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- cross-posted to:
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Unavailable at source, here’s their Bluesky.
He should be using CCS Level 2 at 240v on one of the bigger outlets, Level 1 will be painfully slow to charge.
I don’t think that that is even CCS Level One, looks like a standard North American wall outlet to me. (120V at 10A, or 1.2kw).
Aren’t they electrically the same? CCS Level 1 is 120v at 12-16A. All the CCS standard does is provide the signaling to make it safer and offer an emergency cut-off in case of overloading so you aren’t relying on the breaker alone.
I guess since we can’t see it we don’t exactly know if they use CCS since the other connector isn’t visible. Seems logical that they would or use something similar, since it’s safer than drawing the AC directly with no protection.
His clock battery also died so he’ll be pretty confused when he wakes up.
The memory battery (aka motherboard, CMOS, real-time clock (RTC), clock battery)[2][10] is generally a CR2032 lithium coin cell. This cell battery has an estimated life of three years when power supply unit (PSU) is unplugged or when the PSU power switch is turned off.[
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonvolatile_BIOS_memory#CMOS_battery
That is one forgetful protogen.
That or he’s based on an Original Xbox and uses a clock capacitor instead of a battery.