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Lookout Gas! The Hyundai Ioniq 5 Charges UNBELIEVABLY Fast! 

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In this video we check out the charging speed of the all-new Hyundai Ioniq 5!
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1 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 322   
@Probablyshouldnthave
@Probablyshouldnthave Год назад
here i am waiting for an ev to charge and i dont even own one
@Rafegaret
@Rafegaret Год назад
I don't want an app. I don't want to be a member. I don't want to need my phone. I just want to pull up, plug in, swipe my Amex, and charge. That's how gas stations work, and that's how this needs to be done.
@JonathanLong
@JonathanLong Год назад
You can do that at every evgo and electrify America charger I’ve been too, also you don’t need a card or app if you plug in at home
@mattbrew11
@mattbrew11 Год назад
Swipe a card? Lmao I haven’t used a card to pay for anything in 3 years. Phone payment is way more secure.
@Rafegaret
@Rafegaret Год назад
@@mattbrew11 Not the point, but you do you.
@Rafegaret
@Rafegaret Год назад
@@JonathanLong Agreed. I would charge at home as much as possible.
@brainslag4200
@brainslag4200 Год назад
Hundred percent agree having to have multiple apps and accounts just to charge and all these various charging networks. It’s just going to be annoying. If you want make it cheaper if you have an account but make it so I can just use a card at the station.
@moarpwr4414
@moarpwr4414 Год назад
I have the sister car, the EV6. I have gotten 10-80% in 18 minutes on a regular basis. I have driven up and down the east coast 5 times each way and have done over 16,000 miles in about 6 months. Got the car specifically for the 800v architecture and the charge speeds. Don’t regret it one bit.
@S2kDude36
@S2kDude36 Год назад
Don't just look at the percent gained over time, look at how many miles you can drive over a given time when charging. If you take into account the efficiency of the vehicle, you will understand the Hyundai/Kia 800V architecture currently doesn't have an advantage over the Tesla 400V architecture. As Hyundai/Kia make their future EVs more efficient, then we will see more range added in less time. When you just compare how fast you charge a battery from 10%-80% in a short time, if the battery is small that time can be very fast, look at range added, not percentage.
@billybobbob3003
@billybobbob3003 Год назад
you will when it catches on fire or have to replace 15,000 dollar battery lol
@moarpwr4414
@moarpwr4414 Год назад
@@S2kDude36 granted on the Tesla point. The battery is not small compared to vehicles in its segment. But yes, it does regain about 200 miles in that 18 minutes. But even when compared to something like the Lucid that has a huge battery, charge/miles is not much different in a long trip. But if you compare this to something like the Bolt, the Kona or similar CUV’s, long trips take way less time due to the charge speed. A Model Y and this would most likely be similar. Tesla has a great advantage in efficiency and technology. Their software is top notch, where legacy auto has a ways to go to catch up.
@moarpwr4414
@moarpwr4414 Год назад
@@billybobbob3003 if it catches fire, which is less likely in an EV, just make more headlines it has insurance. If the battery goes, it will probably be way higher than $15k, but has a warranty for 8yrs/100k miles. It even there, the batteries in most EV’e have shown to last way longer without issue. Are there exceptions, sure, but less likely than you may think. For everyone that has to harp on the batteries, thing about Hybrids like the Prius. That vehicle has been around a long time and I certainly did not see every Prius burn to the ground or require a new battery every few years. There are still plenty of early gen Prii/Priuses on the road today. And if the vehicle ultimately has an issue, I would trade it in or sell it and get a new/used one. Ultimately I would rather have an F-150 Lightning or other EV pickup. With that being said, after living with an EV, doubt I will ever go back to gas or diesel unless I have to. Prior to the EV6, I was driving an F350 Platinum diesel. Vehicles are apples and oranges, but I have made the change work. And in the 6 months of ownership, I have saved over $6k in fuel for the amount of driving I do. Could I have saved with a smaller gas vehicle, sure, but not as much and I would have higher maintenance costs. Ultimately I will have the EV6 which is an early generation EV for just so long before getting a newer/better generation. Can’t wait to see what is available in 4-5 years which is most likely when I will be in the market to upgrade. In that time, if it needs a new battery, it will most likely still be in warranty, and if it burns, I have insurance.
@S2kDude36
@S2kDude36 Год назад
@@billybobbob3003 Just saw a crash yesterday, 4 car accident where cars hit each other in the rear, one car was an EV, but it was one of the gas cars that caught fire, I'd try to tell you that an EV is far safer but people that post these responses will never understand facts.
@danielm9315
@danielm9315 Год назад
The time I waste charging my F150 Lightning is a lot LESS than the time it took me at the pump with my previous Ram 1500... it takes a few seconds to plug in at home and get 200 miles overnight vs spending 5-10 minutes at the pump once to twice per week.
