Welcome!!! Lots to learn, but it's not as complicated as it seems (or as I am likely to make it sound.. sorry ;-)
ElGuapo said:
I know that I can use a CSS adaptor but does this mean I can only use a CSS? Can I get adaptors for other types?
Quick baseline. There are 3 types of charging and 2 types of plugs you can use (depending on your Bolt)
Level 1 is 120v (home outlets) and can charge your Bolt at 8 or 12 amps. Depending on your driving style, that is good for 3-4 or 4-5 miles per hour charged. (You can get more if your miles per kWh is better.. It's one of the numbers on the dash you can see. As I use my heater and drive a lot of highway speeds, mine is lowish in the 3.4 or so miles per kWh) The Bolt defaults to 8 amps, but you can toggle it to 12 amps. They default to 8 because not everyone's plugs are really safe for higher amps.. The plug end on your car is the J1772 plug for this.
Level 2 is 240v and it also uses the same J1772 plug on the Bolt. The level 1 and level 2 devices are called EVSEs (Electric Vehicle Supply Equipment).
Again, how many miles you can get per hour charging depends on the amps of the unit. The most of Bolt can take is a 32amp device which gets you 25-ish miles in an hour. I'd recommend a 30 or 32 amp unit at home. You will want a 40 amp circuit for a 30/32 amp EVSE. (Some people have the electrician put in 50 amp or larger circuits to "future proof" for the next EV they might buy. Your call on that. ) The EVSE can be wired in in 2 ways. It can be hardwired in. Just have the electrician run the wire right to your EVSE and connect it. This is nice for stability/security, but not for flexibility.
A lot of people (most?) just have the electrician put in a receptacle and they put a plug on the EVSE. Since there aren't technically official 40 amp outlets, a 50 amp might be easier. Then you are into the Nema 14-50 are (the same one RV parks use) or the 10-50 (dryer plug).
You can just put in a 30 amp receptacle, but you are then going with a 24amp or lower EVSE (less miles per hour).
See what kind of plug your EVSE comes with to make sure the electrician can add the proper receptacle.
ElGuapo said:
I see all this stuff about 120V / 240V / 250V and 8AMP / 12AMP / 16AMP / 30AMP / 32 AMP. How do I know what I can use and, if use the wrong thing, will it fry my car?
Won't fry the car, but might pop some circuit breakers and not let you charge if you get the wrong combination. Just make sure your plug supports more amps than your EVSE is rated for. ;-)
ElGuapo said:
I'm going to get an electrician to install a 240V/30AMP circuit in my garage along with a EVCS. Right now I'm looking at the Siemens unit for $450 since that looks like the cheapest I can find. Do I have other options? I drive about a 100 miles a day minimum so I just don't have time for the lower voltage and amperage options.
Lots of other options. (tho that is a good one)
Check out ClipperCreek, they have a good variety and it will be good looking at what they have...
ElGuapo said:
Also, I found at work that I can plug into a 250V/30AMP circular receptacle. Can I use this for my car - I assume I'll have to get some kind of adaptor to accommodate the circular receptacle but other than this is there anything else I need?
That would be great, but you will need an EVSE with the proper plug end to match that receptacle. You can get small portable EVSEs for that.
Turbocord is one that comes to mind..
If you don't need too many miles per hour (as you are charging at home), you can even just use the EVSE that comes with your Bolt.
If you make/get an adapter, it can be a 240v 12 amp EVSE. It will probably net you something like 8 miles per hour.
Make: http://www.kawal.net/volt%20adapter.htm
Buy: https://www.etsy.com/listing/384390572/chevy-volt-chevy-bolt-ev-level-2-charge
(note: I don't know anything about the above listing. Just a google search. I made my own adapter..)
It seems complicated, but it's actually not that bad..
Mostly just the different type of plugs for 240v that gets complicated and that isn't a problem with electric cars, but with the electrical system in general. ;-)
Have fun!!
desiv