Don't those NACS connectors handle AC or DC depending on the evse or charger? seems dangerous to not totally isolate the AC and DC connections like a CSS does.. You are putting a lot of faith in the vehicles onboard system and evse playing fair with each other. or contactors not to get stuck, etc.
@Pir8radio The plug does not really matter, NACS (Tesla) or SAE J1772 with a Tesla adapter. They are electronically and pin equivalent. Tesla seems to have it figured out, every Tesla vehicle shipped in North America uses the same pins for AC charging via NACS and J1772 or DC supercharging.
I would assume non-Tesla OEMS would have to comply with the same standards for their onboard charging systems to use Tesla Supercharger network and NACS socket.
I have been using a Tesla plug on my personal station since 2012 without issue.
@pir8radio Are you saying Teslas should not charge on AC charging stations?
Tesla has been using the same pins for AC/DC charging since The Model S was released in 2012, we are not aware of any issues with DC from the vehicle damaging AC charging stations. 10 years and 4.5 million vehicles would seem to be a pretty large sample size.
We are not experts on the Tesla DC system but, we are aware that there are physical contactors in both the vehicle and battery. If the vehicle system is anything like the charging stations, then a DC fault would force the vehicle to open the vehicle and/or the battery contactor. I would be shocked if Tesla did not think this one through.
NACS level 2 is electrically identical to J1772. People today use OpenEVSE units with NACS / Tesla cables without issue.
*however*, as NACS was proprietary, few to no NACS cables / handle vendors exist today. (check yourself, you can find tons of vendors selling J1772 components, but almost zero Tesla / NACS cables / handles / etc.)
As soon as 3rd party components become a thing, I'm sure OpenEVSE should be able to support native NACS cables.
Electric Ant, Make sure the wires leading from the control board to the connector are the correct gauge for the amperage.
I opened a ticket with the OpenEVSE team, I'm working with a team in Ohio who is interested in developing a NACS connector, support from OpenEVSE would be helpful.
@OpenEVSE Support
I dont see them in your store, put me down for one. lol
Are you sure that’s how billing happens? I read that the car sends billing info via the car’s cellular modem which is encrypted. Only vin number is sent to supercharger.
@Pir8radio The CAN pilot on only for DC Supercharging charging. On AC stations, Tesla uses the analog pilot on both the vehicle side and charging station (Tesla Wall Connector and Mobile unit).
Most of your posts do not have to be approved. I see 2 in the bucket now, not sure why. One was yours from a few days ago and the other Electric Ant.
We do not have any source for NACS (SAE J3400) yet. We have been working with Phoenix Contact and ITT to get some, but they are not selling anything yet.
yea i have not had luck other than used stuff. I did reach out to a few people that make tesla extension cables, they are getting the ends from somewhere. one looks custom, i asked them if they would sell to me, maybe they would sell to you for volume.
Lectron makes one, and this place looks like they are having custom ends made? https://evadept.com/p/tesla-supercharger-extension-cord-tslaext/
Alexander von Gluck IV
Whelp. With CCS dying in the US. We *really* need OpenEVSE to source an NACS cable or connector for existing OpenEVSE units.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BfrgG8MmrLI
Just opening the discussion. :-)
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