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How BYD’s new EV charging tech and range stacks up against Tesla and the rest

Range anxiety and slow charging were the last arguments against EVs going mainstream. BYD's Blade Battery 2.0 just dismantled both of them in one event.

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If BYD’s “Disruptive Technology” event on March 5 was meant to rattle the EV industry, it probably worked.

The Chinese automaker unveiled the Blade Battery 2.0 — a second-generation lithium iron phosphate pack that takes direct aim at two of the biggest frustrations with electric vehicles: how far they go and how long they take to charge.

BYD’s battery leap: More range, less time at the plug

Over 1,000 km on China’s CLTC test cycle sounds like marketing until you translate it — that’s roughly 725 km on the US EPA scale and around 900 km on WLTP. To put it another way, the old Blade Battery was doing 600 km CLTC and that was considered good.

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The Model S Long Range, Tesla’s range king, barely clears 660 km on the EPA test. BYD just skipped past it in one go.

BYD’s new “flash charging” system can go from 10% to 70% in five minutes flat, and 10% to 97% in nine. To put that in perspective, Tesla’s V4 Supercharger — currently the fastest widely deployed charging network — peaks at around 325 kW for some vehicles (though most are limited to around 250 kW) and takes roughly 15 to 20 minutes to cover the same ground.

Even Porsche’s 800-volt Taycan, one of the fastest-charging EVs in the western market, needs around 18 minutes for a 10% to 80% charge.

BrandBest Range (WLTP/EPA)Peak Charging Speed10–80% Charge Time
BYD (Blade Battery 2.0)~900 km WLTP1,500 kW~5 min (10–70%)
Tesla (Model S Long Range)~560 km EPA325 kW (V4 Supercharger)~15–20 min
Porsche (Taycan Turbo S)~530 km WLTP320 kW~18–21 min
Hyundai (Ioniq 6 Long Range)~614 km WLTP350 kW~18 min
Lucid (Air Grand Touring)~837 km EPA420 kW (peak)~22 min

1.5 MW charging and a battery that works at −30°C

Cold weather performance also gets a meaningful upgrade. At -30°C, the Blade Battery 2.0 can charge from 20% to 97% in 12 minutes — a spec that matters enormously in northern Europe and Canada, where battery performance in winter has historically been a real weak point for EV adoption.

To support all of this, BYD has also introduced a 1,500 kW flash charger, a figure that dwarfs anything currently available from Tesla or the broader public charging network.

The first vehicle to use the new battery will be the Yangwang U7, BYD’s luxury flagship, which will pair the 150 kWh Blade Battery 2.0 with a quad-motor setup and that 1,006 km CLTC range figure.

A mass-market EV has already got the charging tech

What makes this more than just a luxury showcase is the Seal 07 EV — a mid-size sedan from BYD’s mainstream Ocean lineup, roughly the size of a Toyota Camry, starting at a converted price of around $24,600.

It gets the same Blade Battery 2.0 and the same flash charging capability, and a real-world test has already confirmed a 10% to 70% charge in 4 minutes and 51 seconds — just under the advertised five.

Range anxiety and slow charging were the last two credible arguments against EVs going mainstream. BYD just dismantled both of them — and did it at a price point that leaves the competition with very little to say (at least for now).

Shikhar Mehrotra
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