supplied power but also the amount of "power electronics" required in the vehicle itself (should be less). I for myself consider that a key improvement in the 2013-Series of Zero - it effectively doubles/nfolds the range I have here in germany (there is already one Station every 100km or something like that) - Nuremberg to Cologne would be actually realistic in one day, if still not much fun (~400 km => 4h driving and charging each).
Did you test if the currently used accumulators up to the challenge of such fast charging rates (e.g. 10kW - 30kW)?
I would also be curious as to the suitability of the Empulse batteries for CHAdeMO (or other fast DC) charging. Charging rates offered by CHAdeMO are on the verge of offering trips with zero charging penalty, when combined with an aerodynamic single track vehicle (100 Wh/mile @ 70 mph = 7:1 ride:charge ratios).
Im sometimes under the impression that the rather low output rate of j1772-lvl2 is the bottleneck in EV-recharging time today, not the batteries themselfs. I would be happy if you could drop a statement about that, thanks in advance
The largest of the 2013 Zeros charges at ~10 kW at the pack, vs ~3 kW for the Empulse and ~1 kW for the 2013 Zero Level 1. 30A J1772 will happily supply ~7 kW, and the spec supports rates up to 80A (~19 kW).
Faster chargers are heavier, and more expensive - there's a weight and cost tradeoff for batteries vs fast chargers. Here's an example combined charger/control system, Netgain's Pulsar:
http://www.ngcontrols.com/pulsar.php* 24 kW AC charging (240V 100A), J1772 compatible, up to 150 kW DC level 3
* motor controller supports up to 370V battery pack, 500A (185 kW)
* liquid cooled
* 34 pounds (not including liquid, radiator, fans, tubing)
* 18.5x14.5x5.5 inches
In comparison, here's the 2012 Zero's discrete charger and controller:
* Sevcon Gen 4 Size 4 controller, 8.9x6.6x3.1 inches, around 10 pounds
* DeltaQ QuiQ 1 kW charger, 11x9.7x4.3 inches, around 13 pounds
Better size comparison:
http://www.sizeasy.com/page/size_comparison/35769-Netgain-Pulsar-vs-Sevcon-Size-4-vs-Delta-Q-QuiQ-DCI