The main question is simple: does the adapter work with your car?
Autonlaturit.com has a compatibility checker for the Longood CCS to CHAdeMO adapter to answer exactly that.
The checker is built around cars that have good known compatibility with the Longood adapter. You choose your car, choose your country, and the tool shows a practical summary based on that combination.
What does the compatibility checker show?
The tool starts with the most important part: the car.
It shows whether your model is included in the supported list and gives a short summary for that car. The goal is not just to list model names, but to show what the adapter means in practice for that specific vehicle.
The checker also shows an indicative view of charging performance. It compares the car’s usual CHAdeMO charging level with what the Longood adapter can enable on compatible CCS chargers.
There is also a short note for each model. That note explains the main practical benefit of the adapter for that car. On some models the value is mainly broader charging access. On others the benefit is more about making better use of modern CCS charging power. On work vehicles, the value may be day-to-day usability. On some passenger cars, it may be easier long-distance travel.
Which cars are included?
The current version of the checker includes Nissan Leaf 24 kWh, 30 kWh, 40 kWh, and e+ 62 kWh models, Nissan e-NV200 24 kWh and 40 kWh versions, Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV models, and the Lexus UX 300e.
These are the cars the checker is built around. It focuses on models that have good known compatibility with the Longood adapter.
Why does the checker ask for country too?
Because the same car can get different practical value from the adapter in different countries.
The adapter may work with the car in the same way, but the usefulness of that compatibility depends a lot on the charging network around you. In one country, CHAdeMO may still be available often enough that the adapter feels like added flexibility. In another, CCS may already dominate so strongly that the adapter becomes much more important.
That is why the checker asks for your home country or destination country. The current version includes Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Finland, and an international option.
For each country, the tool shows a short summary of the CCS environment and a note about the local CHAdeMO situation.
Why does the checker show charging power?
Because that is one of the first things people want to understand.
The power comparison in the checker gives an indicative view of that. It shows how the car normally charges on CHAdeMO and what the Longood adapter can enable on compatible CCS chargers.
That does not mean every charging session will hit the same number in real life. Battery temperature, state of charge, charger behavior, and the car’s own limits still affect the result. But the comparison helps show whether the practical gain is likely to be small, moderate, or significant.
Why is the checker built specifically around the Longood adapter?
Because compatibility only becomes useful when it is tied to a specific product.
This checker is not about the whole CCS to CHAdeMO category in general. It is about the Longood CCS to CHAdeMO adapter sold by Autonlaturit.com.
That is important because different adapters are not automatically the same in real use. Compatibility, firmware support, and charger behavior can vary.
Where can you try the compatibility checker?
You can try the CCS to CHAdeMO Adapter Compatibility Checker on https://autonlaturit.com/en/products/ccs-chademo-adapteri#adapter-checker-root