@mattbrew11
@mattbrew11 Год назад
Is yours a large pack? If so it’ll take right at 19kW for all but the top 5% of the battery so thats ~ 30miles an hour. We have a small fleet but they are std range and max out about 34amps
@stevenesheim9413
@stevenesheim9413 Год назад
I have been telling people this for years. It takes less time to charge than to use gas. At least in your everyday driving. I now get annoyed when I have to fill my ICE car
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
I mean, a Lighting is $15,000-$30,000 more expensive than a regular F150. For that money, I can pay a mobile service to fuel my truck for the entire life of the truck, which wastes ZERO time, and I'd still have thousands left over to afford the gas itself.
@mattbrew11
@mattbrew11 Год назад
@@AkioWasRight I have ten lightning pros that we paid $47k for. Thats nowhere near 15-30k more per truck
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@mattbrew11 Well, that's you. 2023 Lightings are nearly $54,000 for the standard range, or over $80,000 for the extended range. If I'm looking to buy the cheapest fleet possible, Lightnings are more or less $15,000-$30,000 more expensive per truck, at least in the real-world.
@corporatepsychobabble188
@corporatepsychobabble188 Год назад
This type of fast charging is what is needed to make EVs versatile so the road trip use case is handled well. For the most part you wont need this type of capability if you charge at home and get around town. Still, this is the type of EV I would buy if prices drop a bit.
@wilfredovalentin302
@wilfredovalentin302 Год назад
I have a 2021Kona EV with my own charging station at home. I drive here in Long Island,NY. 115 miles every day to go to work and return home. So far excellent car no regrets.
@InternetDude
@InternetDude Год назад
Now try it when it’s -35 out like where I live. Part of the reason I traded my Tesla in for a hybrid.
@aneececolt
@aneececolt 5 месяцев назад
you just precondition the battery. My Ioniq 5 preheats the battery, and it's lightning quick even when cold outside.
@LeoNation007
@LeoNation007 Год назад
Bro, this reminds me of when I charge my phone! It goes from 10-65 in just 15mins. Crazy to think how we can charge cars just as if we were charge our phones! 😅❤️‍🔥❤
@toyyoda3710
@toyyoda3710 Год назад
@Defective Degenerate Thats right... basically all batteries work best from 15 to 85 percent capacity ... in fact, overcharging is the number one cause of fires in small rechargeable devices
@z1az285
@z1az285 Год назад
@@toyyoda3710 That is an excellent point, not to mention prolonging battery life by restricting charge level to 85% (like Samsung phones can) and also charging the battery slowly. Fast charging the car battery all the time is the height of stupidity.
@RealTacticalHobo
@RealTacticalHobo Год назад
Min 2:34 shows why EV charging infra needs to catch up. I’ve seen it locally where we have 4 different stations within a few miles but everyone is at ONE of them cause the others are not functioning. Oof.
@dalejones4322
@dalejones4322 Год назад
Wow. These charge times are really coming down fast. Thanks guys
@jamesbeaman6337
@jamesbeaman6337 Год назад
It will be interesting how this video ages over the next 5 years as batteries improve and fast charging speeds hopefully increase.
@USUG0
@USUG0 Год назад
the 2023 Qilin battery pack from CATL will supposedly have 40% higher energy density, and accept up to 4C (280kW in a 70kWh battery) charging
@laloajuria4678
@laloajuria4678 Год назад
tries to show successful quick charging.....but most of the stations are broken....
@ChuloHock
@ChuloHock Год назад
It's pretty nice pulling up to one of these, taking 15 minutes to charge and going for a cup of coffee. But is anyone going to be happy when all of the chargers are in use, with some broken ones, and you're two or three cars away from having the ability to charge your car? How much time is that going to take? I'd say that these are great options for people who have a charger installed in their garage. As for the masses, I guess we'll have to just wait and see.
@robertpolestar-em4je
@robertpolestar-em4je Год назад
Ummm….most EV owners charge at home (it’s much, much cheaper to charge at home), so charging speed is only relevant when going on a road trip, but then, most owners have at least one gas car as well as an EV,,,,since the availability of fast chargers is still limited in most of the US. Not to mention most charging stations are broken or have other issues.
@jghall00
@jghall00 Год назад
EVgo added plug and charge support for my 2017 Focus Electric a few weeks ago. I thought it was pretty cool that they did that for such and old vehicle. EA on the other hand, has the biggest network on pricing, but no plug and charge support on my vehicle.
@michaellowe3665
@michaellowe3665 Год назад
I'll be impressed when they come with a lightning rod for ultra fast charging.
@taison03251970
@taison03251970 Год назад
Movie "Back to the Future" .
@bigdavedayday1581
@bigdavedayday1581 Год назад
They should up the charger to 500 Megawatts that should charge 0-100% in 5 mins or less
@daves1646
@daves1646 Год назад
Honestly, and unfortunately, until EVs become affordable (similar to Bolt EV, but up to date capability-charging), gas cars / SUVs / Crossovers have got little to threaten them. Just looked at least expensive Ioniq5, lowest price possible after destination is $500 over the cap for my state Point Of Sale rebate. And no one stocks any at the low prices; all in my area are >=$48K. Now that Kia discontinued the Light version, the lowest price Kia’s will all be near or over $50K as well. High prices, slow adoption. O well.
