geordi
Mr Fusion V.1
And that is my point - if it isn't safe to supercharge, then it shouldn't be allowed to charge at all until it is fixed and inspected. The risk is the same with charging fast or slow - it is STILL building up the same heat and energy in the pack.
If there is a problem, is potentially burning down someone's house (which WILL be on the news) better than a supercharger station where nobody lives on site and usually more than 50 feet from other structures?
If the inspection passes, then continuing to block supercharger access is just being petty. There's no mechanical justification for it.
If there is a problem, is potentially burning down someone's house (which WILL be on the news) better than a supercharger station where nobody lives on site and usually more than 50 feet from other structures?
If the inspection passes, then continuing to block supercharger access is just being petty. There's no mechanical justification for it.