Much thanks to @mymodl3 ♥ Cybertruck for sharing this with us, and to Brian Swenson for the original photos and tweets. The former, in response to a question about the number of stalls, wrote, “It appears that 100 is the number of total charges that the pack carries. The original post doesn’t indicate the number that can charge simultaneously. I’d love to have more details. Great topic for an article @cleantechnica@tesletter. This could be an answer for power losses.” Duly noted, mymodl3 ♥ Cybertruck! (Though, tbh, I noticed your main tweet on the Twitter home feed, not from the CleanTechnica account’s Twitter mentions, and thought we should cover this news just from that.)
I’ve reached out to Tesla asking about the number of cars this portable Tesla Supercharger thingie can charge, how many have rolled out and will roll out, and their locations. If Tesla responds, I’ll update the article to add that info.
This definitely seems to be a clever and highly efficient approach to holiday Carmageddon charging congestion, and it again shows how Tesla’s scrappy, capital efficient culture solves problems.
I remember learning in city planning graduate school that all of those giant Walmart, Target, and other “Big Box” parking lots are basically designed around one weekend a year. All that extra concrete wasteland is sitting there 364 days a year because of Black Friday. It’s highly inefficient, creates all kinds of issues — from harmful amounts of stormwater runoff to essentially unwalkable places — and it’s just ugly. I’m happy to see that Tesla has a smarter approach to rare peak demand challenges. No point in overbuilding for 360+ days a year when you can just spend a little money rolling out Superchargers with Megapacks on high-traffic routes on Thanksgiving weekend.
If you stumble across any more info these portable Carmageddon Superchargers before we do, please drop us a note down in the comments.
Update: Here’s another tweet about these mobile Tesla Superchargers, this one featuring a short video: