mkhuffman
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Mike
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2020
- Threads
- 29
- Messages
- 6,875
- Reaction score
- 9,507
- Location
- Virginia
- Vehicles
- 2025 Rivian R1T Tri-Max, Jeep GC-L, VW Jetta
Actually, in my inderstanding it's the charger inside the car (EV or plug-in) that dictates how much amperage the car will choose to pull on via the EVSE, of whatever type. The OEM car-provided EVSE cord's brick is a communication and safety device only. And the Mach-E pulls a max of about 29 amps on a Level 2 wall or street charging station... likely a notional 32 amps with a little bit of current loss through the charging path. I was just watching a street-side public charging station in Bethany Beach Delaware display this info while my Mach-E was "drinking". So, a 50-amp house circuit for this car is plen-tee as the car cannot exceed 32 amps on any EVSE. My old Fusion could not exceed 16 amps... my even older Prius Gen III could not exceed 12 Amps. My son's Audi E-tron cannot exceed 40 amps. He runs a 14-50 NEMA plug at 50 amps for his OEM car EVSE charging system. Hope this is useful info.
I also have a 48 Amp charger and it also pulls 48 Amps all the time and every time I connect it to my car. Actually, to be more precise, 46.8 Amps and I am charging right now:Not sure who told you that, but it’s not correct. Mine pulls 48A all the time.
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