Vehicle to Vehicle Charging - V2V and In Motion V2V
A major factor in the success of LightShip (before fast chargers with pull through lanes are built out) may hinge on the ability of available tow vehicles to support some version of Level 2 V2V charging. The inconvenience of charging a trailer in tow with current infrastructure is the primary driver. That capability will be significantly enhanced if the tow vehicle can support
In Motion V2V. Some vehicles that can support V2V charging have a charging port located on the front fender making
In Motion V2V impossible. But getting the LightShip to a destination with a full charge is important to realizing all the benefits of the Lightship at unimproved campgrounds.
Since I placed my deposit on a LightShip I have been lobbying Ben and Toby to robustly support V2V and In Motion V2V in the LightShip. Other priorities have not made that happen to date. But with competition from new market entries, like Evotrex, the clock is ticking. A LightShip with robust V2V support, particularly In Motion V2V, makes a competitor like Evotrex a non issue for LightShip. This becomes a slam dunk when the EREV tow vehicles are available. Evotrex is too heavy and complex. And nobody wants an ICE engine under the bed.
Undaunted, I am determined to make In Motion Level 2 V2V practical for the LightShip. As I write this there is only one tow vehicle that can support In Motion Level 2 V2V with up to 230 kW of electricity available, the Ford F-150 PowerBoost. The PowerBoost has a bed mounted 7.2 kW inverter generator plug in close proximity to NACS port of the LightShip. Some pure EV's like the Cybertruck and the late Ford Lightning have bed mounted NEMA14-50 outlets but the kW available is more limited. Even limited, in some situations it might make sense to do In Motion charging at Level 2 with an EV, then find a SuperCharger to top off the EV truck. Even more important right now until fast charging is turned on for the LightShip HV battery.
With that in mind, I am continuing to modify my LightShip to support In Motion charging. The latest modification is to replace the NACS port door on the side of the AeroHub with a door that can be closed yet still allow the NACS connector be connected. During my tests with In Motion charging I have confirmed the NACS plug has a locking interface that will not allow the plug to come out of the NACS port in motion, unless you press the NACS button.
Here is the new NACS plug door on my LightShip. Still waiting for some black metric hardware for the door to finish the installation.