I just got back from a five day road trip, I charged twice at EA and twice at Tesla stations. If you can find a Tesla station marked as "325kw" in the Tesla app, that is a station with the v4 dispensers that have longer cables. The two stations I went to had the posts arranged so you could just park nose in, the cable reached easily. This is so much nicer than the older 250kW stations. Of course, there are a lot fewer of the newer stations than the older stations, but I think they are worth looking for if you can find them.
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In both cases I was only using one spot, in other words I wasn't blocking an extra space. Not that it mattered to anyone...
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At this station there were 48 stalls and for about a third of the time I was there I was the only car there. I had to back way up to take this picture, but if you look closely, you can see my GV60 off in the distance. By the way, there is a 4 stall EA station about 3 miles from this spot, but of course it was full (and probably had a line waiting, I wish the EA app could tell you that).
The first time I used a supercharger it took me about 5 minutes to get the adapter off of the Tesla cable, which of course was alarming. Turns out the problem was that I didn't read the instructions, and figured I didn't need to. The instructions said to remove the cable from the adapter first, while leaving the adapter in the car, and then remove the adapter from the car. Turns out it won't work in the reverse order. So don't be like me - be sure to read the instructions for your adapter before you do it. Fortunately I had brought the instructions with me. The second time I had no trouble, everything went smoothly, in fact I'd say the cable + adapter is easier to handle than a typical CCS cable. I did notice that the adapter remained cool to the touch the entire time.
Both times I got a completely flat curve at 97kW up through 82% SOC. In this case I let it go to 90% just to see what the curve looked like. (This data was collected via the OBD port using a custom iOS program I am currently developing. The numbers along the bottom of each chart indicates time in seconds. In this case I had pre-heated because I was going to go to an EA station, but it was full so I went to the Supercharger 14 miles down the road.)
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Tesla has some stations with v4 dispensers, like the ones in my pictures above, but they have not yet installed any stations with v4 cabinets (i.e. 1000v cabinets). They have announced that they will start installing 1000v cabinets sometime in 2025, but until then, all stations are 400v and the GV60 is limited to 97kw. This is the limit of the 400v-800v conversion circuitry in the car, which uses the rear motor windings to convert 400v to the 800v needed by the battery. The new Ionic 5 with the NACS port has been upgraded so that can handle up to 120kW, so it will be slightly faster. But even at 97kW, the GV60 is faster charging than some other cars like the Mach-E because the GV60 will sustain that 97kW rate to a much higher SOC.