xylhim said:
If you're going from LA to San Diego and are too impatient to wait 30 mins for a full quick charge, then just wait 10 minutes instead; you'd have enough range to still make it to San Diego and you can L2 charge or quick charge once you're there. It will take you 10 minutes at least to swap for the gas car anyways.
Whilst it is possible (anything is possible I guess) it comes down to a matter of how much time/energy you are willing to devote to the endeavor.
I live near San Diego airport, and occasionally have family that arrives at LAX (most international flights don't go to SAN unfortunately). That is a 125 mile, or 2:07 trip each way per google maps. Which makes for approx 4:14 hrs round trip in a gas car, typically on less than 1 tank of gas (no stopping for fuel necessary).
Assuming the Spark realistically does 80-90miles on a full charge (AC on, freeway speeds)
Full charge departing SAN.
Drive to Irvine SAE Combo chargers (of which there are 2 total, without knowing whether they are occupied/working) - 82 miles / 1:24, car will be empty.
+ 30 mins to charge up
Irvine to LAX, 46 miles / 50 mins.
Pickup family at LAX.
Wait for 30mins-1hr of L2 charging, which is necessary to make it back to Irvine.
LAX to Irvine, another 46 miles / 50mins. Car is empty again.
+ 30 mins to charge up, will need a full charge to get back to San Diego.
Another 82 miles / 1:24 back to SD
Arrive in San Diego empty.
Add all these up and it comes to a best-case scenario of ~6 hours to do a trip that would've taken ~4 in any other car.
Add in the questionable reliability/availability of the Combo chargers - if I arrive in Irvine unable to pickup a SAE charge that potentially means +7 hours on L2 to continue on my journey.
This is not to say the Spark isn't a bad car. It'd be great for traveling within a city/region. But anything outside of a 40 mile radius (80 mile radius with guaranteed charging or time to charge) could potentially become a major hassle.
The only real solution to this is if there were more SAE chargers. Lots more chargers, to where you could stop wherever you please to pick up a charge. I don't want to go to a deserted mall in Irvine at 9pm and find out if a SAE charge is even available. I don't want to show up at 9pm to find out that the SAE charger isn't working or the mall is closed and I can't get home.
Economically that would incur significant costs to install so many chargers, especially with so few vehicles supporting the SAE standard. I doubt that GM is willing to spend the money to build out the infrastructure to do this. It would cost them much less to just keep a gas-engined Spark on standby at a select number of dealerships for people to use; but even that probably isn't cost effective to do so.
So that leaves us with one last option - for another company to step in and provide this service.
Perhaps Hertz/Enterprise/Avis, could offer free parking/basic charging at their 24-hour airport locations for EV's in exchange for renting a car from them. That would be a win for the EV owner and a win for the rental company.
I'd certainly pay $30-50 a day to a rental company for this privilege. Time is money, and getting stuck waiting for a 7-hr L2 charge = lots of time and money wasted.