11kW Charge Rate From Ford 48A EVSE?

devmach-e

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Sep 8, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
2,030
Reaction score
2,488
Location
SF Bay Area
Vehicles
2022 Premium RWD ER, 2016 Toyota Highlander Hybrid
Occupation
Unix Sysadmin
Country flag
I see 10.4 on mine when charging at 48 amps.
Is that what you see pulled from the wall, or what Ford Pass reports?
Sponsored

 

devmach-e

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Sep 8, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
2,030
Reaction score
2,488
Location
SF Bay Area
Vehicles
2022 Premium RWD ER, 2016 Toyota Highlander Hybrid
Occupation
Unix Sysadmin
Country flag
Ford pass app info
That's what makes it into the battery. There's about a 10% loss between the wall and the battery due to things like the AC to DC conversion losses, and ancillary loads like cooling for the battery & electronics.
 
Last edited:

devmach-e

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Sep 8, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
2,030
Reaction score
2,488
Location
SF Bay Area
Vehicles
2022 Premium RWD ER, 2016 Toyota Highlander Hybrid
Occupation
Unix Sysadmin
Country flag
The charger has configuration setting (DIP switches) to configure the amperage that the car is allowed to draw. Check the book that came with the charger. You can open it and compare to the DIP switches settings to verify that they are set correctly. If it is set to 48 amps ... then your car gets 48 amps X whatever voltage the utility company is supplying.

I saw “whatever voltage” because 240v power is often not precisely 240v. Utility companies can vary … I think it‘s +/- 5%. If it is exactly 240v (I’ve tested mine a few times with my multimeter and it often shows 245v — still within spec.) then you get 11.4 kW that the car will “draw”.

There are also some charging losses (resistance that converts to heat instead of stored energy) … so typically what the FordPass app reports will be a little less than the draw.
The thing on the wall is an EVSE. The actual charger that coverts AC to DC is built into the car. Not all EVSEs have the ability to configure the amperage advertised to the car. The dual-voltage Ford mobile EVSE that comes with the car is fixed at 32A on Level 2 for instance.

When I had my Bolt, which could do a maximum of 7.68 kW, I would see the Bolt throttle the amps because our incoming voltage to the house was 245 to 249 volts (transformer was right across the street and we had solar, so line voltage was always higher). It was an interesting thing to see happen. Still pulled the same ~7.68 kW from the wall.
 

devmach-e

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Sep 8, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
2,030
Reaction score
2,488
Location
SF Bay Area
Vehicles
2022 Premium RWD ER, 2016 Toyota Highlander Hybrid
Occupation
Unix Sysadmin
Country flag
The code where I live is a 60 amp breaker should never have more load than 75% of that 60amps.
60amp x 240vac(where I live we are always above 240vac)=14400watts x .75allowed load=10.8kw. 9.8kw after going through wiring losses and charging station losses, I would say is good.
Can you quote the code section that says this? Pretty much everywhere else in the US, the code is that a continuous load has to be on a circuit that is upsized by 25%. I.e a 40A load needs a circuit that is capable of 50A (wiring and breaker). Another way to look at it is that a continuous load cannot be larger than 80% of the circuit, I.e a 40A circuit can only support a 32A load (40 * .8 = 32).
 


jav_eee

Well-Known Member
First Name
Javi
Joined
Jul 30, 2025
Threads
3
Messages
164
Reaction score
121
Location
Edinburg, TX
Vehicles
2025 Mach-E Select
Occupation
Energy Industry
That's what makes it into the battery. There's about a 10% loss between the wall and the battery due to things like the AC to DC conversion losses, and ancillary loads like cooling for the battery & electronics.
im charging at 40 amps right now. Ford pass says 8.8kW while the vehicle says 39 amps and 9.4kW.
 

devmach-e

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Sep 8, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
2,030
Reaction score
2,488
Location
SF Bay Area
Vehicles
2022 Premium RWD ER, 2016 Toyota Highlander Hybrid
Occupation
Unix Sysadmin
Country flag
im charging at 40 amps right now. Ford pass says 8.8kW while the vehicle says 39 amps and 9.4kW.
Do you know what is being drawn from the wall?
 

Shayne

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2020
Threads
18
Messages
3,824
Reaction score
2,738
Location
Northern Ontario Canada
Vehicles
2021 MME4x Prem
Occupation
Retired
Country flag
Folks:

I’ve been noticing on my new ‘25 GT that I’m only getting ~9.8kW or so charge rate from my Ford EVSE on a 60 amp circuit. Should I be expecting the full 11kW from the EVSE to the onboard charger?

