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My charger blew - what's the best replacement?


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Is there any reason to not just buy the cheapest thing on Amazon? i.e. this: 

https://www.amazon.com/Lectron-Level-Charger-Extension-UL-Certified/dp/B08HHBDQ88/ref=sr_1_10?crid=W7Z1FBLB7VZ5&keywords=ev+charger&qid=1655241996&sprefix=ev+char%2Caps%2C137&sr=8-10

 

There is also a used C-Max charger in my area on Facebook Marketplace:

https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/549173226513315/?ref=search&referral_code=marketplace_search&referral_story_type=post&tracking=browse_serp%3Aa5c80214-9c7f-4257-9eac-bb40f62bbee0

 

Any thoughts would be much appreciated.

 

Edited by Nervous but Excited
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On 6/14/2022 at 5:12 PM, Nervous but Excited said:

Is there any reason to not just buy the cheapest thing on Amazon?

Not really (assuming it has all the safety approvals).

 

The only reason I see is if you planned to upgrade, EV-wise, to something that needs more power. 1.7kW from a 110v circuit only cuts it for plug-in hybrids. 

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To elaborate a bit further: With xEV charging (EVs and PHEVs alike), as a baseline here in the US they use J1772 as the standard plug and protocol for Level 1/2 AC charging. Being standardized, EVSEs/cords work with everybody across the board. The obvious exception being the weirdness Tesla has set up.

 

As @fbov mentioned however, if you plan to ever migrate to a full EV, you may want to consider a higher capacity cord (given your electrical supply is up for it) to future proof. You can use a much higher capacity supply with the C-Max and it will only pull the max it can take which is around 1200-1500w on a 110v circuit or 12 amps. This is also part of the J1772 standard where the cord indicates to the vehicle the max it can supply and the vehicle will only pull up to that amount to the max itself can take.

 

One caveat with some of those cheaper 'Duosida' clones on Amazon as someone pointed out recently on /r/electricvehicles is those sold and supposedly rated for 220/240v and higher amperages above the 12a baseline may not be fully reliable at those levels. Some have reported them failing at those higher loads. For the C-Max being limited to 12a, it's likely not an issue but just something to be aware of in case you do ever plan to upgrade to a vehicle that can charge at higher rates.

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  • 4 weeks later...

The receptacle seems to be a NEMA 14-30R... But this doesn't seem standard for level 2 chargers..?


I'm going to get a convertor:
https://www.facebook.com/commerce/products/nema-14-30p-to-6-20r-receptacle-adapter---ev/5105350399580671?ref=messenger_share&rt=54

And a level 2 charger:

https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/5103966699710748/?ref=search&referral_code=null&referral_story_type=post&tracking=browse_serp%3Ad38044b2-d80e-4239-9d01-bc12d4f7322b

 

 

Edited by Nervous but Excited
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  • 4 weeks later...

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