@dontbanmebrodontbanme5403
@dontbanmebrodontbanme5403 Год назад
We truly need to get to the point where there's induction charging, and literally the moment you park, you're charging. No more worrying about someone messing with the cord. Everywhere you park, you're charging. That would be the future.
@bigdavedayday1581
@bigdavedayday1581 Год назад
A nuclear fusion reactor inside your car would give you unlimited range for 30+ years now that would be the future
@robertpolestar-em4je
@robertpolestar-em4je Год назад
Oh, and then there’s the inconvenient truth that you will get nowhere near this charging rate when the temp drop.
@johna5563
@johna5563 Год назад
I do small road trips from time to time. And 15 minutes is about what I wind up spending at each stop to use the bathroom, grab a snack and get a stretch in. For the car to charge up that fast… that’s awesome! I think having more efficient fast chargers will be critical to these new EV cars. If we can get that, EV will go far!
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
The longer range offers 303 miles per charge. If you're charging with 60% of the pack, that's 181.8 miles, or a little over 2 hours of driving at typical highway speeds. If you need bathroom breaks and are looking to eat every 2 hours or so, you have health and lifestyle issues.
@67GreenBay
@67GreenBay Год назад
@@AkioWasRight You also have health problems if you're sitting for long periods of time. You should be getting up every 30-60 minutes.
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@67GreenBay Not at all. Extended periods of sitting for periodic road trips won't create long-term health issues. But needing to use the bathroom every 2 hours absolutely is a health issue.
@mikewurlitzer5217
@mikewurlitzer5217 Год назад
@@AkioWasRight WRONG! 100+ flights per year plus extensive driving, gave me blood clots in my legs, they went to my lungs and heart, caused Afib, and for the last 7 years I've been unable to do anything. I'd drive/fly for hours and never take a break and that is very bad for you.
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@mikewurlitzer5217 No, it's not. Blood clots themselves are not necessarily a long-term heath issue, nor is it necessary to stop every 2 hours. For a healthy person, bloods clot are avoidable and totally manageable. People drive, fly, or sit at desks regularly, for hours, everyday, without issues. Again, if you need a break every 2 hours, you have other health issues. In most cases, sitting for long periods is not the only factor in blood clots. People are now tying to tie far away healthy issues to driving gas car now. I mean, seriously...
@WW-wf8tu
@WW-wf8tu Год назад
That one is broken, that one is...etc., lmao. Isn't great that EV's are so few out and about that Tommy did not have to drive to another parking lot to keep searching for a charger that worked? 😉
@ben3989
@ben3989 Год назад
200kw is a crazy amount of power! Like 4 houses could barely pitch in to provide that rate of charge.
@omartin30
@omartin30 Год назад
Great to see Hyundai and EVgo upping their game!
@glenngore6609
@glenngore6609 Год назад
350 kw chargers are extremely rare from my experience. I have yet to see one anywhere away from an Interstate highway or at anything but EA, EVGo, ChargePoint, etc. Here in Oklahoma the vast majority of chargers are by Francis Electric and I have never ran into anything more than 70 kw from them. I have been fortunate to experience 250 kw at an EA station once but there are only 4 EA stations in the entire state, and none between here and Denver. Nowhere in the western half of Kansas south of I-70 till you get down to I-40 and none between I-25 and I-35. Your part of the country outside of Denver is a wasteland of charging.
@mattbrew11
@mattbrew11 Год назад
We’ve installed 7 stations that are 350kW since end of September. Probably be exclusively 350kW by Q2 23. For the record over that same period weve installed 11 stations ranging from 50kW to 150kW. My core business is solar. There are quite a few DC charger only businesses popping up doing more volume but a couple of them really screwed EA over
@glenngore6609
@glenngore6609 Год назад
@@mattbrew11 That’s great, I wish the rest of the industry would get on the band wagon. I stopped at a Francis station on I-40 west of Oklahoma City yesterday. 3 of the 4 800 volt-capable units were down. The remaining one would only output 50 kw. The 2 flo units could not charge my Ioniq 5 at all since they don’t work with 800 volt cars like the Ioniq 5 and EV6, etc. This is what users are faced with across the country, not to mention there aren’t any charging locations on US or State highways, only along Interstates.
@mattbrew11
@mattbrew11 Год назад
@@glenngore6609 you can send specific location requests to EA through their site and also talk to walmart store managers
@glenngore6609
@glenngore6609 Год назад
@@mattbrew11 Good to know, but their policy is pretty evident since all 4 of their EA Oklahoma locations are along I-35 and I-40. Other types of highways are being left to other providers but no one is doing anything yet. There are plenty of Walmarts between I-25 and I-35 and I-40 and I-70 but there is not a single DCFC location anywhere in that part of the world by EA or anyone. Just one DCFC in Guymon, OK by Francis, but it has been down for months. There are no Tesla Superchargers in this part of the country either.
