One year ago we took the ID.4 to Palm Springs and back for an event. This year we repeated the trip with somewhat different results. If you just want the drama and near violence read the Sunday charging experiences or the summary at the end.
Thursday: Phoenix to Palm Springs
Stop 1: Quartzite, Arizona Electrify America at Loves Truckstop
Yes this sis still one of the worst EA stations around. Screens have huge scorch marks from sitting in the desert sun and are all but unreadable during the day. Needs a shade cover.
The 4 chargers are cramped and a challenge to back into as the parking lot is always packed full of travelers.
It doesn't help that the 20-30 Tesla Superchargers across the way are mostly empty and easy to access.
Fortunately on a Thursday 2 of the 4 chargers are working and there is only one other EV there so we can charge immediately.
Stop 2: Indio, California Electrify America at Wal-Mart
2 of the 4 chargers being serviced when we arrive. Able to charge immediately at one of the functioning chargers.
Charging limited to 50kW speeds. I have never been to this location when speeds were not limited.
This is the odd Wal-Mart where bathrooms are all the way at the rear of the store.
Sunday: Palm Springs to Phoenix
Stop 1: Palm Springs, California Electrify America at Target
A Hyundai Ionic 5 nearly ran me off the road at 7:00AM Sunday Morning to "beat me" to the chargers. Almost crashed into my front fender to cut me off in the turn lane to the Target parking lot. Car had CA plates and a Palm Springs license plate frame so theoretically was a local. The driver got out of his car plugged in and sat on the hood smoking a cigarette while his Uber/Lyft lights glowed from the dashboard.
The other 3 chargers were full so I started a que in the parking lot. Before long 4-6 more EV's arrived.
When it was my turn I noticed the man at the charger next to me was very frustrated with the EA support person he was speaking to on his phone. Then I discovered why, CC card reader and NFC reader was down. I was able to initiate a charging session using the EA app on the 3rd attempt. 10-15 minutes later the man was still chatting with EA tech support.
In addition to the card readers being down charging was limited to about 65kW. I verified this with others charging. Regardless of SoC or make/model no one was getting more juice.
By the time I was done charging there were over 10 cars waiting to charge. Luckily at this location it is pretty easy to create an orderly cue and other than Ionic 5 guy I did not see anyone acting like an idiot.
Stop 2: Quartzite, Arizona Electrify America at Loves Truckstop
Sunday afternoons are the worst at this location as people are trying to get home and are generally tired and in a hurry. Lines can become very long and disorderly.
Luckily we arrived with 2 chargers open. As we started backing into a charger a woman jumped out of the Kia EV next to us and grabbed the plug for the charger we were backing into. My wife hopped out the and asked if the charger was broken and the lady erupted in a fury of anger and swearwords I will not repeat here. She is shouting at my wife to "mind her own **** business" and even called my wife a "Karen" which was somehow funny and sad at the same time. My wife was visibly shaken by the interaction with this woman and clearly did not feel safe/comfortable at this location. I think if we could have, we would have simply left to avoid this dangerous woman. But we still needed to charge.
I managed to back into the now only open charger and being ready for the burned marks on the screen was able to initiate a charge before going into the truck stop to grab a water.
By the time I returned a BMW iX, 2 Mustang Mach-E's, an Ionic 5, and a BMW sedan EV had arrived and the woman who was blocking one charger and using another was having an all-out shouting match with 2 of the car owners as well as screaming at the EA representative on her phone because apparently she had still not been successful in initiating a charge. After much shouting and several people walking away in dismay the iX was able to park at the charger the Kia woman was using and plug into the station where she was parked but not using.
One of the Mach-E owner's wives took it upon herself to become the "charging police" and direct traffic and establish and order for those waiting. Admirable but not everyone appreciated her busy body approach.
By the time we left there were 5-6 cars qued to charge and the Kia woman was still causing problems and threating to "kill people" if they didn't mind their own business. This woman was blocking a working charger others could use while using the one next to her. She also stopped someone else's charge session and tried to reach their plug to her car. Complete chaos. Add to the mix several homeless people hanging about and this EA station starts to feel fairly dangerous and sketchy. We were happy to get out of there and be on our way.
SUMMARY:
I've said it before, the EA experience brings out the absolute worst in some people. There are simply not enough chargers. The chargers they do have tend to be damaged, broken, or slow. Many of the locations are cramped, not well maintained and dangerous day or night but especially at night. I've seen bad behavior in the past with people jockeying for position at the chargers but this was the first time I saw people actively arguing and almost fighting at an EA station. First time I have experienced other EV drivers driving aggressively/dangerously to "beat" other people to the chargers and almost cause an accident in doing so.
Is it only a matter of time before someone is hurt or worse at an EA charing station? If so what kind of lawsuits and liability are EA and their hosts like Wal-Mart, Target, and Truck Stops looking at? It seems we have reached a tipping point where the lack of charging infrastructure is more than an inconvenience, it can cause people to act selfish or lash-out in life threatening ways. Is this the EV future we were promised? Something has to change, EA has to do better or the Supercharger network is going to need to grow and open up faster than planned before petty arguments degrade into something much worse.
