Haxster
Member
Sorry, it wasn't very clear which part was humor and which part was serious. Never mind then
No problem. Sometimes I can't even tell the difference with my own comments.
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Sorry, it wasn't very clear which part was humor and which part was serious. Never mind then
No wonder the burgers had a tough crust.The BBQ grill is otherwise known as a concrete mixer.
Yes, those bunch of workers are not very smiley. They all seem extraordinarily young, too; typically, a crew will have a range of ages, including some combination of young (their age), middle aged, and old. I wonder where the older people are. If indeed there are no old people, this was ambitious of that company, and they've probably learned a lot about doing their work in the future (if they wanted to learn). The fact they keep plugging away at it means they're determined to get the job done.
You and I seem to have opposite opinions about that; I thought oh no that chrome looks awful, and now that they finished it I think it looks really professional with the trim pieces and it all painted, what I'd expect for that type of plain construction. The intent is to make it look nice, and seem part of the architecture in a nice way, a finished part of the building, like it is meant to be there, and at the same time, not let the guts hang out in such a way that it causes eye sores and potential difficulties. I think they did a pretty good job taking warty-looking SuperCharger equipment (cabinets, pipes, etc.) and make it look nice, both downstairs and upstairs.Looks like they painted the metal plate covering the conduit on the wall. Too bad... the shiny chrome finish looked kind nice IMO.
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You and I seem to have opposite opinions about that; I thought oh no that chrome looks awful, and now that they finished it I think it looks really professional with the trim pieces and it all painted, what I'd expect for that type of plain construction. The intent is to make it look nice, and seem part of the architecture in a nice way, a finished part of the building, like it is meant to be there, and at the same time, not let the guts hang out in such a way that it causes eye sores and potential difficulties. I think they did a pretty good job taking warty-looking SuperCharger equipment (cabinets, pipes, etc.) and make it look nice, both downstairs and upstairs.
That paired with the local stores makes this a pretty nice SuperCharger site.
You and I seem to have opposite opinions about that; I thought oh no that chrome looks awful, and now that they finished it I think it looks really professional with the trim pieces and it all painted, what I'd expect for that type of plain construction. The intent is to make it look nice, and seem part of the architecture in a nice way, a finished part of the building, like it is meant to be there, and at the same time, not let the guts hang out in such a way that it causes eye sores and potential difficulties. I think they did a pretty good job taking warty-looking SuperCharger equipment (cabinets, pipes, etc.) and make it look nice, both downstairs and upstairs.
That paired with the local stores makes this a pretty nice SuperCharger site.
Good to see that they allocated one of the stalls for "TESLA VEHICLE CHARGING ONLY"
That must be the funniest post I’ve seen on this site.No wonder the burgers had a tough crust.
Has anyone seen evidence of the utility company transformer being installed for these Superchargers.While it may look finished, it can take a while to actually become available. This is what the Tesla representative
that I spoke with yesterday at the Fremont factory told me.
No, they are not. The photos of these new Supercharger pedestals posted by @heytae and others are of the normal 135kW Superchargers.Those are slightly lower-powered urban Superchargers.
I took a long look around on January 26 and saw no sign of a transformer near the superchargers. I think it will likely be outside at ground level, where there's a small area fenced off directly below. I leaned out and took a picture looking down, and while it seems the area is filled mostly with building debris, there is something. It was kind of dark, but I think that might be something greenish on a pad. What do you think?Has anyone seen evidence of the utility company transformer being installed for these Superchargers.