Please advise.

Thanks!
IMG_4626.jpeg
For an understand you can look at the laboratory EPA test attached page 5. This is carried out in ideal conditions and therefore depending on your conditions may vary. Your charger is capable of 48 amp 48 x 0.24 KV = 11.5 KW. 11.5 x 0.87 efficiency is 10.0 KW max into the car. Your 9.8 looks in the ball park. At a stead 9.8 your 10 to 100% time will be 0.9 x 90 KW/ 9.8 = 8.3 hours. It slows down when going from 90 to 100 so a bit longer. If you sleep you should be good.
 

Attachments

Space_Pony

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 7, 2023
Threads
4
Messages
1,712
Reaction score
1,442
Location
Indiana
Vehicles
2023 Premium Mach-E awdX
Country flag
For an understand you can look at the laboratory EPA test attached page 5. This is carried out in ideal conditions and therefore depending on your conditions may vary. Your charger is capable of 48 amp 48 x 0.24 KV = 11.5 KW. 11.5 x 0.87 efficiency is 10.0 KW max into the car. Your 9.8 looks in the ball park. At a stead 9.8 your 10 to 100% time will be 0.9 x 90 KW/ 9.8 = 8.3 hours. It slows down when going from 90 to 100 so a bit longer. If you sleep you should be good.
You stated that the maximum charge rate is 10 kw. That is not what I and many others are seeing. See post #36. My Fordpass app routinely shows 10.5. My window sticker also states that my MME has a "10.5KW AC ONBOARD CHARGER".
 

Shayne

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2020
Threads
18
Messages
3,824
Reaction score
2,738
Location
Northern Ontario Canada
Vehicles
2021 MME4x Prem
Occupation
Retired
Country flag
You stated that the maximum charge rate is 10 kw. That is not what I and many others are seeing. See post #36. My Fordpass app routinely shows 10.5. My window sticker also states that my MME has a "10.5KW AC ONBOARD CHARGER".
I state based on the EPA efficiency it is. Facts are facts read the testing. That was 2021 88 KW battery I do not think the efficiency has increased too much or your app is at all accurate. It will fluctuate.

Take the percentage charged x 91 KW divide it by time and report back.

Edit: Think the app gives KW now take that and divided by time charging. Ensure you are charging it for a reasonable percentage. If I had 9.8 and not 6.5 I would be laughing.
 
Last edited:

devmach-e

Well-Known Member
First Name
David
Joined
Sep 8, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
2,030
Reaction score
2,488
Location
SF Bay Area
Vehicles
2022 Premium RWD ER, 2016 Toyota Highlander Hybrid
Occupation
Unix Sysadmin
Country flag
For an understand you can look at the laboratory EPA test attached page 5. This is carried out in ideal conditions and therefore depending on your conditions may vary. Your charger is capable of 48 amp 48 x 0.24 KV = 11.5 KW. 11.5 x 0.87 efficiency is 10.0 KW max into the car. Your 9.8 looks in the ball park. At a stead 9.8 your 10 to 100% time will be 0.9 x 90 KW/ 9.8 = 8.3 hours. It slows down when going from 90 to 100 so a bit longer. If you sleep you should be good.
My testing indicates that the efficiency of the internal charger is closer to 93%. This is based on noting the kWh remaining figure reported by Car Scanner prior to charging, charging the car, noting the amount pulled from the wall using something like an Emporia Vue, and looking at the kWh remaining figure after charging. I've done this multiple times. Ancillary loads didn't pull much apparently.

And it absolutely does not slow down between 90% and 100%. It is pretty much the full amount all the way up to about 97% or 98% SOC. Again, tested multiple times.
 

Shayne

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2020
Threads
18
Messages
3,824
Reaction score
2,738
Location
Northern Ontario Canada
Vehicles
2021 MME4x Prem
Occupation
Retired
Country flag
My testing indicates that the efficiency of the internal charger is closer to 93%. This is based on noting the kWh remaining figure reported by Car Scanner prior to charging, charging the car, noting the amount pulled from the wall using something like an Emporia Vue, and looking at the kWh remaining figure after charging. I've done this multiple times. Ancillary loads didn't pull much apparently.

And it absolutely does not slow down between 90% and 100%. It is pretty much the full amount all the way up to about 97% or 98% SOC. Again, tested multiple times.
To be whining about 9.8 and not 10.5 is ridiculous when some of us can not get over 6.5
 
 







Top