DC Fast Charging 100KW++
Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? I am still on the free 30 min charging from the dealership as the car (for all of us) is relatively new and we all still have the free 2 years charging. Has anyone gotten over 100KW? btw i am in Central Florida. The weather here is warm , so i thought that there would be no issues with ideal charging temps.
please help i am a EV newbie!




Last edited by Utopia Texas; May 29, 2023 at 10:38 AM.




Does anyone know what I am doing wrong? I am still on the free 30 min charging from the dealership as the car (for all of us) is relatively new and we all still have the free 2 years charging. Has anyone gotten over 100KW? btw i am in Central Florida. The weather here is warm , so i thought that there would be no issues with ideal charging temps.
please help i am a EV newbie!
To precondition your battery, use the NAV to select a charging station and the EQS will start warming up the battery for a faster charge.
To precondition your battery, use the NAV to select a charging station and the EQS will start warming up the battery for a faster charge.
so every time I go to charge I always use the Mercedes nav to select the EA charging point. And go from there , so I should be preconditioning toward the station. Also living in central Florida we don’t have many locations where we have dc fast chargers so when I go to this location it’s always full of cars sometimes we have to queue up too. I select this station because I figure I’f I can get in and out fast I will let the next person in But you are right there is always other csars there.








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The EQS 580 SUV is in the garage and the temperature there is 83 degrees. I just pressed the EQ button on the screen as though I was going to start charging and it indicated the max charging speed was 142 kW. When I have charged the car in the past I find I can attain the max charging speed as long as I start charging when the charge remaining is the 20-35% range. So if I were going to charge the car right now, I wouldn't even bother pre-conditioning because I only use a 150 kW charger at EA.
So, I suggest you check the max charging speed next time you charge, and go ahead and pre-condition on the drive there. Watch how that number changes as you go to the EA station. If it gives you a number like 60 - 80 kW it looks like you have a problem with the car. If it gives you a number far in excess of that and that is all the charger is putting out, then it is an issue with the EA charger. Try another if a slot is available.
My peak charging rate (again starting out with about a 20-30% charge on the battery) is typically in the 145-153 kW range. The rate slowly drops such that it typically drops below 100kW when I get to about an 75-80% charge on the battery. I typically end a session when I get to a 80% state of charge because I am at about the 30 minute mark.
On the flip side last winter we had a very cold day with temperatures in the teens and a pretty brisk wind blowing that gave a wind chill of around 0 degrees. So I just had to do a cold weather experiment. It was a somewhat flawed experiment because I did not need to charge the car, the state of charge was about 60%. I forget what the charging speed was when I left the garage (garage temp was probably mid-60s) to go to the charger about 25 miles away. I used pre-conditioning. The charging speed actually dropped when the car was exposed to the frigid temps. I realized preconditioning was not working as intended. Then, about 20 miles from the station, preconditioning kicked in. So I believe preconditioning does not turn on until it gets within 20 miles of the station. My sample size is just 1, so I won't conclude it is designed to not turn on you are within 20 miles...but I suspect that to be the case. With preconditioning on the charging speed did not drop, but it also barely went up. My conclusion was I like living in a climate that rarely sees freezing temperatures, I can't imagine owning an EV in upstate NY where I went to college!
Hope you figure it all out....car vs charger issue.
i heard from talking to the folks there that particular EA location sucks *****
i heard from talking to the folks there that particular EA location sucks *****
As I mentioned in the other thread you must get an l2 home charger. The strategy of going to an l3 station to "fill up" like an ICE car is just not the right way IMHO. And once you start charging overnight at home you realize how much easier it is to actually own an EV especially for in city by driving.




As I mentioned in the other thread you must get an l2 home charger. The strategy of going to an l3 station to "fill up" like an ICE car is just not the right way IMHO. And once you start charging overnight at home you realize how much easier it is to actually own an EV especially for in city by driving.



So I think 80 amp is bit of a overkill unless you have long commute every day and stay only for a few hours at home.
It could be that they can charge at a higher rate but their car did not pre-condition the battery before arrival and as a result they are maxing out at 40-50KW
Tesla chargers next to EA ones i see such a high turnover they are getting really fast DC charging and they are in out in 30 mins or less