@gregkramer5588
@gregkramer5588 Год назад
Come to Murphy TX. We have 4 EVGO chargers. 2x150 and 2x350
@DieselSniffer3500
@DieselSniffer3500 Год назад
I really hope we can get to a day where you can fully charge an EV in 5 minutes
@GeorgeGeo
@GeorgeGeo Год назад
I mean its not really needed.. if you are traveling a 15 min break isnt bad at all.. and you should pretty much never fast charge unless you are road tripping.
@mattbrew11
@mattbrew11 Год назад
That is completely unnecessary. The vast vast majority of your charging happens at home or at your destination. All that time added up turns into tons of time saved
@MrGMawson2438
@MrGMawson2438 Год назад
I'm looking forward to the day all cars can charge themselves
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@mattbrew11 Millions of people have no access to private home chargers, or chargers at their destinations. It is very necessary to them.
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@GeorgeGeo How do you take breaks??? With the large capacity pack, 60% is 181.8 miles, which is about 2.5 hours of driving per fast charge. Like I said in another comment, if you need a break that often, you have health issues.
@petelattimer6808
@petelattimer6808 Год назад
What people fail to realise is that these 'fast' charging only happens between 10 and 80% charge. people say 'thats all they do' because its 'better for battery health'. and maybe theyre right BUT if they have a 300 mile range on your 'full' battery, you are also LOSING 30% of your range, which in real terms means that your 300 mile range battery is only actually giving you 70% of range, or 210 miles, instead of the 300 miles. and yes 18 mins is fine IF you have something you need to do while you wait. useless if on a business journey etc and you literally need to stop to pee, where you would normally only stop for 5 mins tops.
@mowcowbell
@mowcowbell Год назад
Other than road trips, what's the point of public chargers in urban areas? I'll stick with AC charging in my garage, takes about 30 seconds to plug in at night, 30 seconds to unplug and coil up the cable in the morning. Much cheaper electric costs, too. And what's up with the amount of out of service public chargers? You see a gas pump out of service every now in then, but its very rare.
@thevrhouse
@thevrhouse Год назад
New technology always has its growing pains. Once more and more people own EVs this will change. It takes time though. This is the future tho. Even big oil companies are switching their investments to EV's and solar. They know it is coming.
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
Many people, if not most, who live in urban areas have no access to private chargers. Think of people who street park. Where will they charge besides publicly accessible chargers? There are millions of people who will depend on it. A public charging network isn't just important, it's far more important than people think.
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@Defective Degenerate It's not a lie, you just don't think hard enough to realize not everyone has the same living situation as you. Just because someone might have access to home electricity doesn't mean their cars will. Many people live in apartments, or they have street parking. Even in cases of personal homes, not everyone has a garage or driveway to park in. This applies to millions of people across the country. Stop being so small-minded. Also, I don't think you know how RU-vid works, which is why your comment got deleted, lol.
@johncusanelli6516
@johncusanelli6516 Год назад
So three out of four chargers were broken. Unacceptable. I’m all for competition but Tesla is years ahead. I’m hopeful others will follow. Also 400-800Kw differences are not relevant. My Tesla charges at 254Kw. Regardless the battery technology is limited and can only accept a high capacity charge for a very short time. So it’s basically marketing at this point. No one on any of these channels have actually sine a real road trip without compromising. The average consumer won’t accept broken stations. Also isn’t the Ioniq5 having overheating issues if you use the HVAC while charging? Again this will take 5 more years to adopt. Also how many of these high speed chargers are in the wild compared to Tesla? Not even close.
@irfanhusein1445
@irfanhusein1445 Год назад
I love my Mach e but the ionic 5 would be much better at road-tripping
@atlasstjames5904
@atlasstjames5904 Год назад
just get gas, why waste money on a EV - time is money
@irfanhusein1445
@irfanhusein1445 Год назад
@@atlasstjames5904 saving money and time is one of the reasons an EV works in california. It costs about 7 cents a mile to drive an EV versus about 20 cents a mile for a similar ICE vehicle. I get to drive in a carpool lane saving me time on my 110 mile commute. I also save time charging at home instead of filling up at a gas station twice a week. And best of all, I’ve never had to have it serviced in 34,000 miles
@bigdavedayday1581
@bigdavedayday1581 Год назад
A gas car is even better for road tripping. My ice car goes from 0-700 miles range in maybe 3 minutes
@RedHawkish
@RedHawkish Год назад
THIS - this could actually be a roadtrip/vacation vehicle. Now let's see if Hyundai can make enough and sell enough.
@scottbalak7123
@scottbalak7123 Год назад
Tesla needs some competition to push them off their 600V standard. Maybe this will do and they'll have the Cybertruck at 800V.
@gregkramer5588
@gregkramer5588 Год назад
The IRA money for charging infrastructure does not go to any proprietary chargers. This will change them. No way they will spend a bunch of money to move to 800v when the days are numbered for their proprietary chargers.
