Leviton electric car chargers
Leviton electric car chargers
Just for clarification, the charging ?levels? are not a function environment (indoor vs. outdoor), but is a function of power input/output. Initially, Level 1 and Level 2 Charging referred to AC Charging and Level 3 referred to DC Charging. However, the standards are still evolving. Today, the SAE J1772? standard defines charging levels as follows:
AC Level 1: 120V up to 16A (~1.92kW Max), single-phase
AC Level 2: 240V up to 80A (~19.2kW Max), single-phase
AC Level 3: not yet defined; proposed >20kW
DC Level 1: not yet defined; proposed 200-450 V DC, up to 20 kW (80 A)
DC Level 2: not yet defined; proposed 200-450 V DC, up to 80 kW (200 A)
DC Level 3: not yet defined; proposed 200-600 V DC up to 200 kW (400 A)
Currently, most production plug-in electric vehicles (at the moment NOT including Tesla) will be outfitted with the J1772 Charge Connector inlet, able to accept AC Level 1 and AC Level 2 Charging from the current lot of electric vehicle supply equipment (EVSE). Some PEVs (like the Nissan Leaf) will also be outfitted with a DC ?Fast Charge? port conforming to the CHAdeMO standard, utilizing a TEPCO connector.
One other note: the current AC Level 1 and Level 2 ?Charging Stations? are actually just supplying AC power to the PEV, which has an onboard battery charger. The DC ?Level 3? Fast Chargers contain the charging units within and directly charge the PEV.
Leviton electric car chargers
I believe that Square D and Leviton, among others, are now offering EV charging stations.
I think they come in these flavors:
Level 1 is slow charge indoor.
Level 2 is slow charge outdoor.
Level 3 is fast charge - probably needs 3-phase
You should be able to find information on their websites.
Just for clarification, the charging ?levels? are not a function environment (indoor vs. outdoor), but is a function of power input/output. Initially, Level 1 and Level 2 Charging referred to AC Charging and Level 3 referred to DC Charging. However, the standards are still evolving. Today, the SAE J1772? standard defines charging levels as follows:
AC Level 1: 120V up to 16A (~1.92kW Max), single-phase
AC Level 2: 240V up to 80A (~19.2kW Max), single-phase
AC Level 3: not yet defined; proposed >20kW
DC Level 1: not yet defined; proposed 200-450 V DC, up to 20 kW (80 A)
DC Level 2: not yet defined; proposed 200-450 V DC, up to 80 kW (200 A)
DC Level 3: not yet defined; proposed 200-600 V DC up to 200 kW (400 A)
Currently, most production plug-in electric vehicles (at the moment NOT including Tesla) will be outfitted with the J1772 Charge Connector inlet, able to accept AC Level 1 and AC Level 2 Charging from the current lot of electric vehicle supply equipment (EVSE). Some PEVs (like the Nissan Leaf) will also be outfitted with a DC ?Fast Charge? port conforming to the CHAdeMO standard, utilizing a TEPCO connector.
One other note: the current AC Level 1 and Level 2 ?Charging Stations? are actually just supplying AC power to the PEV, which has an onboard battery charger. The DC ?Level 3? Fast Chargers contain the charging units within and directly charge the PEV.