Sponsored

Need help deciding on extension cord solution

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,085
Reaction score
1,634
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
I'm trying to purchase an extension cord for traveling to destinations without high speed chargers to avoid any anxiety while there, be able to drive as much as we want locally, and perhaps avoid DC charging on return legs of the trips (Airbnb's at the beach, in-laws in interior New Hampshire).

With the super slow 120v charging rates of 2mph maybe, that isn't really a solution so it's off to a 14-30 solution to plug into a dryer outlet which just about every place has. However, I find myself in a research loop on getting a 14-50 cord or a 14-30 cord. IIn either case, I'm pretty locked onto a 50ft cord to handle the most number of parking/dryer location scenarios. The pros/cons seem to be the following:

14-50 cord

Pros
- 20 mph charge rate on 14-50 and 15 mph charge rate on 14-30
- Can use at RV parks and camprounds
- Can use on dryer outlets (I know you can buy adapters, but looks like many people just cut off the neutral pin which is 110 that EVs don't use and then you can plug it into the 14-30, 14-50, and 14-60 without an adapter)

Cons
- more expensive
- super heavy 6 gauge cord

14-30 cord
Pros

- A lot lighter to lug around
- Quite a bit cheaper
- No mod or adapter needed (not a big pro)

Cons
- 15 mph charge rate only on 14-30 outlet
- No use anywhere there isn't a dryer (like RV parks and campgrounds)


If the weight and expense of the cord wasn't such a big delta I would be in for the 14-50, but I'm tempted to stick with the 14-30 unless someone can spot something I'm missing. Thoughts?

Thanks!
Sponsored

 

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
148
Messages
13,589
Reaction score
27,460
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
I carry a full gamut of common NEMA adapters, but we typically end up places where a TT-30 is the highest output available. Unfortunately that means a specialty setup since it's only 120V. Rivian will charge at 48A on 120V if your EVSE supports it. The stock portable EVSE will work with an EV specific TT-30 to 14-50 adapter, but you have to remember to adjust the amperage in the truck down to 24A every time. Same with a 14-30 to 14-50 adapter though.

I have a 40' J1772 adapter we bring with us and that has covered a lot of situations where a charger is ICED (like at a hotel, etc)
 
Last edited:
OP
OP
jeeden

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,085
Reaction score
1,634
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
I carry a full gamut of common NEMA adapters, but we typically end up places where a TT-30 is the highest output available. Unfortunately that means a specialty setup since it's only 120V. Rivian will charge at 48A on 120V if your EVSE supports it. The stock portable EVSE will work with an EV specific TT-30 to 14-50 adapter, but you have to remember to adjust the amperage in the truck down to 24A every time. Same with a 14-30 to 14-50 adapter though.

I have a 40' J1772 adapter we bring with us and that has covered a lot of situations where a charger is ICED (like at a hotel, etc)
Yea, I figured I could just put a big tag on the cord to remind myself and/or the wife to drop it to 24A for safety. I think I'm leaning towards the dryer cord. Of course if I do that I will wind up seeing nothing but 14-50 outlets everywhere! haha
 

camaroz1985

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 5, 2021
Threads
15
Messages
980
Reaction score
1,035
Location
Carlisle, PA
Vehicles
R1T, ID.4
Occupation
Engineer
I carry a full gamut of common NEMA adapters, but we typically end up places where a TT-30 is the highest output available. Unfortunately that means a specialty setup since it's only 120V. Rivian will charge at 48A on 120V if your EVSE supports it. The stock portable EVSE will work with an EV specific TT-30 to 14-50 adapter, but you have to remember to adjust the amperage in the truck down to 24A every time. Same with a 14-30 to 14-50 adapter though.

I have a 40' J1772 adapter we bring with us and that has covered a lot of situations where a charger is ICED (like at a hotel, etc)
I have a tote of adapters (14-30, 10-30, TT-30, 6-50, and 10-50), 14-50 extension cord, and J1772 extension cord that I take when we go on a trip to an unknown charging area. Also always carry the OE EVSE and Lectron J1772 to Tesla adapter. Doesn't take up much room and I think (key word) will have us covered for any situation.
 

Killer95Stang

Well-Known Member
First Name
Dan
Joined
Dec 7, 2021
Threads
68
Messages
1,543
Reaction score
3,054
Location
Sunny Socal
Vehicles
Mustang, Falcon, F150, Flex and Explorer
Occupation
Engineer
That 50' cord will probably weight 50 pounds... and at 6 gauge it is not exactly flexible in a tight loop. I'd stick with a 25 ft cord with adapters. I use a 25 footer for my welder in the garage and I would not want to have to coil anything longer than that.
 

Sponsored

bgoldber88

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ben
Joined
Mar 12, 2023
Threads
7
Messages
132
Reaction score
186
Location
Chicago, IL
Vehicles
2023 Rivian R1T LE, 2021 BMW X3 PHEV
Occupation
Engineer
I just went through this in my own garage because the location of the NEMA 14-50 in my garage doesnt allow the 23' cable of my chargepoint to reach all the way to the front of the truck when backed in. I originally bought a NEMA 14-50 extension cable but after many horror stories of melted plugs, overheating outlets, and so on, I decided to return it without using it. Instead, I purchased the 20' Lectron J1772 extension cable: https://ev-lectron.com/products/lectron-j1772-extension-cable . I have been very happy with this so far, and I actually really like the flexibility it offers me in situations like what you've described above. You know that they used the correct wire gauge in this extension cable, and that its going to be compatible with your mobile charger or even J1772 destination chargers on trips.

