this post was submitted on 19 Mar 2026
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[–] Pika@sh.itjust.works 2 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (2 children)

not PC but, I mean I can tell you the state I live in the closest EV charger is an hour away if that helps your data set on infrastructure knowledge. That's my primary reason I have no current interest in EV. I firmly agree infrastructure is not there at this time for it in this state. Maybe in the future it will but until I can easily charge my car either at work or without an hour detour it's a hard not happening for me.

being said, it has gotten better over the last few years so maybe soon?

[–] tpyo@lemmy.world 1 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

Does your situation not allow a plugin ev? You don't need to rely on a charging station. There's a good video about people's "range anxiety" and breaks down why home charging is adequate for nearly everyone

[–] Pika@sh.itjust.works 1 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago)

I had thought about it when i was thinking of getting an EV prior. The answer is "yes", technically, but I don't find it cost effective to do so. I don't own the building, or pay power utility, its bundled in my rent, and whatever power solution I installed would need to run roughly 150-200 ft feet across a lawn and part of an active driveway to get to my designated parking area(I had considered over or under but that also adds cost). Said parking area has already been designated as non-negotiable as the closer parking is strictly for the landlord's wife who has mobility issues(fully valid). On top of that I have been instructed to not put a constant load on the outdoor outlet, it according to them has high wear on it and they are worried about the risk of putting something constant on it because it used to run as an input for a generator that ran higher than what the line was actually rated for(old building, was before the requirement of a bypass switch, they used to just kill the main breaker before turning the generator on and then reversing it when the main had power again) and almost burned it out, so any solution would be either rewiring the outdoor outlet line from the fusebox on, or installing a dedicated charger line for it and then running it across prior distance. (which I had at one point thought about)

technically possible, but I don't think it's cost effective to do something like that, especially considering even if given permission, it's for a property I don't own and don't know how long I would be living here.

[–] ExperiencedWinter@lemmy.world 1 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

Should have linked this earlier, but adding it now anyways https://afdc.energy.gov/fuels/electricity-locations#%2Ffind%2Fnearest%3Ffuel=ELEC There are very few places in the US where you can be an hour away from the nearest charger.

It's also kind of a strange situation to explain to people who are used to fuling up at gas stations. I almost never use the fast chargers near my house, I can fill up way cheaper, and way more conveniently at home. The only time I start thinking about fast charging is when I'm driving more than 300 miles in a weekend.

[–] Pika@sh.itjust.works 3 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago)

yea those charts can be deceiving at times though , charge finder said I had one within 35 minutes I looked at what it was, the station it said is the old town house, and that's been disabled/damaged(the charger not the building) due to vandalism since mid covid and was never fixed. The other option shown is the high-school but it's restricted to students and Staff only and is parking pass enforced. I could likely abuse it via visitor pass, but that's still 40 minutes to get there, time spent charging and then 40 minutes back. They had a town vote to install a community one a few years back at a town meeting but, there wasn't enough local support for it to get on the official vote.

Being said, it must be nice having the luxury of charging it at home. I don't have such luxury.