@joeslider7236
@joeslider7236 3 месяца назад
Got absolutely no idea why and its becoming extremely tedious, but my family has an ioniq 5 awd, and no matter the conditions, whether it be 20c with mild ambient temperatures (ideal for charging speeds) or hot or cold outside the ioniq even on 350kw Dc fast chargers never ever goes above about 100kw charging speed no matter the battery packs state of charge. Meaning charging time is about an hour from roughly 20%-90%. If you are considering buying an ioniq 5 dont, horrible charging speeds and range is no where near claimed, averaging 22-28kwh/100km on the highway at normal speeds.
@overlandPNWGX
@overlandPNWGX Год назад
Hmmm, I’ve gotten 250kw speeds in my Tesla model Y from the 250kw super chargers in Colorado.
@naf2579
@naf2579 Год назад
No way would I let my wife sit around at the back of a parking lot to charge a car. Naive if you think it's safe. Not like you can just drive off. Sitting duck.
@nujjigram
@nujjigram Год назад
And why wouldn't your wife be okay sitting by herself?
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@nujjigram Some areas of town are dangerous, particularly for women... It's just common sense.
@nujjigram
@nujjigram Год назад
@@AkioWasRight fair enough. But why would she be there when in town?
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@nujjigram I mean, ladies should be allowed to drive anywhere they want, for whatever reason... She works in town, has friends and family, anything. For the most part, driving through certain areas is one thing, and there's little risk. However, if her EV has shorter ranger and has to sit at a charger for an hour with her car's powertrain disabled, that's a deep new layer of risk that she didn't have before. And this doesn't even have to be about women. Even me, a guy, I don't want to have to drive into certain parts LA, run out of juice at night and be stuck to a charger for an hour, or even any period of time. Imo, all EVs should have the ability to drive away from a charger in an emergency, like for fires, a robbery, anything. There should be a breakaway cord that protects the car and the charger.
@allentoyokawa9068
@allentoyokawa9068 Год назад
JUNK< FIRE HAAZARD
@Silverback_GMT410
@Silverback_GMT410 Год назад
I’ve seen multiple videos of you guys not getting charge for the charge which is awesome
@ctclardy
@ctclardy Год назад
Enough said when you have 3 out of 4 chargers not working... and, you said you could go to the store or Starbucks while it charges... what happens if it stops charging while you are gone and you come back to find it quit charging on you?... or, if someone just took off with your vehicle?... and, how far off from the main highway did you have to travel to get to this charging station?... and/or, what if it's pouring down rain, no cover to keep you dry while connecting and disconnecting... there are lots of hurdles to overcome for real-world practicality with EVs... though, I'm sure they will eventually be solved with time and more acceptance and sales of EVs.
@1338Sunshine
@1338Sunshine Год назад
What happens if you leave the car unattended while charging and you reach your charging limits? Do you have the charge times at a 50KwH station? Finally, as a charging strategy, would it make sense it dc fast charge to 80% and charge to 100% on a overnight level 2 home charging session? Thanks in advance.
@ryanevans2655
@ryanevans2655 Год назад
Why don’t more cars charge in 18 minutes?? Why would anyone get the Mach-E or BZ4X/Solterra for example if Hyundai can get 18 minute charge times?
@Andrew-zs5tc
@Andrew-zs5tc Год назад
In my mind, you just proved that we are not ready for widespread EV sales. They can't stay in business long if they aren't charging customers. If they did charge you, I would not be comfortable not knowing what cost will show up on my credit card statement. Most of the units were down. It looks like either a failed business model or one that has rolled out their service before they fixed the bugs. I would not be able to sleep at night not knowing if I would be able to get my vehicle charged and possibly be stranded. I will check back in 5 years.
@Bryan46162
@Bryan46162 Год назад
That's way less time than it takes to fuel my gas car. I timed it. Wife comes home, hands me the keys "Can you put gas in my car please?" I head out to the local Costco. 10 minute drive each way. Hit the line. 15 minutes. Get to the pump and fill, another 2 minutes. Oh, wait. I've got two cars. I've got to do this again tomorrow. Curse at how much time I waste each week getting gas. I'd happily trade a couple 20 minute road trip pit stops a year if it means that I don't have to waste that hour and a half each week fuelling vehicles. As soon as I can I'm buying electric for the sole reason of being able to charge at home.
@WiNNiep00h
@WiNNiep00h Месяц назад
10 to 80% is 18min is nice but not unbelievably fast^^ notify me if we reach the 10-80% in 5min :D
@eugenedeleon448
@eugenedeleon448 Год назад
Awesome review. I’ve read on the forums about people having issues charging at a level two at home. I was really considering this vehicle until I read those issues. Can any one chime in if this has been resolved. So far Hyundai only had band aid updates/ fixes so far.
@jmc6000
@jmc6000 Год назад
Still no where near as fast as a gas fill up and only 260 miles of range for 18mins of charging is pretty pathetic
@777Outrigger
@777Outrigger Год назад
There are some great charging CCS EVs out there right now. Unfortunately, they're dependent on the awful and unreliable CCS infrastructure. I wouldn't try to road trip one.
@skyemalcolm
@skyemalcolm Год назад
Big missed opportunity to show EVgo’s autocharge+ feature. TFL once again showing their lack of true EV prowess, sorry to say.
