Back in October I picked up one of the $300 L1 12A Clipper Creek EVSEs. Ref:
http://myimiev.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=1805
This Clipper Creek has replaced my EVSEUpgraded Mitsu for my L1 charging. My charge rate roughly yields six bars for five hours of charging, whereas the original Mitsu L1 8A EVSE yielded roughly four bars for five hours of charging. No problems, and the Remote likes it.
Now, I use my Remote just about every night to time the car's charging, starting the charge at some point in the night to yield about 13-14 bars and stop charging just before one of us takes the car in the morning. No problem.
The other day we were going to take a longer trip so I timed the Remote to allow the car to fully charge to 16 bars and programmed in another hour so that the battery could happily balance. When I went into the garage just before leaving home, I heard the Clipper Creek relay cycling, a couple of clicks (IIRC) about every 10-15 seconds. The car was fully charged. Rushed back to the house to check TED and found that it showed the nicely-decreasing charge rate and shutoff which had occurred 20 minutes earlier. The good news is that TED did not show any current spikes as though the car's charger was trying to start up again. Didn't have time to investigate further as we needed to unplug and leave. The same thing had happened a few weeks ago, but at that time I was also in a hurry and didn't note all the surrounding conditions.
FWIW, I've included a snapshot of the TED display. The blue line is the Clipper Creek power draw which shows the car pulling a steady 1.383kW at a little over 120v and then dropping down normally as the battery balances. The green line is my PV solar starting its daily charging, the orange line is a charging experiment using some old PV panels, and the red line is 120v line voltage. The blue line looks pretty normal except for a slight jog as it turns off at the end.
Just a curiosity at this point, but perhaps worth noting and paying attention to. I don't like clicking relays when nothing is supposed to be happening.