I think we were installing the special switch in yours so you won't have to fuss with the app. But we're only doing the switch for a select few because it's extra work and time is precious.
So can you confirm that the normal operation is that to switch between 110v and J1772, you need to first configure the charger with an app?
Let me try and break this down in a way that makes sense because I promise there's a reason even if it sounds weird at first. So remember that our charging units are modular 3.3kW units by themselves. They can stack together into multiples of that number for charging purposes (3.3, 6.6, 9.9, 13.2, etc.)
It makes the most sense to tie the chargers together so they're all feeding off one inlet, and by that I mean plugging in one thing turns all the chargers on and starts feeding the bike power. HOWEVER. In the US, the most common EV plug is the J1772 or J Plug. EV stations that use these are notoriously inconsistent and a huge amount of them will trip if you try and take more than 7kW out of them. Well crap that's an interesting dilemma.
Oh, I know! What if we just tie two chargers together at a time (6.6kW) and each dual unit gets a J inlet! That way you can just pull from multiple stations every 2 units and never break the station. This is exactly how the US version of the 3 units in the pan is set up. 2 of the chargers are tied to 1 J1772 inlet, and one is on its own. We refer to it as Double J or 'Dub J' charging. This means that in both the 3.3kW single charger setup, and the 9.9kW Dub J setup there is a single SuperCharger on its own J1772 inlet pulling about 16A. If you run an adapter to this and plug it into a 110V wall outlet the charger will not pull enough to trip your breaker on its own. This makes life simple with both the single and triple units. Simple is good.
Turns out a lot of people want the 6.6kW setup where both chargers are tied into the same J1772 inlet. Plugging that into the wall will definitely trip your breaker. Crap. Oh, I know, what if we just have the customer issue a Bluetooth command to throttle the chargers' rate so it won't trip the breaker? That works!
And that was more or less Brandon's thought process.