Electric cars are great but, like petrol or diesel powered models, they need refuelling and in the same way, as a hose delivers petrol to a car’s tank so an EV charging cable delivers energy to the electric vehicle’s battery pack and for that, a plug-in source is needed. That’s why charging cables have connectors at either end. This can cause confusion with new adopters of the technology. Some cars have Type 1 to Type 2 connectors while others have Type 2 to Type 2 cable connectors.Here at the EV Cable Shop we offer a wide variety of 16amp or 32amp charging cables. We also provide 3 phase power cables for high capacity vehicles like the Tesla range. When buying either new or used electric cars prospective buyers should note that early production electric cars were fitted with a 3.6KW onboard charger as standard. They need a 16amp cable. More recent vehicles have 7KW onboard charge capability which requires a 32amp cable, for example. If in doubt, check out our model descriptions for the best fit.All electric cars come supplied with a standard charging cable that can plug into a common household electrical outlet. Thus electric car charging at home using a domestic 3-pin socket is fine but slow (overnight) and it is recommended that for home use and for fast-charging public points and at commercial premises another cable is needed. That’s why we recommend carrying one of our latest charging cables on board and keep the standard cable at home.
Which Cars Require a Type 1 Charging Cable?
Manufacturer and model
Max Charge Speed
Range
Plug Type
Full Charge with 3 Pin
Full Charge with Charging Station
Chevrolet Bolt
7,4kW
383km
Type 1
12h
8 h
Chevrolet Spark
3,3kW
132km
Type 1
9h
5,67 h
Citroen C-Zero
3,7 kW
150 km
Type 1
6,5 h
4,5 h
Citroën E-Berlingo Multispace
3,2 kW
170 km
Type 1
10 h
7,5 h
Fisker Karma
3,7 kW
81 km
Type 1
9 h
6 h
Ford C-Max Energi
3.7kW
33km
Type 1
3,25 h
2 h
Ford Focus
3,7 |4,6 | 6,6 kW
225 km
Type 1
15 h
8 | 7,5 | 5,5 h
Kia Soul 64kW
3,7 |4,6 | 6,6 kW
250 km
Type 1
13 h
8,5 | 7,5 | 5 h
Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV
3,7 kW
50 km
Type 1
6 h
5 h
Mitsubishi-I Miev
3,7 kW
160 km
Type 1
7 h
6 h
Nissan e-NV200 Combi Van
6.6kW
185km
Type 1
19,5h
7h
Nissan Leaf (24 kWh)
3,3 | 4,6 | 6,6³ kW
199 km
Type 1
11 h
7 | 5,5 | 4 h
Nissan Leaf (30 kWh)
3,3 | 4,6 | 6,6³ kW
250 km
Type 1
13,5 h
9 | 7 | 5 h
Nissan NV200 SE Van
3,3 | 4,6 | 6,6³ kW
167 km
Type 1
11 h
7 | 5,5 | 4 h
Peugeot iOn
3,7 kW
150 km
Type 1
6,5 h
5 h
Renault Kangoo Phase1
3,6 kW
170 km
Type 1
10 h
6.5 h
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