Iām not sure if Ford implied that or not, but it would require some expensive hardware for a marginal use case.Am I incorrect to remember that Ford teased at DC vehicle-to-vehicle charging?
Found the article.Iām not sure if Ford implied that or not, but it would require some expensive hardware for a marginal use case.
Interestingā¦.the article is kind of vague on technical details, and the way it reads, it wonāt be available initially.Found the article.
https://www.thedrive.com/news/43203/the-ford-f-150-lightning-will-be-able-to-charge-other-lightnings
It appears to be Lightning->Lightning only, and uses the 9.6kW onboard inverter through the charge port instead of DC. Still better than the 30A plug in the back though!
I was looking for something like that. A lot of YouTube reviewers said there was already one in the Frunk and even the Tesla adapter, so I expected to find one in my Frunk. I guess they just sent them to the reviewers for publicity.So what is that adaptor.. a 4 prong 30 amp (240 volt) to 14-50 nema (w/ neutral)? Something like this?
https://www.amazon.com/Generator-Ad...ocphy=9022395&hvtargid=pla-349051757259&psc=1
I need to pick up one incase I need to save the wife lol.
Yea that looks like it'll work fine!I was looking for something like that. A lot of YouTube reviewers said there was already one in the Frunk and even the Tesla adapter, so I expected to find one in my Frunk. I guess they just sent them to the reviewers for publicity.
Meanwhile, I ordered this one a few minutes ago, before I saw your link. I think it's the same, but with more amps?
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08R62R5YN/
THANKS!Yea that looks like it'll work fine!
The only problem is L2 charging is considered a continuous load and should be derated by 20%ā¦30A to 24A.THANKS!
I think they should include stuff like that in the charger kit in the frunk. They only cost about $20, and V2V charging is definitely something useful.
I can definitely see a need to help somebody out who needs help.
Also... I think Ford should include a couple of adapters that people can use at RV parks to convert from the popular round plug to go into the charger.
It depends on what you want/how you want to use the power from the truck. Iām no expertā¦I just read and digest it. As for my post to this thread, I just restated comments that started back on post #6ā¦I just qualified the issue raised about max amperage when charging another RV with documentation labeled on the very adapter Ford recommends to use.I am waiting for you experts to reach a consensus about which adapter I need.
They definitely should put some details about things like this somewhere online for clarification.It depends on what you want/how you want to use the power from the truck. Iām no expertā¦I just read and digest it. As for my post to this thread, I just restated comments that started back on post #6ā¦I just qualified the issue raised about max amperage when charging another RV with documentation labeled on the very adapter Ford recommends to use.
The adapter recommendation needs (and hasā¦so I bought one) to come from @Ford Motor Company as they are the one who promoted the vehicle charging capability of the Lightning ProPower, showed it off at one of their events, recommended the Parkworld 30A rated adapter with 24A EV charging limitation to use, designed their mobile charger to operate at 30A@240V, and designed the ProPower system. Ultimately, it may be safe to do so for occasional short charging durations, but Ford should explicitly say soā¦ā¦.
Iām not trying to be snarky hereā¦I just can read. I love my truck, feel Ford engineers designed a great vehicle, and Fordās assembly workers have done a great job putting it all together. I just think the engineers, the marketing team and those who put the manuals together locked a little communication somewhere along the wayā¦ā¦ā¦.