Skip to main content

Tesla has installed its 500th Supercharger station

Tesla Supercharger
As a brand, Tesla Motors is still relatively new. Its first vehicle was revealed only nine years ago. But like the cars it produces, the company itself likes to move quickly. Just how quickly? According to the automaker’s website, Tesla has officially installed its 500th Supercharger station in Moers, Germany.

If you’re tuned in to the world of Tesla (we like to call it the Elon Muskosphere), you’ll know that the automaker hasn’t been producing Superchargers since the beginning. In fact, the brand starting installing the charging stations less than three years ago, which makes the feat all the more impressive. Each station features multiple Superchargers as well, totaling some 2,832 individual units around the globe.

Part of the reason the Supercharger network is so appealing is its ability to give Tesla owners a lot of charge in a little time. The company claims an 85 kWh Model S can be replenished to 80 percent capacity in just 40 minutes, which gives the car over 170 miles of driving range. Unlike standard outlets, the stations use multiple chargers working in tandem to provide up to 120 kW of DC power directly to the battery.

If you have a flair for the unconventional, you’ll love Tesla’s prototype “Snakebot” charger, which was revealed in a slightly creepy testing video in early August. The device appears to automatically locate the charging port on a Model S once the door has been opened, and then slowly but surely plug itself in and replenish the car’s batteries autonomously.

It’s still in the development stage for now, but you may very well see this product available for sale one day. Back in December 2014, Elon Musk wrote on Twitter, “Btw, we are actually working on a charger that automatically moves out from the wall & connects like a solid metal snake. For realz.”

Andrew Hard
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Andrew first started writing in middle school and hasn't put the pen down since. Whether it's technology, music, sports, or…
Intel has 500 bugs to fix in its next supercomputer chips
Sandra Rivera smiles as she holds an Intel Sapphire Rapids wafer.

What do Intel and the U.S. federal government have in common? Neither of them has a supercomputer. And that's because Intel's ability to build a 4th generation Xeon 'Sapphire Rapids' super processor keeps getting set back, most recently when it was revealed the chip had 500 bugs the company needed to fix.

The Sapphire Rapids chips have been delayed several times over the past two years with no reasons given. Then, last week, computing watchdog site Igor's Lab revealed Intel was working on 500 bugs that required 12 steppings to fix them. Ouch.

Read more
Tesla starts opening up its Supercharger network to other EVs
tesla starts opening its supercharger network to other evs

Tesla has started to open up its Supercharger network to non-Tesla electric vehicles (EVs).

Tesla chief Elon Musk promised in July that the automaker would begin the process before the end of this year.

Read more
Tesla offers a peek inside its shiny new Giga Berlin factory
tesla offers a peek inside its shiny new giga berlin factory tour

Tesla has offered a peek inside its new Giga Berlin facility located about 20 miles (32 kilometers) southeast of the German capital.

To celebrate Giga Berlin’s completion, Tesla invited members of the public to a kind of county fair event that included tours of the new factory. Held on Saturday, the Giga Fest shindig was also attended by Tesla chief Elon Musk.

Read more