

Can be Schuko, BS 1363, or Australian outlets.ĬT2100 – J1772 and NEMA 5-20 charging on separate circuits.ĬT2500 – Mennekes (IEC 62196) charging (single phase).ĬT2020 family – Dual J1772 on separate circuits (no power sharing support).ĬT500 – Small home charger (J1772), now replaced by ChargePoint Home. Now rare with most being upgraded to CT2100.ĬT1500 – 220 V 16 A outlets behind a door. Obsolete stations ĬT1000 – NEMA 5-15 outlet only behind a door.
Charge point services plus#
The CPF50 added 50A charging support.ĬhargePoint Express Plus Family – The liquid-cooled, modular 400 kW charging system called "Express Plus" was launched in January 2017 at CES in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. CPF32 is a European Type 2 version (still limited to single phase 32A charging). For multi-family communities, CPF25 stations are intended for personal charging in assigned parking spots. For fleets, CPF25 stations are suited for depot charging. Express 200 is a charging design licensed from Tritium.ĬPF25 Family – The CPF25 is designed for select fleet and multi-family applications. Express 100 is available in separate CCS and CHAdeMO models, while Express 200 is larger and has both ports. They can also be installed in workplaces to complement CT4000 stations for employees who need a quick charge. Express stations are particularly suitable for short dwell time parking, freeway corridor locations and quick turnaround fleet charging. With an embedded AC-to-DC converter, they directly charge the vehicle battery and can charge some EVs in less than 30 minutes. Can share a single three phase 63A circuit or use two separate 32A circuits.ĬPE 100 and CPE 200 – ChargePoint Express DC fast chargers offer fast charging for most DC-capable electric vehicles. ĬP4000 Family – Three phase Mennekes ("type 2") charging for Europe, up to 22 kW. It was the first to support power sharing along multiple ports. ChargePoint Home Flex added 50A charging support.ĬT4000 Family – The CT4000 is intended for property owners, businesses and municipalities providing for charging stations for their employees, customers, residents and fleets.
Charge point services drivers#
Its business model, according to the Silicon Valley Business Journal, involves selling "its hardware and software to property owners, build a searchable network of charging stations for drivers and maintain individual stations." Current stations ChargePoint CT4000 family intelligent dual port networked Electric Vehicle charging station with driver services, mobile and web apps.ĬhargePoint Home – This is a small home charger that won an Edison Award for new product innovation and human-centered design. The company "designs, develops and manufactures hardware and software solutions" for electric vehicles at large. In January 2023, ChargePoint, Mercedes-Benz, and MN8 Energy announced plans to add 2,500 fast chargers at 400 charging hubs in the U.S., which will be available to all EVs. Ĭompany reached 100,000 chargers in September 2019, while adding more than 2,000 charging locations per month ĬhargePoint went public through a special-purpose acquisition company ("SPAC") reverse merger in February 2021. In 2019, VW's Electrify America and ChargePoint agreed to provide common access to their US customers. At the time, ChargePoint maintained 57,000 charging spots.

On November 28, 2018, ChargePoint raised $240 million. The current CEO and president as of 2018 is Pasquale Romano. Prior to that point, ChargePoint managed 34,900 charging stations across Mexico, Australia, Canada, and the United States. In June 2017, ChargePoint took over 9,800 electric vehicle charging spots from GE. History A ChargePoint public charging station at the Hillsboro Civic Center in Hillsboro, Oregon.ĬhargePoint was founded in 2007 as Coulomb Technologies by Richard Lowenthal, Dave Baxter and Harjinder Bhade. ChargePoint operates the largest online network of independently owned EV charging stations operating in 14 countries and makes some of the technology used in it. Financials as of January 31, 2023 ĬhargePoint (formerly Coulomb Technologies) is an American electric vehicle infrastructure company based in Campbell, California.