Thursday: Phoenix to Palm Springs
Stop 1: Quartzite, Arizona Electrify America at Loves Truckstop
Yes this sis still one of the worst EA stations around. Screens have huge scorch marks from sitting in the desert sun and are all but unreadable during the day. Needs a shade cover.
The 4 chargers are cramped and a challenge to back into as the parking lot is always packed full of travelers.
It doesn't help that the 20-30 Tesla Superchargers across the way are mostly empty and easy to access.
Fortunately on a Thursday 2 of the 4 chargers are working and there is only one other EV there so we can charge immediately.
Stop 2: Indio, California Electrify America at Wal-Mart
2 of the 4 chargers being serviced when we arrive. Able to charge immediately at one of the functioning chargers.
Charging limited to 50kW speeds. I have never been to this location when speeds were not limited.
This is the odd Wal-Mart where bathrooms are all the way at the rear of the store.
Sunday: Palm Springs to Phoenix
Stop 1: Palm Springs, California Electrify America at Target
A Hyundai Ionic 5 nearly ran me off the road at 7:00AM Sunday Morning to "beat me" to the chargers. Almost crashed into my front fender to cut me off in the turn lane to the Target parking lot. Car had CA plates and a Palm Springs license plate frame so theoretically was a local. The driver got out of his car plugged in and sat on the hood smoking a cigarette while his Uber/Lyft lights glowed from the dashboard.
The other 3 chargers were full so I started a que in the parking lot. Before long 4-6 more EV's arrived.
When it was my turn I noticed the man at the charger next to me was very frustrated with the EA support person he was speaking to on his phone. Then I discovered why, CC card reader and NFC reader was down. I was able to initiate a charging session using the EA app on the 3rd attempt. 10-15 minutes later the man was still chatting with EA tech support.
In addition to the card readers being down charging was limited to about 65kW. I verified this with others charging. Regardless of SoC or make/model no one was getting more juice.
By the time I was done charging there were over 10 cars waiting to charge. Luckily at this location it is pretty easy to create an orderly cue and other than Ionic 5 guy I did not see anyone acting like an idiot.
Stop 2: Quartzite, Arizona Electrify America at Loves Truckstop
Sunday afternoons are the worst at this location as people are trying to get home and are generally tired and in a hurry. Lines can become very long and disorderly.
Luckily we arrived with 2 chargers open. As we started backing into a charger a woman jumped out of the Kia EV next to us and grabbed the plug for the charger we were backing into. My wife hopped out the and asked if the charger was broken and the lady erupted in a fury of anger and swearwords I will not repeat here. She is shouting at my wife to "mind her own **** business" and even called my wife a "Karen" which was somehow funny and sad at the same time. My wife was visibly shaken by the interaction with this woman and clearly did not feel safe/comfortable at this location. I think if we could have, we would have simply left to avoid this dangerous woman. But we still needed to charge.
I managed to back into the now only open charger and being ready for the burned marks on the screen was able to initiate a charge before going into the truck stop to grab a water.
By the time I returned a BMW iX, 2 Mustang Mach-E's, an Ionic 5, and a BMW sedan EV had arrived and the woman who was blocking one charger and using another was having an all-out shouting match with 2 of the car owners as well as screaming at the EA representative on her phone because apparently she had still not been successful in initiating a charge. After much shouting and several people walking away in dismay the iX was able to park at the charger the Kia woman was using and plug into the station where she was parked but not using.
One of the Mach-E owner's wives took it upon herself to become the "charging police" and direct traffic and establish and order for those waiting. Admirable but not everyone appreciated her busy body approach.
By the time we left there were 5-6 cars qued to charge and the Kia woman was still causing problems and threating to "kill people" if they didn't mind their own business. This woman was blocking a working charger others could use while using the one next to her. She also stopped someone else's charge session and tried to reach their plug to her car. Complete chaos. Add to the mix several homeless people hanging about and this EA station starts to feel fairly dangerous and sketchy. We were happy to get out of there and be on our way.
SUMMARY:
I've said it before, the EA experience brings out the absolute worst in some people. There are simply not enough chargers. The chargers they do have tend to be damaged, broken, or slow. Many of the locations are cramped, not well maintained and dangerous day or night but especially at night. I've seen bad behavior in the past with people jockeying for position at the chargers but this was the first time I saw people actively arguing and almost fighting at an EA station. First time I have experienced other EV drivers driving aggressively/dangerously to "beat" other people to the chargers and almost cause an accident in doing so.
Is it only a matter of time before someone is hurt or worse at an EA charing station? If so what kind of lawsuits and liability are EA and their hosts like Wal-Mart, Target, and Truck Stops looking at? It seems we have reached a tipping point where the lack of charging infrastructure is more than an inconvenience, it can cause people to act selfish or lash-out in life threatening ways. Is this the EV future we were promised? Something has to change, EA has to do better or the Supercharger network is going to need to grow and open up faster than planned before petty arguments degrade into something much worse.