Instead of working I’m thinking about wildly irresponsible ideas for EVs.
With the Harvester, the vehicle will be capable of charging while driving. It’s highly unlikely in my opinion that the Harvester will use a separate converter to charge the battery while driving. It would make little sense to add yet another, redundant (but not usefully redundant) converter to the vehicle. So I suspect that the Harvester engine will turn the generator motor which will produce single phase, 240 volts, probably 48 to 80 Amps (11.5 to 19.2 kW) that feed into the L2 onboard chargers. If they do 80 Amps, that will mean something like what the early Lightnings have, which is dual onboard charging (two AC-DC converters). Most EVs turn off access to charging while the vehicle is in motion because that would be a dumb thing to leave on. But an EREV, by definition, requires access to charging while the vehicle is in motion.
The possible implications of my speculation here are:
1) The Scouts will be able to take advantage of 80A Level 2 charging (not all EVs have dual onboard charging), which will be great.
2) The BEV Scouts might only require a small bit of software changes and maybe a bit of hardware to allow L2 charging while driving.
What kind of idiot would want #2?
Me.
I would love to build a trailer with a 60-120 kWh battery built into it—probably from a rescued totaled EV—and use it to charge the truck while on the road. With Level 2, 80A charging, I could push 19 kWh into the truck for every hour I’m on the road. Assuming 2 miles/kWh efficiency, that’s an extra ~60 kWh and ~120 miles of range for every 3 hours of driving. I would charge the trailer battery on DCFC when possible (park it at one DCFC station and the truck at another). That bit of extra range gets me to my favorite, very remote boondocking sites with plenty of juice left over. And I could leave behind the extra weight when I’m not camping. And I have significantly less maintenance than I would with a Harvester.
There’s zero real evidence this would be possible, so it’s all speculation.
With the Harvester, the vehicle will be capable of charging while driving. It’s highly unlikely in my opinion that the Harvester will use a separate converter to charge the battery while driving. It would make little sense to add yet another, redundant (but not usefully redundant) converter to the vehicle. So I suspect that the Harvester engine will turn the generator motor which will produce single phase, 240 volts, probably 48 to 80 Amps (11.5 to 19.2 kW) that feed into the L2 onboard chargers. If they do 80 Amps, that will mean something like what the early Lightnings have, which is dual onboard charging (two AC-DC converters). Most EVs turn off access to charging while the vehicle is in motion because that would be a dumb thing to leave on. But an EREV, by definition, requires access to charging while the vehicle is in motion.
The possible implications of my speculation here are:
1) The Scouts will be able to take advantage of 80A Level 2 charging (not all EVs have dual onboard charging), which will be great.
2) The BEV Scouts might only require a small bit of software changes and maybe a bit of hardware to allow L2 charging while driving.
What kind of idiot would want #2?
Me.
I would love to build a trailer with a 60-120 kWh battery built into it—probably from a rescued totaled EV—and use it to charge the truck while on the road. With Level 2, 80A charging, I could push 19 kWh into the truck for every hour I’m on the road. Assuming 2 miles/kWh efficiency, that’s an extra ~60 kWh and ~120 miles of range for every 3 hours of driving. I would charge the trailer battery on DCFC when possible (park it at one DCFC station and the truck at another). That bit of extra range gets me to my favorite, very remote boondocking sites with plenty of juice left over. And I could leave behind the extra weight when I’m not camping. And I have significantly less maintenance than I would with a Harvester.
There’s zero real evidence this would be possible, so it’s all speculation.