@joshbridges8410
@joshbridges8410 Год назад
In the UK and Europe the Ionic 5 and EV6 supports 350 kW charging at compatible chargers.
@markweber5297
@markweber5297 Год назад
Doesn't Tesla Superchargers charge at 250KW? Why are you so excited about 204kW?
@mbaktari8194
@mbaktari8194 Год назад
Hopefully NIO EV come to USA. JUST SWAPPING THE BATTERY.......
@gabrielback5615
@gabrielback5615 Год назад
LOL, half the chargers are broken, and this super fast charging car still wants 3/4 hr to fill. Thats 5 min at a fuel station that has far more reliable pumps and are everywhere.
@davidmilhouscarter8198
@davidmilhouscarter8198 Год назад
It takes me four to six minutes to fill-up with gasoline. Some days, most days, I have a difficult time finding just those few minutes.
@infernovideo
@infernovideo Год назад
Great example of how you only needed 6-8 minutes to get more than enough range to finish your day and then charge up at home. The issue is clearly illustrated at the 2:00 mark when half the chargers stop working just as you go to start your session!
@kevincinnamontoast3669
@kevincinnamontoast3669 Год назад
I hear hyundais lose oil pressure and catch fire and kill you. I dunno how much oil pressure these electrical cars need but I will stick to my mule cart. 23 skidoo!
@patriot0971
@patriot0971 Год назад
I do not understand why the hell do these EV charging companies not take credit cards, and force you to sign up and use their app. It's ridiculous.
@ianjay5301
@ianjay5301 Год назад
Ordered one in early March but have heard nothing further. Nothing. Bought a Model 3 but if they ever decide to fill the order, I will consider changing.
@lizerdmonk
@lizerdmonk Год назад
It sure does I keep seeing Audi's and VW and my Hyundai Ioniq 5 charges way faster.
@Chobaca
@Chobaca Год назад
It's not going to be the most important thing. At least not fast charging. You charge at home like 99% of the time!
@robertpolestar-em4je
@robertpolestar-em4je Год назад
Oh, and then there’s the inconvenient truth that you will get nowhere near this charging rate when the temp drops to near freezing.
@abc123fhdi
@abc123fhdi Год назад
free charging pretty sweet. But the other guy's charger wasn't working so he just left.
@kd7lxl
@kd7lxl Год назад
Everything looks great on the surface, then we find out that every other unit is dead. 😂
@williammorrisonjr6302
@williammorrisonjr6302 Год назад
why dont you guys show us how long it takes to get a 100% charge on these cars and pickup.
@yootoub7109
@yootoub7109 Год назад
lol, how fast could another Ionic charge if it arrived here since all other chargers are broken.
@karl5404
@karl5404 Год назад
Doesn't matter how fast a car can charge if your more likely then not to run into a broken charger.
@stevelovesemmy
@stevelovesemmy Год назад
I have owned several EV’s since 2019 and can count on two hands how many times I have needed to DC charge. I don’t understand this fascination with fast charging. Public charging is inconvenient, expensive, and not practical. If someone is considering spending $50k on an EV and does not have access to a home for charging, I would recommend they spend their money on a house instead of an EV. Just my opinion!
@abc123fhdi
@abc123fhdi Год назад
the title says it charges as fast as gas, but none of the chargers are working lmao
@ericcindycrowder7482
@ericcindycrowder7482 Год назад
Thanks for the video. I’m patiently waiting for the Ioniq 6 streamliner sedan version. FYI, that delicious beverage is often called an Arnold Palmer.
@SteveLord
@SteveLord Год назад
Wow......too bad nobody can get one or get one below $50k.....
@broosewee
@broosewee Год назад
It's a shame I rarely see the Ioniq 5 on the road. Plenty of Tesla's, Mach-Es, even the EV6. But extremely rare to see the Ioniq 5.
@MrNicholg
@MrNicholg Год назад
That half lemonade tea thing is called an Arnold Palmer.
@bunnyfartloads
@bunnyfartloads Год назад
When dealers stop charging 10k and up markups for these cars then maybe. Otherwise there just not worth it. Also all but one of these chargers where broken. No thanks.
@bunnyfartloads
@bunnyfartloads Год назад
@Defective Degenerate I won’t spend 10k in gas in 5 years. For me the total cost of ownership for thy car os way out of whack. I can buy brand new Corolla xse and spend half of what inwouod spend on that car. Sorry this isn’t for me
@speterbilt
@speterbilt Год назад
Nice charging till sitting in line for the 5 cars in front of you
@seraphimsscythe1628
@seraphimsscythe1628 Год назад
Great for all the Hobbyists. That's all it really is.
@captainsharyntaylor8711
@captainsharyntaylor8711 Год назад
In reality it is NOT pretty cool as you constantly say.
@lucasg5094
@lucasg5094 Год назад
The only thing I would care to know is how many miles per minute. I’m sure it would have to do a lot of rough guesses based on percent of charge and my driving habits.
