Well that manual shows a Nema 14-50 plug, and someone said it doesn't really use 3 phases, so it should be fairly easy to use in the US.A charger, for a dirt bike, that can't be exposed to dust or humidity...
Nice to see a faster 110v charge option for the US though, but we're still locked to 3.5kw max unless you're in a place with industrial power.

That's two 110v phases though, if the charger only operates on single phase, you're capped at the 110v limit of 3.5kw.Well that manual shows a Nema 14-50 plug, and someone said it doesn't really use 3 phases, so it should be fairly easy to use in the US.
My generator has a 14-50 outlet.
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if you plug it to 110v outlet max will be 240v, but if you plug it 240v in US (split phase) I think this will work, inside is probably 20A charging module as in other external DC CCS chargers - they will not make it custom bcoz not a lot ppl will buy it - they make custom mobile and probably not even make profit on them - even if this is very low marginThat's two 110v phases though, if the charger only operates on single phase, you're capped at the 110v limit of 3.5kw.
if you plug it to 110v outlet max will be 240v, but if you plug it 240v in US (split phase) I think this will work, inside is probably 20A charging module as in other external DC CCS chargers - they will not make it custom bcoz not a lot ppl will buy it - they make custom mobile and probably not even make profit on them - even if this is very low margin
It's a 14-50 not a 14-30In Europe the three phase plug will have 3 phases, neutral, and earth/ground. Phase to phase voltage is 400VAC, and each phase to neutral is ~230VAC. Since the stated draw is 32A max, that max 32*230=7.4kW
So in the USA, a nema 14-30 (commonly used for electric clothes dryers) is rated for 30A at 240V. So if you plug it into that, you should be able to get 7kW out of it.