Evil “unpluggers”, ice'd  spots, EVSE-etiquette> Mind your manners 

http://peninsulapress.com/2013/12/12/electric-vehicle-etiquette/
Electric vehicle owners get charged up over poor manners at the ‘pump’
By Lauren Goode | 12 Dec 2013

[video  / Lauren Goode/Peninsula Press
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GzQumYXsH0
Etiquette Tips for Electric Vehicle Owners 
StanfordJournalism· Dec 12, 2013 
Some electric vehicle owners are bristling at being unplugged, having to
unplug other idle cars or simply seeing their parking spots snatched up by
non-EV drivers. Two industry experts weigh in on proper etiquette at the
pump -- or, charging station. A report by Lauren Goode for Stanford
University's Peninsula Press.


images  
http://peninsulapress.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/IMG_0006.jpg
Some electric car owners are dismayed to see non-EV drivers taking up their
parking spots -- or to find that other EV owners have "unplugged" them

http://peninsulapress.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/OkaytoUnplug.jpg
Some EV owners, like Marc Geller, put a sign in the car window to let know
it’s okay to unplug. Otherwise: Unplugging is an EV etiquette no-no

http://peninsulapress.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/IMG_0033.jpg
A sign in a California Avenue parking garage, in Palo Alto, prohibits non-EV
drivers from parking in the spots closest to the charging stations
]

Dimitrios Papadogonas, a vice president of marketing at Silicon Valley-based
ChargePoint, was sitting in the governor’s office not long ago when he
received an alert on his mobile phone.

It was from his company’s own app, letting him know that a stranger had
unplugged Papadogonas’s electric vehicle parked two blocks away in a public
parking garage.

“I was unplugged for no reason whatsoever. No reason. They didn’t plug in
their car — they just unplugged me,” Papadogonas says. “No note!”

As of September, there were roughly 11,500 plug-in electric vehicles in the
Bay Area. They come with standard owner manuals, but no Emily Post books on
“EV Charging Etiquette.” Meanwhile, electric vehicle charging stations are
multiplying at a fast rate across San Mateo and Santa Clara counties.

So, call these next-level first-world problems, but complaints like
Papadogonas’s aren’t isolated. Though almost cultish in their support of the
electric car community, EV owners are bristling at being unplugged or having
to unplug other idle, fully charged cars. Even worse is finding their spots
snatched up by non-EV drivers.

Compounding the problem, industry insiders say, is a lack of standardization
when it comes to the indicator lights that let people know the car doesn’t
need any more juice.

Some feel there’s an implicit hierarchy involving non-EVs, hybrid EVs and
“pure” EVs. Non-EV drivers shouldn’t ever park in charging spots, they say,
whereas hybrid drivers could always “top off” at a regular ol’ gas station.

“Please don’t park your MS in an EVSE parking spot unless you need to
charge,” a online commenter pleaded in a Tesla-related forum last month,
referring to Tesla’s Model S. “On several occasions I’ve seen an MS taking
up an EVSE parking spot without charging. I even informed a MS owner that it
was discourteous…his response was, ‘but these are the best parking spots.’”

Forrest North, a former Tesla engineer and the chief operating officer of
EV-software company Recargo, says he often hears stories like these – or
experiences such incidents himself.

“I’ve been to this exact station and seen a brand-new Leaf, and on another
day a brand-new Volt, parked in this spot and not plugged in,” he says,
gesturing to an electric charging station in a parking garage on California
Avenue in Palo Alto.

“That would be like parking in front of a gas station that’s completely full
and you just park there and go inside to get some jerky or a sandwich, while
there’s a line of people waiting to use it.”

While it’s unclear how many EV charging stations are up and operational on
the Peninsula alone, Papadogonas of ChargePoint says there are more than
2,000 stations across the Bay Area, and that the year-over-year growth rate
is around 70 percent.

Some are public stations, such as the one on California Avenue. Others are
technically private, like the ones sponsored by local tech companies to
attract and retain employees. And there are countless other charging options
at private residences — as some people open up their home station to the
general EV public by listing their address on sites like Forrest North’s
Recargo.com.

Many of these stations are free to use. But even if you’re getting charged
to charge, the cost is usually nominal compared with filling up a gas tank:
A recent report from the Santa Clara County Department of Planning and
Development estimates that charging a purely electric vehicle enough for a
100-mile trip would cost $3.74, compared with $13.36 for the same trip made
by a gas-fueled compact sedan.

So it’s often not the cost, but the time it takes to charge, that lends
itself to potentially impolite behavior. Charging stations consist of Level
1 chargers (110- to 120-volt outlets comparable to basic home outlets),
slightly more powerful Level 2 chargers or Level 3 fast chargers.

Depending on the vehicle’s range and the type of charger the owner plugs
into, charging up an EV can take as little as 15 minutes or as long as
several hours, which means it can be hard to know when it’s okay to unplug
someone else and when it’s not.

Issues like these have spurred EV bloggers to post etiquette tips online.
Brad Berman, a writer and researcher at Recargo-owned Plugincars.com,
offered some tips this past summer in a comprehensive post, including:
“Charge only when necessary,” “Don’t unplug plug-in hybrids,” and “No nasty
notes.”

But Marc Geller, a writer and advocate alongside Berman at Plugincars.com
who focuses mostly on policy around EVs, dismisses the notion that some
display poor etiquette at charging stations. He says he’s never encountered
any overtly bad behavior.

Still, Geller carries with him a green laminated sign that displays his full
phone number underneath text that reads: “Okay to Unplug.” He leaves this
sign on the dashboard in his car when it is, in fact, okay to unplug.

Others have no qualms in being the “unplugger” themselves. Robert Olson, an
Oakland resident who drives a relatively rare Honda Fit EV, says before he
unplugs a stranger’s car he usually looks to see if there are hybrids he
could unplug first, or the cars are fully charged.

“Most people don’t mind if you unplug a full vehicle, because they
understand that charging stations are limited,” Olson says.

Plus, EV owners have one option that gas guzzlers don’t: They can charge up
at home, which the majority of them do.

Recargo, along with PlugInsights, just released survey results that show the
overwhelming majority of EV charging (more than 80 percent) takes place at
home, with only 10 percent of EV drivers using public charging on a monthly
basis. Tesla Model S drivers are especially likely to charge at home, the
data show.

In Palo Alto, an ordinance was passed in September requiring every new
single-family home to come pre-built for electric vehicle chargers.

But the PlugInsights report also notes that as availability of Level 3 fast
chargers in public places expands, the amount of public charging is expected
grow, too.

Assuming public charging does grow, EV drivers and non-EV drivers alike
might want to keep in mind a common adage: Mind your manners.
[© 2013 Stanford University]



http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1089095_etiquette-tips-for-electric-car-charging-new-video-explains-it-all?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+GreenCarReports+%28Green+Car+Reports%29
Etiquette Tips For Electric-Car Charging: New Video Explains It All
Dec 13, 2013 - Whether they've been "ICEd"--internal combustion engined
vehicles parking in electric car spaces preventing EV owners from
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http://blog.sfgate.com/inthepeninsula/2013/12/13/electric-vehicle-etiquette/
Electric vehicle owners get charged up over poor manners at the ‘pump’
December 13, 2013 - Meanwhile, electric vehicle charging stations are
multiplying at ... Also from the Peninsula Press: Bay Area Bike Share pilot
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