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This small curbside EV charger can deliver 200 miles of range in 13 minutes

Google Ventures-backed Gravity’s new curbside DC fast charger is no bigger than a Level 2 charger, but it’s 30 times faster.

EV infrastructure startup Gravity just released a 200kW curbside DC fast charger. This speedy 18 x 9 x 27-inch DC charger can be mounted to street utility poles and uses the same advanced technology as Gravity’s record-setting indoor charging systems.

Gravity says its lightning-fast curbside EV chargers can deliver 200 miles of range in 13 minutes, don’t need utility upgrades or street reconstruction, and can be deployed en masse. What’s more, the UL Solutions-certified chargers are bidirectional.

These speeds mean chargers can be deployed on metered curbs in busy city areas – where people are already parking – and provide dozens of charging sessions per parking space daily, maximizing turnover and minimizing drivers’ downtime. (Gravity’s power cabinets can be installed up to 500 feet away.)

Moshe Cohen, founder and CEO of Gravity, said, “An urban parking spot is valuable real estate. So is people’s time. If cities install slow, outdated chargers at the curb, they’re wasting people’s time and blocking the ability to fully utilize the latent potential in parked EV batteries.”

Google Ventures led a successful seed funding round for an undisclosed amount for Gravity in November 2023.

Top comment by Laird Popkin

Liked by 7 people

Fast DC chargers are great, but they're way more expensive than slow AC chargers. Which means that for the same money you can deploy perhaps 100 AC chargers or 1 DC charger, and it's far from obvious that deploying 1 DC charger is better for EV owners than 100 AC chargers. Imagine if there were an AC charger between every two curbside parking spots, you could park anywhere and charge while you're running errands, or at home overnight, etc.

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Read more: Boston is going is going big on installing curbside EV chargers

Correction: I previously stated that Gravity is backed by Google. I have corrected the story to reflect that it’s backed by Google Ventures, an independent and non-strategic venture firm that invests independently of Alphabet and Google.


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Avatar for Michelle Lewis Michelle Lewis

Michelle Lewis is a writer and editor on Electrek and an editor on DroneDJ, 9to5Mac, and 9to5Google. She lives in White River Junction, Vermont. She has previously worked for Fast Company, the Guardian, News Deeply, Time, and others. Message Michelle on Twitter or at michelle@9to5mac.com. Check out her personal blog.