xylhim said:
cwerdna said:
Chaconzies said:
That would not be possible. The Combo is for DC charging and needs 400V and a giant charger. It's not a plug n play.
Yep. xylhim needs to look at
http://www.mynissanleaf.com/viewtopic.php?p=262630#p262630.
When doing DC fast charging, the on-board charger used for L1 and L2 AC charging is bypassed. One is using a very large external charger instead.
Do you absolutely need 400v? When I was quick charging last week, the charger went to around 200V / 50 amps for a time. Why couldn't someone hack the software to fool the car into thinking that it was being quick charged?
When you're using a
DC fast charger, you're using the EXTERNAL charger in the large unit the car is being plugged into and it is supplying DC to the car which then goes to the battery. The battery needs DC to charge.
When you're doing AC charging, AC is being supplied to the car and the car's on-board charger is responsible for upping the voltage, converting to DC (so that it can go into the battery), etc. The Spark EV's on-board charger is a 3.3 kW OBC. That's the bottleneck. (200 volts @ 50 amps is 10 kW. You don't have a 10 kW OBC.)
Then you're plugged into an L1 or L2 EVSE for AC charging, the EVSE is mainly just a smart switch w/GFCI and implements
https://code.google.com/p/open-evse/wiki/J1772Basics. The EVSE tells the vehicle how much it can output safely at max via the pilot signal and the car's OBC is supposed to comply. L1 and L2 EVSEs do not alter the line voltage, convert AC to DC, nor have any knowledge of the car's battery condition, voltage, temperature, etc.
The difference in hardware is part why L1 and L2 EVSEs can be as cheap as a couple hundred dollars (and some feel they're overpriced at that) while DC FCs are currently at least $10K. Some costs at
http://www.mychevysparkev.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=3753
We've had some discussion about why an EVSE is needed before at
http://www.mynissanleaf.com/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=4898 and
http://www.mynissanleaf.com/viewtopic.php?f=26&t=4056.
If you wanted a car w/a 10 kW OBC, you should've gotten a Rav4 EV or Model S. Or, if you wanted a 20 kW OBC, a 2nd 10 kW OBC is optional on the Model S. I've posted about it at
http://www.mychevysparkev.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=3549 and numerous times here before.
http://shop.teslamotors.com/products/high-power-wall-connector is Tesla's 240 volt 80 amp EVSE.
I just did a quick Google search and found these, which may help you:
http://www.edn.com/electronics-blogs/automotive-currents/4421241/How-the-J1772-charging-standard-for-plug-in-vehicles-works
http://www.sae.org/smartgrid/chargingprimer.pdf