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Which public plugs work for 2020 Prime

Discussion in 'Prime Plug-in Charging' started by JeremyM09, Jun 30, 2019.

  1. JeremyM09

    JeremyM09 Junior Member

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    I traveling out of state tomorrow to pickup my new vehicle: a 2020 Prius Prime LE. I'm starting to look on PlugShare, etc. and see multiple different plugs.

    Which ones work with the Prime? I know that wall plug does and Testa doesn't. What about:

    J-1772
    CHAdeMO
    NEMA 14-50
    CCS/SAE

    Thanks!
     
  2. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    J1772 and wall (which uses the cable that comes with the car).

    If you have a portable 220/240V EVSE with the NEMA 14-50 plug, then you can use it. If not, stick with J1772 and wall outlets.
     
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  3. jb in NE

    jb in NE Senior Member

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    Any available 120VAC outlet using the EVSE that comes with the car. Motels, campgrounds, etc. frequently have these where you can use them.
     
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  4. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    All J-1772 Plugs will charge, Level 2 plugs can charge as fast as 2 hours, Level 1 in 5.5 hours. J-1772 is on your cable Toyota supplied. No matter how many Amps the EVSE can provide, the Prime only draws 16 Amps

    CHAdeMO is a DC system, both the plugs and the voltage are incompatible.

    NEMA 14-50 is often used in RV/state parks, you can buy or build an adapter to the 5-15 on your existing cable to make it charge in 2.5 hours. (this adapter is non standard as it makes a 5-15 receptacle at 240 volts)
    220v NEMA 14-50P Plug to 3PIN 220v NEMA 5-15R RECEPTACLE POWER CORD ADAPTER | eBay

    CCS is a tossup, there are two style connectors, one allows J-1772, one does not. Assume it does not work in the US, and does in Europe.

    PlugShare - Find Electric Vehicle Charging Locations Near You

    Choose J-1772 (and NEMA 14-50 if you bought/made that adapter. Often stuck in RV parks)
     
    #4 JimboPalmer, Jun 30, 2019
    Last edited: Jun 30, 2019
  5. JeremyM09

    JeremyM09 Junior Member

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    Thank you!
     
  6. PrimerPrius

    PrimerPrius Junior Member

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    Here’s the deal:

    It took me a long time to figure this out but perhaps this will be of help.

    I live near free public charging stations in Santa Monica. Every time I would take my empty battery Prime to get charged, it would take 4hrs and 50 mins to fully charge. I then realize I had the wrong setting on my car.

    The manual nor this community tell you this BUT if your car takes a long time to charge on a public charging station, please go to the car settings and change the charge settings from 8A to MAX!

    You can now charge at Level 2!
     
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  7. Raytheeagle

    Raytheeagle Senior Member

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    I’ve seen that setting mentioned here before;).

    And I use it every day to charge at work(since I’m there for more than 8 hours, I 8A charge)(y).
     
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  8. jerrymildred

    jerrymildred Senior Member

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    @PrimerPrius, yes, it's been mentioned here a lot. But it's not bad to repeat it. (y)

    As for the manual, it's on page 123 in mine:

    Screen Shot 2019-09-22 at 8.47.13 AM.png
     
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  9. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    I thought the default is 12A on 120V, and 16A on 240V. I never checked or changed the setting on mine, but it dose complete charging by OEM EVSE at 120V in less than 6 hours.
     
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  10. jerrymildred

    jerrymildred Senior Member

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    That's roughly what my meters read.
     
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  11. PrimerPrius

    PrimerPrius Junior Member

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    YES! But it doesn’t do a good job explaining:
    “Level 1 / 120V (Slow charging) select 8A”

    “Level 2 / 240V (fast charging) select “MAX”

    It’s confusing and unclear.
     
  12. jerrymildred

    jerrymildred Senior Member

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    I can't find your quotes in my manual. Where did you find them? My manual doesn't say anything about charging voltage in the section about selecting charging current.; just charging current. Heat is a function of current, not voltage. The ability to reduce charging current is there solely for those situations where there are other loads on the same circuit breaker and they cause the breaker to trip when you plug in the car.

    It's perfectly clear. Use the lower amperage if the breaker trips when using max amperage. Done. That's it. Voltage is no more of a factor in this than the color of your shoes.
     
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