Charging output
Charging output is used to charge the high-voltage battery and precondition the vehicle. Charging is performed by connecting a charging cable between the vehicle's charging socket and a 120/240 V electrical outlet (alternating current) or via a charging station.
Important
When the charging cable is activated, a message will be displayed in the instrument panel and an indicator light in the vehicle's charging socket will illuminate. The vehicle's center display is activated at the same time and shows the charging settings. Charging output is primarily used for battery charging, but is also used for preconditioning. The 12 V battery is charged while the vehicle's batteries are charging.
Important
Never detach the charging cable from the 120/240 V outlet (AC, alternating current) while charging is in progress – the 120/240 V outlet could be damaged in such circumstances. Always interrupt charging first and then disconnect the charging cable – first from the vehicle's charging socket and then from the 120/240 V outlet.
Note
- In cold or hot weather, it may take longer to charge the high-voltage battery. Some of the charging current is then used to heat up/cool down the high-voltage battery.
- Selecting preconditioning can affect the charging time.
- Rapid charging with up to 150 kW output is possible under favorable conditions for the high-voltage battery and charging station. Charging output is limited toward the end of rapid charging.
Current intensity (amperage)
Charging time varies depending on the amperage set in the center display or the available charging output. The following charging times apply when charging is not affected by current being drawn from the climate system or any other function. If charging seems to be taking more time than shown in the table, this should be investigated.1
Current (A) | Charging output (kW) | Charging time (hours)2 |
---|---|---|
6 | 1.3 | 60 |
10 | 2.2 | 36 |
16 | 3.6 | 22 |
32 | 7.2 | 11 |
48 | 11 | 7.5 |
Amperage rapid charging (direct current)
Charging output (kW) | Charging time3 (minutes) |
---|---|
50 | 120 |
140 | 40 |
Fuse
There are normally several 120/240 V power consumers in one fuse circuit, which means that more than one power consumer (e.g. lighting, vacuum cleaner, electric drill, etc.) may use the same fuse.