You can install our site as a web app on your iOS device by utilizing the Add to Home Screen feature in Safari. Please see this thread for more details on this.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Although this is a much need location, I still don’t understand why Tesla completely neglects US-30 in Ohio. This is yet another missed opportunity to alleviate a terrible oversight on their part.
Although this is a much need location, I still don’t understand why Tesla completely neglects US-30 in Ohio. This is yet another missed opportunity to alleviate a terrible oversight on their part.
Sorry, in this sense a splitter is a Supercharger in a gap between existing Superchargers of more than 100 miles.It's not easy to google "Tesla splitter" and get the results I'm looking for. Can someone help me out on what you guys are referring to?
no - I was looking for that definition - which is why google is useless, because "Tesla splitter" would only give results having to do with splitting a charging cable or something.Sorry, in this sense a splitter is a Supercharger in a gap between existing Superchargers of more than 100 miles.
I assume you're looking for a different kind of splitter.
This may help provide some context and clarity: Wiki - Largest gaps between Superchargers on US Interstatesno - I was looking for that definition - which is why google is useless, because "Tesla splitter" would only give results having to do with splitting a charging cable or something.
I'm trying to understand the supercharger "splitter" lingo. There's a bunch of them. Every time I see "splitter" in supercharger threads, it looks like people are talking about them negatively. But I can't understand why that would be the case. Seems like a good thing.
Sorry - I'd already seen that, and didn't help at all - thus my original question, which still stands. I must be dense.This may help provide some context and clarity: Wiki - Largest gaps between Superchargers on US Interstates
Sorry - I'd already seen that, and didn't help at all - thus my original question, which still stands. I must be dense.
no - I was looking for that definition - which is why google is useless, because "Tesla splitter" would only give results having to do with splitting a charging cable or something.
I'm trying to understand the supercharger "splitter" lingo. There's a bunch of them. Every time I see "splitter" in supercharger threads, it looks like people are talking about them negatively. But I can't understand why that would be the case. Seems like a good thing.
no I am not - I addressed this alreadyAre you confusing V2 Supercharger power splitting (every two pedestals sharing one power cabinet) with the context of this thread - which is distance between Supercharger sites on the interstate highway system? Context matters. They are two very different uses of the term "splitting".
Thank you for understanding my question, and finally someone answering it. Much appreciated. Wouldn't every new station "split" two other locations? Is it possible to have a new location not be a "splitter"?Well, I'm not really negative. If I call a Splitter! Pathetic it's not actually saying it's useless, just that it won't bring the gap below 100 miles or it doesn't make a significant difference to a larger gap. The term is a reference to a UK comic. These are usually supplementing existing, smaller sites, especially older V2 sites, as is happening with a bunch of new locations in Montana and they just happen to be in gaps over 100 miles. I first used the term for Asheville - Thetford St, NC which at the time was in a notably large gap on I-26 of 253.8 miles, and was 5.7 miles from the existing V2 in Asheville. With a gap that size people obviously were wanting more Superchargers on I-26 and that new one obviously made little difference.
If people are negative about them, it's usually because they'd like them somewhere else or would like another site to split the gap more. Over time Tesla owners have become more demanding. Recently somebody complained that there wasn't a Supercharger within 6 miles of their location/destination.
Thank you for understanding my question, and finally someone answering it. Much appreciated. Wouldn't every new station "split" two other locations? Is it possible to have a new location not be a "splitter"?