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Tesla's V4 Supercharger Cabinet Can Charge Cybertruck 30% Faster, Recharge Tesla Semi And Save Annual Electricity Usage Of Over 9000 Homes

Benzinga ·  Nov 15 21:18

EV giant Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) on Thursday announced the company's new charging equipment called the V4 cabinet aimed at increasing charging speed and enabling sufficient charging infrastructure for the company's upcoming Tesla Semi vehicle slated to enter production in 2026.

What Happened: The V4 Cabinet, Tesla said, supports 400V-1000V vehicle architectures and is capable of delivering up to 500kW for cars and 1.2 MW for the company's upcoming Semi. It powers 8 posts and twice the stalls per cabinet.

"Our first sites with V4 Cabinets are going into permitting now. First openings in 2025," Tesla said in a post on X.

While Tesla launched its V4 posts last year, it was still using a V3 cabinet, limiting power output.

— Tesla Charging (@TeslaCharging) November 14, 2024

"There's great engineering behind the V4 system that enables faster charging speeds, lower deployment costs, more efficient power conversion, and higher power density. These benefits for Tesla Semi customers will be a key part of scaling electric trucking," Senior Manager for Semi Truck Engineering Dan Priestly said in a post on X.

The new V4 cabinet can also enable charging the company's Cybertruck 30% faster, the company said.

Max de Zegher, Tesla's Director of Charging, North America, highlighted the efficiency improvements of the new V4 Cabinet, saying, "Even some of the small incremental improvements matter. V4 Cabinet has a 2% efficiency improvement. Superchargers already deliver over 5 TWh/year, 100 GWh/year in waste heat that can be saved."

This is equivalent to the annual electricity usage of over 9,000 households in the U.S. on average, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Posts can peak up to 500kW for cars, but we need less than 1MW across 8 posts to deliver maximum power to cars 99% of the time.
No more DC busbar between cabinets. Power comes from a single V4 cabinet to 8 stalls. Easier to install, cheaper, more reliable.
Even some of the...

— Max de Zegher (@MdeZegher) November 14, 2024

Why It Matters: As of the end of the third quarter, Tesla had 6,706 supercharger stations around the globe and 62,421 connectors.

During Tesla's annual shareholder meeting in June, Tesla CEO Elon Musk slammed rumors of the death of its supercharger network following a major layoff in April as "greatly exaggerated." Tesla will invest $500 million in expanding the network this year, Musk then said.

Tesla's company-wide layoffs in April impacted 500 members of the supercharging team and Rebecca Tinucci, Tesla's then Senior Director of Charging Infrastructure, left the company.

Check out more of Benzinga's Future Of Mobility coverage by following this link.

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Photo courtesy: Tesla

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