I've been wondering for some time about the "200V limit" that exists for both non-spec CHAdeMO stations and all DC CCS stations (as I understand it, it's written into the CCS spec).
So let's say I connect my vehicle up to a CCS station, and it does the interface protocol thing with the charging station, at which point it claims to have a 250 VDC battery, with a current limit of, say, 125 amps. In reality, it's my 2014 Zero SR (which now has a 2016 14.4 battery in it), which is actually a 116 VDC peak battery, with a 1C current limit and a capacity of 125 Ah.
So the charging station starts ramping up the voltage, and current comes up as well, but it reaches 125 amps way, way before 250 VDC...let's say around 100 VDC. Is the charging station going to stop charging? I'd be surprised if it does. I'd imagine it's just going to assume the battery is very depleted, and allow my vehicle to manage the charge rate via the current limit. So it will continue charging, at 125 amps, and the battery voltage will rise slowly from 100 VDC, just as expected.
Then we get to 110 VDC, and the bike tells the charger that it can only tolerate, say, 25 amps now (or whatever the appropriate voltage and current levels are). Again, I doubt this would cause any sort of ill behavior. The charger would just do what we've told it to do, to charge to "250 VDC" but limit the current to a maximum of (now) 25 amps. Then, as the battery reaches its actual terminal voltage, the bike would tell the charger through the protocol to de-activate entirely, and we're fully charged.
Modern chargers usually act in "CC/CV" mode (Constant Current/Constant Voltage), with BMS supervision. In other words, they do bulk charge in constant current mode as the battery voltage rises, then top-off in constant voltage mode as the battery gets near full charge. We would just be allowing the charging station to think the battery pack is very discharged, and manage the process manually, using the current limit instead of the voltage.
Does anybody else think this would work, without giving the charging station heartburn? I really think it would work.
But no, I'm not going to risk my own bike trying it out.