jjdoe said:Or, I could get an adapter to fit the 240 outlet the Tesla plugs into, and use the 240 plug that comes with the Leaf charger.
Bingo on the bolded part.goldbrick said:Not a dumb question but I'd ask in a Tesla forum. Describe the exact adapter you have and ask there if it will work. BTW, the Leaf takes a standard J1772 plug. This is a standardized size and is meant to work with any car that uses the J1772 standard. There are electrical protocols that apply to the J1772 standard and you would hope :!: than any plug that fits a J1772 socket would use the J1772 standard protocol but better safe than sorry.
Not sure what this means. Leaf can AC charge from 100 to 240 volts over J1772.jjdoe said:I assume the Leaf will regulate whatever the voltage is. Or, I could get an adapter to fit the 240 outlet the Tesla plugs into, and use the 240 plug that comes with the Leaf charger.
I just don't want to blow it up! :shock:
No, that adapter will only let you charge a Tesla using the J1772. You need the reverse of that adapter if you want to charge your Leaf using a Tesla charger.jjdoe said:This is likely a dumb question, but with my Tesla M3, I got an adapter that fit's the 2018 Leaf's charger. Can I use this with my Tesla charger? (220v, 60a rating). The car isn't driven much, but the charging is so slow, with L1.
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