Fixed your post, you're using the word "charger" in many cases where you mean
EVSE. For J1772 L1 and L2 AC charging, the charger is on-board the car. The external unit, either permanent or mobile, and even 120 volt "trickle charge" cable are all EVSEs for L1 and L2 AC charging, NOT chargers.
Jkoeller said:
Careful that you don't put '220V' and 'fast charger' together as they each have different meaning (and much different price-points). The 240 volt EVSE is generally called a Level-2 (L2) EVSE, where a fast-charger is a Level-3 (L3) DC fast-charger. An L3 charger charges *very* fast if you purchase the i3 with the fast-charger option, but you wouldn't install the L3 charger at your house, as it costs well above $10,000 to install. The 120 volt EVSE that comes with the i3 is considered a Level-1 (L1).
I won't go into the whole L3 use/misuse...
See http://www.mynissanleaf.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=14728&p=332668#p332668 and http://www.mynissanleaf.com/viewtopic.php?p=262630#p262630.
Charging speed is influenced by several factors such as line voltage, max output of the EVSE, max draw and output of the car's on-board charger, etc.
For example, if you plugged in a an '11 or '12 Leaf, '13 Leaf SV or SL and a '12+ Rav4 EV into this 40 amp EVSE (http://www.leviton.com/OA_HTML/ProductDetail.jsp?partnumber=EVB40-PST§ion=37741&minisite=10251) running at 208 or 240 volts, the '11 or '12 Leaf would charge the slowest (in terms of energy making it in the battery for a given time) since it has only a 3.3 kW on-board charger. '13 Leaf would be faster as it has a 6 kW OBC. '12+ Rav4 EV is fastest because it has a 10 kW OBC.
Even the Rav4 EV (and Tesla Model S, which comes standard w/a 10 kW OBC) charging at 40 amps @ 240 volts is NOT considered "fast charging".
You are correct that DC fast chargers are extremely expensive for the hardware alone and nobody would have one at home. The cheapest DC FC I know if is Nissan's CHAdeMO DC FC (for $15.5K for hardware only) and that isn't compatible w/an i3, which won't have CHAdeMO outside Japan.
And for DC fast charging, the charger is NOT on-board the car and resides in a unit external to the car.
http://www.mynissanleaf.com/viewtopic.php?p=332063#p332063 mentions
Information provided by Nissan at Plugin 2013 indicates average cost for hardware and installation at dealers for the DC FC is $49K.
Dennis below has it correct.
dennis said:
There are also some EVSEs that can be configured for delayed charging, but it is somewhat redundant with most EVs.
If you decide to go with a hardwired L2 EVSE, the one that BMW makes for the i3 is very aesthetically pleasing. However, I would suggest installing a NEMA 6-50 or 14-50 socket and purchasing an EVSE that plugs into one or the other socket. This ends up being a future-proofed and less expensive solution than most hardwired EVSEs....