Tesla's Supercharger web page quietly jumped over 400 supercharger locations around the world. Congratulations to Tesla Motors!
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That is a difference of half of one percent.
I understand TM to be the authority on what Superchargers are operational and which ones aren't...
It is really amazing--I remember on our first supercharger road trip I think there were six locations all in California. At the time Harris Ranch had one stall.
Different ways of counting:supercharger.info has 399 :scared:
Different ways of counting:
Tesla Motors: Counts superchargers on different sides of the highway (northbound/southbound) as 2 separate supercharger sites. Does not count all service centers locations with supercharger (for some mysterious reason some are listed and counted, others not - like Chicago Grand Avenue Service Center or Berlin Service Center).
supercharge.info: Counts all service center superchargers. Counts separate northbound/southbound superchargers as 1 site.
In general supercharge.info is ahead of teslamotors.com in countries with an active community of Tesla drivers with an interesst in supercharger developments (US, Canada, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria and to a lesser extent from UK and Italy). Lately supercharge.info has started getting some intelligence from the field in China as well. In France
supercharge.info seems to be without spies and thus are trailing behind teslamotors.com on updates.
Do you hear me France? Get inspector Closeau out there to look for upcoming superchargers!!
BTW, by my count the number of lower 48 states without Superchargers is now four: Arkansas, Mississippi, Nebraska and North Dakota
and Maine (I think)...
Thank you.
I stand corrected.
Currently five states still without Superchargers.
Even Rhode Island already has one....
While this may be a nice sounding metric, the midwest is a big whole in the system. NE and ND are pretty big states and Minnesota only has 2 in the very bottom 1/4 of the state leaving the bulk of the state underivable as far as SC are concerned.
Looking ahead on the 2015 TM Map, the five states become only three: AK, ND and NE.
It looks like four Superchargers will be added in MN sometime in 2015.
And if you are referring to large areas: All of Texas West of San Antonio and South of the Panhandle have until sometime in 2016 to be covered.
However: TM exceeded their promise of serving/connecting 80% of the US population before the end of 2014.
Now it is just a matter of serving the next 15% of the population to get it to 95% in 2015.
and Maine (I think)...
MSP is at least close enough to get onto the "Supercharger Highway" at either Eau Claire or Albert Lea. Situation there is akin to Maine, where the big population center (Portland) can hop onto the Supercharger Highway at either Hookset or Auburn, but travel within Maine isn't Supercharger enabled. Let's hope Tesla gets the 2015 expansion plans for each state underway quickly.While this may be a nice sounding metric, the midwest is a big hole in the system. NE and ND are pretty big states and Minnesota only has 2 in the very bottom 1/4 of the state leaving the bulk of the state underivable as far as SC are concerned.
BTW, by my count the number of lower 48 states without Superchargers is now four: Arkansas, Mississippi, Nebraska and North Dakota
Another way to look at it, there are still glaring holes in cross-country travel. CA to FL via South Dakota? Still? Really? Major cross-country interstate routes are still lacking.While this may be a nice sounding metric, the midwest is a big hole in the system. NE and ND are pretty big states and Minnesota only has 2 in the very bottom 1/4 of the state leaving the bulk of the state underivable as far as SC are concerned.
You forgot Maine.
There are now five states of the 48 without Superchargers, Arkansas, Maine, Mississippi, Nebraska and North Dakota.
According to the Tesla Map, that will be down to 3 by the end of 2015, Arkansas, Nebraska, and North Dakota.