It's the mentality of the public, not the reality. 

EVs already showed they can pretty much match a normal car's range most of the time, that's not a problem anymore.

The infrastructure will always be the bottleneck. Even for charging at home.

Say you and I are neighbours, we both have 40A chargers at home. You have one and I have say 2 for charging multiple cars together. Our power company is being cheap and those 120A extra on top of both our houses normal consumption exceed our local line limit. What to do? Maybe intelligent chargers that communicate with each other would do the traffic control and alternate usage priority for sharing. 

What's stopping me from hacking the system and prioritized my chargers over yours? So when you wake up in the morning both my cars are full while yours is stuck at 20%? Or you hacking the system to even ignore my chargers' request for power?

 


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