yblaser said:
My experience with a 240V 16A EVSE is that it assumes the EVSE is 120V based on the current. It might be the same with a 20A EVSE. Plug in the EVSE right after you turn the car off and look at the screen. On mine when I used the 16A EVSE, the 220V estimated charge time disappeared only leaving the 120V estimated charge time.
I did some testing and now have evidence supporting the theory that the Rav4 assumes you're plugged in to 120v if it reads a 20a or lesser pilot signal. I set a departure time of 7 am Sunday, and, quickly after powering the car off, plugged in my 240v EVSE set to 20a. Here's what the display showed:
That says it plans to start charging at the ridiculously early 5:18 pm Saturday, if it's too blurry for you. I then unplugged, adjusted my EVSE to 21a, power-cycled the Rav, and tried again:
Now we have a much more reasonable 12:17 am starting time, from a tiny little 1 amp difference in the pilot signal. I then set a departure time for Saturday morning and left it plugged in, so we'll see if it'll actually do what the screen says it'll do.
A couple other things to note:
I set the departure time to 7 am even though I want charges to complete before 6 am - this seems to work pretty well on my CS-60, but I might need to make it even later for my 21a EVSE.
I've noticed failed charges have occurred in the past with the following scenario: I plug into my 20a EVSE at ~7pm, and the Rav assumes it's plugged in to 120v so starts charging immediately. I then unplug to stop the early charge, and possibly fiddle with the timer, then plug it back in. The Rav then blinks the yellow lights like it's supposed to but doesn't ever start the overnight charge. It thinks that it's "done for the day" because of its 30 second charge that I manually stopped. I wouldn't be at all surprised if this is related to the charge failures after 120v charging that others have seen.
I believe you can tell in advance that this will happen, however, if you look at the dash after plugging in. If the display shows a start time, as above, you should be good; but if it shows "--:--" where the start time should be then it won't charge. I found that to get the timer "reset" for the day you need to turn the car on, go into the timer setup, delete the day's departure time, save the changes, then go back and add the day's departure time back in before turning the car off and plugging in again. There might've been a power cycle of the car in the middle there too...
Anyway, long story short, if you have a <=20a EVSE, just give up on the timer unless Toyota/Tesla get their act together and update the software to have the car sample the voltage, but if 21a or greater, it should work, just set the departure time about an hour or so later than you really want to make up for the Rav apparently assuming 200-208V instead of 240V. And if you charge on 120v or manually terminate a charge the Rav started at some point in the day, delete then add back in your next departure time.