But, also the 120v plug in the bed.There are 2 inverters. A 7.2 KW feeds the bed. A 2.4 KW feeds the frunk and interior.
There are two legs of 120v in the bed for 240v total. The bed outlets are completely separate from the interior/frunk outlets.But, also the 120v plug in the bed.
In regular non 9.6kW pro-power vehicles like mine (For the lightning: Pro Power Onboard Standard) the bottom right 120V duplex shares the one 2.4kW inverter power. For Pro Power Onboard 9.6kW I think @Hammick is correct, the left and right duplex are the 2 legs of the 240v respectively, so technically it's not possible to get 9.6kW of power from the bed, you'd have to run an extension cord and have just the right kind of loads to get the 9.6kW. In short: yes, the 7.2kW 240V twist lock and 2nd duplex on the left are indicative of the 9.6kW pro power.There are two legs of 120v in the bed for 240v total. The bed outlets are completely separate from the interior/frunk outlets.
II think 90% of the people with ProPower just turn it on, plug stuff in and it works.In regular non 9.6kW pro-power vehicles like mine (For the lightning: Pro Power Onboard Standard) the bottom right 120V duplex shares the one 2.4kW inverter power. For Pro Power Onboard 9.6kW I think @Hammick is correct, the left and right duplex are the 2 legs of the 240v respectively, so technically it's not possible to get 9.6kW of power from the bed, you'd have to run an extension cord and have just the right kind of loads to get the 9.6kW. In short: yes, the 7.2kW 240V twist lock and 2nd duplex on the left are indicative of the 9.6kW pro power.
I realize 90% of the people out there have no idea how AC split phase power works or really even cares, but Ford did a terrible job of mis/lack of information behind the: Pro Power Onboard 9.6kW. This has caused thousands of cumulative hours of customers wondering, inquiring, brainstorming on what they can and can't, should or shouldn't do with the pro-power. Shame on Ford
Yeah nobody should buy a lightning just to power their house. The most we will save per year on electricity is $1,500LOL,, yea, using the truck as a battery is awesome, but not really cost effective unless you were able to score a $39k pro with the $7500 rebate. That would be awesome though, if say in 10yrs someone had a zero miles truck, it would technically be worth way more than actual to unsuspecting buyers.