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Maxgreen Lvl 2 Charger (or other recommended cheap chargers)

Discussion in 'Prime Plug-in Charging' started by fredonly, Nov 13, 2017.

  1. fredonly

    fredonly Junior Member

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    I'm looking for an inexpensive 240V Charger for my 3-day old Prime. I searched amazon and ran across a unit from Maxgreen at the attractive price of $280 (I'm new to the forum, and it won't let me post a link). Has anyone tried it? Would anyone have reservations about using it?

    I'd be interested in other suggestions for an inexpensive unit. I'm just looking for a faster charge; I can live without WIFI connectivity.
     
  2. Dm84

    Dm84 Member

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    This is a $25k-$30k car. Don't cheap out on this. The Siemens Versicharge is probably the cheapest charger I'd recommend.

    Are you installing inside or outside?
     
  3. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    congrats and welcome!
    look on eBay for a good used unit.
     
  4. CraigM

    CraigM Active Member

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    Can’t comment on this particular unit, but have two items you might want to consider.

    The cord from the box that usually gets mounted on the wall is only 17 feet. This might be OK, but figure where the unit will be mounted and where the car will be parked.

    The unit is 16 amps which fully supports the 3.3kWh built in charger in the Prime. You might want to get a larger, like a 32+ amp charger if you ever plan to get a pure EV in the future. Of course you also have to have a proper circuit for whatever sized EVSE you decide on.

    Craig
     
  5. fredonly

    fredonly Junior Member

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    Any technical reason for that? I don't understand what these things do, other than act as a conduit for electrons.

    My car will be parked outside (at least, until I finally clean up the garage).The 220V outlet is inside the garage and I will also have to use an extension cord.

    Bisco- I looked at eBay, and found an even cheaper one. A new Duosida, costing $190. The few used ones actually cost more.
     
  6. DavidA

    DavidA Prius owner since July 2009

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    gosser1 likes this.
  7. Dennis_MA

    Dennis_MA Active Member

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    I too have the JuiceBox Pro 40, mine is with a 24 foot cord. Works fine for me. The unit is in the garage and I park my Prime outside. The 24 foot cable works fine for me. For me the biggest expense was getting 240 volts to the garage. I want to have some room for expansion in case we end up with a pure electric vehicle. Well worth the extra $200.
     
  8. SteveMucc

    SteveMucc Active Member

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    I can't see any reason not going for the absolute cheapest thing you can find. Assuming, of course, that you don't anticipate going for a bigger EV in the future.

    sure, build quality of electronics can vary (solder joints can be cheaped out, lower tolerance parts, etc.). But really, it's just a dang transformer and a small microcontroller (hell, even a pic would do for what it needs). Odds are, you can get a cheap one and be perfectly happy for the life of the prius.

    let me know how you like the Dusidio. I've been thinking about it myself, but we're selling our house (to move closer to the grandkids) and, while I already have conduit with plenty of space left feeding my current charger, I don't feel like pulling 3 conductor for only a months of use.
     
  9. fredonly

    fredonly Junior Member

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    I received my Dusido charger yesterday, after ordering it from Alibaba. The cost was $170 (including shipping) and I also had to pay a $40 import tax, so my total was $210. I have used it twice, and so far so good. BTW, ordering through Alibaba (rather than eBay or Amazon) I was able to get it made to a custom length (33 ft).
     
  10. markabele

    markabele owner of PiP, then Leaf, then Model 3

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    same as this one?
     
  11. Sam Spade

    Sam Spade Senior Member

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    If cost is REALLY that important to you.......don't get one at all.

    Won't the "standard" charger recover a full charge overnight (whatever your available charging time is) ??

    Yes, there usually IS a difference in quality. Most of the time you DO get what you pay for.
     
  12. markabele

    markabele owner of PiP, then Leaf, then Model 3

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    another excellent post, Sam
     
  13. SteveMucc

    SteveMucc Active Member

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    The Duosida also comes with a one year warranty. And the way electronics fail, if it hasn't burned out within the first 90 days (30 really) you're ok for a good long while. If it did burn out, it's so freaking cheap that you could buy a few spares and still come out cheaper than another charger.

    I'll probably hold my prime for 5 years or so. If a charger holds out that long for me i'll certainly be happy. Who knows what you're going to need, or what standard to feed it to in 5 years from now anyway.
     
  14. ct89

    ct89 Active Member

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    Not quite. I purchased the ClipperCreek unit and delivered it came to $394 so you couldn't even buy a second Duosida unit without spending more.

    There is always a balance here. You've already paid something in the neighborhood of $25-30K for a vehicle with sensitive electronics so I think it's fair to question the quality of what you connect to the electronics. The conversations here are debating whether to pay a bit more than $200 or maybe up to $500 for a charger. The difference between these equates to about 1% of the cost of the vehicle.

    I'm also not big on the future-proof theory. I bought a car I expect to have for at least 10-15 years and the charge will sit next to it for that duration. Next time I purchase a car, I'll get the appropriate charger for it. With the way technology evolves, it will likely be quite different than what I could get today.
     
  15. fredonly

    fredonly Junior Member

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    Markable - Yes, it's the same brand, but mine is 33 feet long.

    Sam/CT89 - A level one charger works fine for overnight charging, but it's helpful to me to charge it fast between trips during the day - I am retired, and come and go from the house several times a day. Regarding getting what you pay for: I wouldn't have been averse to paying more if I actually knew there was a benefit, but the only benefits anyone mentioned were that a higher amperage would be beneficial for a future electric car (not a factor for me; I keep cars 10 years), and the assumption that if you pay more it will probably be better quality. If that turns out to be true, and this cheap-o unit I bought has problems, I'll let everyone know. On the other hand, if it works out fine - others may want to consider this cheap route.
     
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  16. Sam Spade

    Sam Spade Senior Member

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    While it might SEEM obvious that frequent recharging might be the most economical thing you can do........have you done a rough calculation on the "pay back" time for the cost of the additional charger ??

    It should certainly pay for itself over 10 years.........IF your usage patterns stay the same.
     
  17. ct89

    ct89 Active Member

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    That's a tough calculation. Depends on how often you would have headed out on a less-than-full charge and used HV instead of EV.
    Even simple math like 4 times a week the car was only half charged due to L1 vs. L2 charging, it would mean that an extra ~50 miles of HV driving each week, say 2500 miles a year for now. At 3 cents/mile EV and 4.3 cents/mile HV (about what I pay now) that would work out to just $32/year of savings due to reduced energy costs.

    I'll break even in 12 years...Yea.

    I think I'm going to put my $394 into the category of an expense that enabled me to enjoy the car more. Well worth the pleasure of having the car fully charged awaiting my EV driving experience whenever I want. And whatever additional I save on energy is just a good reason to drive myself somewhere for lunch.
     
  18. Sam Spade

    Sam Spade Senior Member

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    To each his own.

    For ME the additional hassle of plugging and un-plugging multiple times a day would be a negative-enjoyment factor.........that I wouldn't be willing to tolerate without some significant tangible benefit.

    Good luck. Enjoy.
     
  19. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    probably why you don't own a plug in. L2 charger can be more valuable than 'payback time'.
     
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  20. CraigM

    CraigM Active Member

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    Just wish the Prime had the more common 6.6 kWh charger and not the s l o w 3.3 kWh charger.