carsly
Well-known member
- First Name
- Vin
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2023
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 176
- Reaction score
- 46
- Location
- Princeton, NJ
- Vehicles
- LR Defender, CT AWD
Absolutely Tesla should restrict access - and they are!I hope you’re right. In the meantime does it still make sense, if the capacity issue is true, to restrict non Tesla vehicles from using the Super Charging stations?
Lost in the noise of OEM's desperate to issue press releases about Supercharger access are three small facts:
- Tesla is producing and distributing adapters - so they can ration what is produced, when, and to which OEM's they are delivered
- Tesla determines which Superchargers are open to "NACS compatible" vehicles - a few are Magic Dock, v2's will never be compatible AND high-traffic v3's are not "in network" for these partner arrangements at the moment
- Tesla determines the pricing for non-Tesla vehicles to charge
BTW, side benefit is that the business case for investing in an independent charging network, already questionable, has gone to crap. This is how Tesla holds off competition because Tesla can just opt to drop charging fees which means someone's 10 year business case based on a $0.25/kwh markup doesn't work if Tesla upcharges $0.10/kwh OR begins to add solar capacity and megapacks at high demand stations taking their costs down even below utility rack rates. Add in the higher stall costs with the touchscreens and payment terminals with the associated higher maintenance and repair costs (also negatively impacting uptime) and the fixed and variable costs blow up any possible positive economic returns in a high interest rate environment.
Tesla Supercharger network access is a masterclass in strategy, again played 6 moves ahead.