I believe they also offer a 40' version.
 
OP
OP
jeeden

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,085
Reaction score
1,634
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
I just went through this in my own garage because the location of the NEMA 14-50 in my garage doesnt allow the 23' cable of my chargepoint to reach all the way to the front of the truck when backed in. I originally bought a NEMA 14-50 extension cable but after many horror stories of melted plugs, overheating outlets, and so on, I decided to return it without using it. Instead, I purchased the 20' Lectron J1772 extension cable: https://ev-lectron.com/products/lectron-j1772-extension-cable . I have been very happy with this so far, and I actually really like the flexibility it offers me in situations like what you've described above. You know that they used the correct wire gauge in this extension cable, and that its going to be compatible with your mobile charger or even J1772 destination chargers on trips.

I believe they also offer a 40' version.
Wow, 40ft is really something. Pricey too, but looks impressive. I guess I would need to get a 14-50 to 14-30 adapter for the front side of the EVSE though to plug it into the outlet and you would still need to manually set the amps to 24 though. Seems like it would be the same amount of oversight and cheaper to do the 14-30 extension on the front end
 

camaroz1985

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 5, 2021
Threads
15
Messages
980
Reaction score
1,035
Location
Carlisle, PA
Vehicles
R1T, ID.4
Occupation
Engineer
Wow, 40ft is really something. Pricey too, but looks impressive. I guess I would need to get a 14-50 to 14-30 adapter for the front side of the EVSE though to plug it into the outlet and you would still need to manually set the amps to 24 though. Seems like it would be the same amount of oversight and cheaper to do the 14-30 extension on the front end
Added benefit to the J1772 extension is you can use it when traveling with an existing level 2 charger that is ICE'ed. Basically you could park 2-3 spots away and still be able to plug in.
 
OP
OP
jeeden

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,085
Reaction score
1,634
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
Added benefit to the J1772 extension is you can use it when traveling with an existing level 2 charger that is ICE'ed. Basically you could park 2-3 spots away and still be able to plug in.
Yea. I wanted to, but just couldn't swallow the price right now. I wound up going with a 14-30 cord and a 14-50 adapter. I'm going to laminate a tag to put on the cord to remind me to ramp the charge down to 24a when using it. If I ever come across a campground I want to charge at, I can probably park close enough to use the 14-50 direct or I can use the 14-30 direct, OR I could get (although I can't seem to find one right now) a 14-30 to TT-30 adapter. I could even put a 15a 110 adapter on the end of the 14-30 cord and use the 110 if I wanted in a real pinch.
 

Sponsored

Cosmacelf

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2020
Threads
20
Messages
442
Reaction score
530
Location
San Diego, CA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, Tesla Model X
Occupation
Software
You might also want to get a 10-30 to 14-30 adapter. Older dryer receptacles are nema 10-30.
 
OP
OP
jeeden

jeeden

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeremy
Joined
Oct 27, 2020
Threads
57
Messages
1,085
Reaction score
1,634
Location
Northern VA
Vehicles
Rivian R1S, 2016 Ford Escape, 2015 Ford Mustang GT
Occupation
Project Manager
Clubs
 
For our travels to Airbnbs and the possible occasional relatives house I went with the following solution:

After testing the 110 outlet and getting 0mph with the AC on I decided that 110 wasn't for us. If I ever do use 110v, I'm sure there will be a 110v outside outlet around I can use and maybe even an extension cord. The tt-30 seems like it isn't worth it and a headache plus most campgrounds have 14-50 now and if they don't I probably don't want to be there.

I went to a 14-30 cord here: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09ND3575T/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

and the 14-50 adapter here:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08XNX8KQ6/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05_s02?ie=UTF8&psc=1

I even grabbed a little bag for the cord here:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07F1ZMLLK/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o04_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

My reasoning was that any place with a 14-50 probably has it within 20 ft of where I could park the Rivian because it has been installed for EV charging or RV power at a campground, so I probably wouldn't need a 14-50 extension cord. Almost every Airbnb, relative's house, etc has a dryer outlet, but it could be some distance away (like a beach house on stilts with it in the center of the second level) so the 18ft Rivian cord plus the 50ft 14-30 will almost always get me there. A 14-30 at 11 mph is pretty nice I think and the 50ft 14-30 is a lot lighter and easier to tote around than even a 25ft 14-50.

I did print a little card that says "DO NO USE THIS CORD FOR MORE THAN 24 AMPS- GO TO ENERGY SCREEN AND CHANGE AMPS TO 24 BEFORE OR RIGHT AFTER PLUGGING IN CHARGER." I laminated it and tie-wrapped it to the end of the cord that would be closest to the Rivian charger/adapter/Rivian.

I picked up a 10-30 (old dryer outlet style - pre 1998) to 14-30 adapter in case I wind up in an older house.
Sponsored

 
 








Top