DiveMan911
Well-known member
- First Name
- R.J.
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2022
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 157
- Reaction score
- 165
- Location
- Central Coast of CA
- Vehicles
- '06 Acura TL, '13 Ford Escape
- Thread starter
- #1
Have a question for all y’all out there.
I am able to charge at work, but it’s only a 120v outlet.
The Ford Mobile Charger is limited to 15amp (actually more like 11.5 technically).
But…we have a 120v charger that’s rated for 20amps. There is a 20amp circuit. My coworker charges his EV6 on that charger and gets the 20amps (again technically about 16amps). My Lightning still only charges at 11.5amps on that charger/circuit.
There can’t be a technical limitation right? Seems the ford engineers limited the draw on 120v to a 15amp circuit. Any thoughts?
I suspect there aren’t too many folks charging at 120v so I don’t think this “squeaky wheel” will get much attention. Just curious if anyone smarter than me has any explanation.
I am able to charge at work, but it’s only a 120v outlet.
The Ford Mobile Charger is limited to 15amp (actually more like 11.5 technically).
But…we have a 120v charger that’s rated for 20amps. There is a 20amp circuit. My coworker charges his EV6 on that charger and gets the 20amps (again technically about 16amps). My Lightning still only charges at 11.5amps on that charger/circuit.
There can’t be a technical limitation right? Seems the ford engineers limited the draw on 120v to a 15amp circuit. Any thoughts?
I suspect there aren’t too many folks charging at 120v so I don’t think this “squeaky wheel” will get much attention. Just curious if anyone smarter than me has any explanation.
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