schuman1048
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I finally got my Power Promise charge station installed once the issue with ordering a charger was cleared up. Its nice, but….
Ford provided me with a Charge station Pro. I’m not sure if I had a non-pro option. If I knew then what I know now, I would have gotten the non-pro charge station given the option. The problem with the charge pro is that the charging connection has pins for DC fast charging, even though they are not needed for charging my Mach-E at home. I presume they are there for V2L functionality. Since the Mach-E does not have the V2L feature, the DC pins are useless. The problem is that the extra pins on the connector are worse than useless. They get in the way of using the Charge station pro to charge either of my plug-in hybrids.
A search on the web revealed that you can’t purchase a CCS Combo 1 to J1772 adapter. I guess I could get a CCS to Combo 1 to NACS adapter, and plug that into a NACS to J1772 adapter but that doesn’t sound like a good idea.
I think the problem will get worse when my next EV comes with a NACS native adapter. You can get CCS combo to NACS adapters, but they only contain the DC pins, so no help for home charging. You can get J1772 to NACS adapters for the AC pins, but I don't think they will fit for the same reason that the connector won't fit my plug-in hybrids. Clearly a future me problem, but I don't think it will be uniquely mine.
My other thought was to replace the charge cable that came with the unit, with a replacement cable for a non-pro charger.
https://chargers.ford.com/ford-connected-charge-station-charge-cable-with-coupler
I wonder if the non-pro charge cable would work with the pro charge unit. If the non-pro cable worked, then I think it would allow me to charge all of my cars.
This is clearly a first-world problem, but it is a bit annoying.
Ford provided me with a Charge station Pro. I’m not sure if I had a non-pro option. If I knew then what I know now, I would have gotten the non-pro charge station given the option. The problem with the charge pro is that the charging connection has pins for DC fast charging, even though they are not needed for charging my Mach-E at home. I presume they are there for V2L functionality. Since the Mach-E does not have the V2L feature, the DC pins are useless. The problem is that the extra pins on the connector are worse than useless. They get in the way of using the Charge station pro to charge either of my plug-in hybrids.
A search on the web revealed that you can’t purchase a CCS Combo 1 to J1772 adapter. I guess I could get a CCS to Combo 1 to NACS adapter, and plug that into a NACS to J1772 adapter but that doesn’t sound like a good idea.
I think the problem will get worse when my next EV comes with a NACS native adapter. You can get CCS combo to NACS adapters, but they only contain the DC pins, so no help for home charging. You can get J1772 to NACS adapters for the AC pins, but I don't think they will fit for the same reason that the connector won't fit my plug-in hybrids. Clearly a future me problem, but I don't think it will be uniquely mine.
My other thought was to replace the charge cable that came with the unit, with a replacement cable for a non-pro charger.
https://chargers.ford.com/ford-connected-charge-station-charge-cable-with-coupler
I wonder if the non-pro charge cable would work with the pro charge unit. If the non-pro cable worked, then I think it would allow me to charge all of my cars.
This is clearly a first-world problem, but it is a bit annoying.
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