@irfanhusein1445
@irfanhusein1445 Год назад
My Mach E charges at 5 miles per minute and my model 3 is about 7 miles per minute on D/C fast chargers. I think this ionic 5 should do about 8 miles per minute
@NIKEB0ARD
@NIKEB0ARD Год назад
It averages about 10mi/min from 0-80%.
@S2kDude36
@S2kDude36 Год назад
So, about as fast as a Tesla Model 3 LR. In independent testing, a 2019 Tesla M3 LR can charge from 20%-80% in 20 min, adding 193 miles of range or 9.65 miles/min on average. This Ioniq 5 charged from 20%-80% in 18 min, adding 166 mi, or 9.2 miles/min on average. I think the charge rates are similar between Tesla and Hyundai/Kia but the Tesla has an efficiency advantage when it comes to the number of miles added from 20%-80%. Also, my comparison is on a 3 year Tesla vs a new Hyundai, I hope to see EVs charge faster in the future but for now, given the battery chemistry we have currently, this is about the limit of the technology.
@uludak8468
@uludak8468 Год назад
as far as i remember 2021 M3/MY charge slower as tesla has modified their battery chemistry (decreased cobalt, added manganese) and suppliers
@S2kDude36
@S2kDude36 Год назад
@@uludak8468 Chemistry is always changing, my 2019 charges as fast if not faster though, you also need to look at the miles added per minute though, the Tesla uses less Wh/mi and has a bigger battery so just saying one EV charges faster from 20% - 80% doesn't tell the whole story.
@stog9821
@stog9821 Год назад
The charge times are pretty good. I guess one question would be, is how long will the Ioniq’s batteries last until they’ve deteriorated to the point where it becomes annoying and should be (as opposed to need be) replaced?
@toyyoda3710
@toyyoda3710 Год назад
At least a decade or longer... Car batteries are not even close to what we have in our phones and laptops ... In fact they are quite different even in the make up of the battery ... for example the car battery is only about 4 percent Lithium and over 50 percent graphite
@z1az285
@z1az285 Год назад
@@toyyoda3710 That's what manufacturers typically offer 8 to 10 years and 100,000 miles but there are bolt EV's (and maybe others) which are over 200,000 miles and I would bet they use mostly home or level 1 charging with the occasional fast charge to maximize longevity. I don't know the cost of the Ioniq5 EV battery but for the size it won't be less than $10k at least
@tallll70
@tallll70 Год назад
that looks good, or at least better, so now we need quiet few things... all manufactures doing close to 800V high Amp charging capability, better charger reliability and availability, just imagine how much that has to improve if now the very few EVs have hard time to find decent charging
@Romans_Toupee
@Romans_Toupee Год назад
Yes they have impressive DC fast charging rates... however as you yourself have stated on multiple occasions... most EV owners, charge at home on Level 2. And charging on Level 2 this car doesn't really do anything special compared to any other EV, I spend a LOT of time at public chargers and a good majority of people I run into say they have never used / basically never use these things unless absolutely necessary.. even the people with 2-3 years worth of free EA charging
@johnlamers4762
@johnlamers4762 Год назад
That one’s broken, that one’s broken, that one’s broken…… things you don’t hear being said at a gas station. The reason the EV market is not ready for prime time. Thanks for sharing how unreliable these places continue to be for the average person. We are years away from moving to this fully.
@tommckinney1489
@tommckinney1489 Год назад
I've found CCS charging to be hit or miss. Your session was almost a miss in that there was only one charger working. If someone else had been using it, you would of had to wait.
@davidmilhouscarter8198
@davidmilhouscarter8198 Год назад
5:26 I don’t drink Starbucks.
@abc123fhdi
@abc123fhdi Год назад
I saw another car on your channel, the Rivian being unable to charge in the charging drag race with the Hummer EV, so charger reliability is still an issue compared to gas. the location of the chargers at the back isn't good for those who are handicapped.
@Mike-In-O-Town
@Mike-In-O-Town Год назад
Had to laugh at all the broken chargers. No problem, Just run down the street to....oops, where's the next charger? In today's world, the only successful charging strategy is to charge at home (unless you're in California where the power grid itself is as unreliable and screwed up as their politicians).
@billj4859
@billj4859 Год назад
Why aren't these stations covered?
@therealcdnuser
@therealcdnuser Год назад
I think if i showed up to a gas station and they said it was free I wouldn’t be horribly upset. I once waited 40 mins in line to save 50 cents off per gallon for a promotion.
@eddiegardner8232
@eddiegardner8232 Год назад
800 volts, or even higher, is the key to getting the power into the car. It remains to be seen how Tesla deals with this transition of paradigm.
@rkgsd
@rkgsd Год назад
But what toll will that fast charging take on the long-term battery health? Therein lies the tradeoff.
@uludak8468
@uludak8468 Год назад
nissan leaf is a slow charger and their batteries didn't hold up well. now what?
@rkgsd
@rkgsd Год назад
@@uludak8468 The Nissan Leaf uses inferior air cooling instead of the more effective liquid cooling. Now what?
