andyvh1959
Well-known member
As much as I and many of us love our fossil fuel engines, the future is clearly going electric. So planning for electric vehicle (EV) charging at home is something to consider in a modern version of our garages. I'm working in the 200 amp main breaker panel of my attached garage to power the sub panel in my new detached shop garage.
Since I have the main panel open and the wall open to route the cables in the wall, I'm thinking its a good time to wire in an outlet for an EV charging station. I plan to sell the house within ten years, and providing an EV charging station may be a new selling point for homes in the future. NEMA 14-50 outlets are common to RV plug in connections, so to wire it into my attached garage as a EV charging outlet only requires the outlet, and the 50 amp breaker in the main panel, and there is space available in the main breaker panel.
Since I have the main panel open and the wall open to route the cables in the wall, I'm thinking its a good time to wire in an outlet for an EV charging station. I plan to sell the house within ten years, and providing an EV charging station may be a new selling point for homes in the future. NEMA 14-50 outlets are common to RV plug in connections, so to wire it into my attached garage as a EV charging outlet only requires the outlet, and the 50 amp breaker in the main panel, and there is space available in the main breaker panel.
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