@uludak8468
@uludak8468 Год назад
@@rkgsd why question then?
@dennisl6198
@dennisl6198 Год назад
thanks, its a great update on charging tech. now, please do a video on how to actually get one of these cars. that seems to be the problem with all these cool evs.......
@captainsharyntaylor8711
@captainsharyntaylor8711 Год назад
Yes go for the $10.00 ice tea.
@97cadillac
@97cadillac Год назад
I've seen a bunch of your charging setups but it seems like most are free. I really want an ev next year but I'm curious as to how much home costs are plugging it in.
@nujjigram
@nujjigram Год назад
Your home rate is your home charge cost. It's not that hard. Multiply your car battery capacity into the rate per unit and you will have your answer
@stephenjones8645
@stephenjones8645 Год назад
The best way to check would be to look at the rates on your utility since they vary; however, the U.S. average is around 17 cents per kwh at the moment. Also, many places charge less for off peak so if you set your car to charge overnight when grid utilization is low, you might save a few cents per kwh. To determine the charge cost, multiply the pack size by the cost per kwh so an 80kwh useable battery would cost about $13.60 to charge (maybe a little more with energy loss). However, that would be a full tank fill. If you're driving 50 miles a day, you would be using less than 20kwh (depending on the car efficiency) since you're not emptying the tank so that would cost around $3 a day.
@pryme2013
@pryme2013 Год назад
When the majority of people are reliant on Electric Vehicles, the cost of electricity will skyrocket. People that think it will stay this price are hilarious.
@nujjigram
@nujjigram Год назад
@@pryme2013 nobody thinks it would be the same. Price rise and inflation are inevitable. Nice strawman argument though
@thevrhouse
@thevrhouse Год назад
@@pryme2013 It could go down if all electricity is generated with solar and wind. Plus new car batteries will have vehicle to grid capacity. You could make money off your car while it sits in your driveway possibly lowering the cost. You could always buy solar panels for your home as well if they decide to raise the prices of electricity. The point is it gives you options. Even oil companies are switching their investments to EV's and solar. They know it is coming.
@speterbilt
@speterbilt Год назад
Those door handles are dumb
@enz6312
@enz6312 Год назад
50% tea, 50% lemonade....that's called Swamp Water...
@davidmilhouscarter8198
@davidmilhouscarter8198 Год назад
6:45 I don’t drink tea.
@davidmilhouscarter8198
@davidmilhouscarter8198 Год назад
5:27 I bank with Ent.
@egidiomeola
@egidiomeola Год назад
That is great!
@NickTarterOKC
@NickTarterOKC Год назад
Doing the math at .27 per kWh and with gas prices at 3.15 per gallon, this car would cost about half as much to drive 180 miles as it costs me to do so in my Honda CR-V. That's pretty impressive. I'm still not sold on EVs for every situation, but for a commuter around town it seems very viable and a good value for those who can afford one. It still seems expensive when considering the entry price for a long range car is $45k, but that is basically the average new car price right now. Rebates can help offset that some. It will be interesting to see if those prices can come down with wider adoption so that more people can afford to get into the EV game.
@gregkramer5588
@gregkramer5588 Год назад
And for all commuting needs no gas station visits. No oil changes to mess with. Smooth, responsive, quiet power. Even on low end models the drivetrain feels like high end luxury car drivetrains.
@thewaterboy2013
@thewaterboy2013 Год назад
Do the math with your local utility rates and it gets even better most likely. Ours is 16 cents during the day and only 5 at night.
@stopthefomo
@stopthefomo Год назад
Before the expiration of the $7,500 credit, we picked up the Kia EV6 AWD Wind for $43,000 MSRP less $7,500 and it ends up being $36,000 - THIS is pretty incredible. Obviously, you'll have a hard time getting the EV6 but it shows you how much more affordable EVs have become now that competition from Korea are arriving.
@AkioWasRight
@AkioWasRight Год назад
@@stopthefomo Tax credits aren't free money, and not everyone qualifies for them. Also, Kia just raised the base price of the EV6 from ~$43,000 to nearly $50,000. In fact, they aren't becoming more affordable, they're more become way more expensive.
@irfanhusein1445
@irfanhusein1445 Год назад
EV’s make a lot of sense in California where gas prices are usually above $5.00 . We have a Mach E and a model 3 in our household, but we still use our Ford Explorer for road tripping, because ICE vehicle are just more convenient on long trips
@TimothyBaylosis
@TimothyBaylosis Год назад
good demo. it actually maxes at around 240kw
@AdrianMcDaid
@AdrianMcDaid Год назад
That is fast !
@febrianadji5758
@febrianadji5758 Год назад
Too bad US spec doesn't have 2 'nap' seat
@glennkverneland833
@glennkverneland833 Год назад
what is the effect of high speed charging on battery life? Have y'all done any shows on this?
@yournumberonepal
@yournumberonepal 5 месяцев назад
The owners manual says not to do it frequently, Tesla's, using mostly DC fast charging versus slow AC charging shows little difference in battery degradation.
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