quickfarms
Well-known member
If you can not decide just run the conduit for future use, cheap and easy when the walls are open
They've been making electric vehicles since the 1890's. As an engineer, I think they have a use, just not everywhere across the country. And not so much in cold states like yours. but who knows ten years from now, maybe they'll be hydrogen powered.
can we have a moment to complain that realtors hardly ever take photos of the garage or shop in a meaningful way? good lord I see 4 garage doors. show me whats inside already.
They've been making electric vehicles since the 1890's.
If future proofing remember many envision the ability to have the car power the house as well as having room for power wall batteries.

That's only about half as stupid as using a generator to charge you car.![]()
That's only about half as stupid as using a generator to charge you car.![]()
That's only about half as stupid as using a generator to charge you car.![]()
My Tesla has a large enough battery pack to power my house for several days. I would love to be able to tap into that power if we had a large outage. It would be dead silent unlike a normal generator and it would be 75% cheaper to run than my backup generator which can **** down 5 gallons in a couple hours.
Without solar or a backup generator, it would **** to end up with no power at home and a dead car
Without solar or a backup generator, it would **** to end up with no power at home and a dead car
Up here we can have bad storms that put some out for days but a couple towns away there is power. Kinda cool to think you can take a car, go charge it for half hour, then come back and have power during an outage.
Not sure why some are so against this idea?? My original point was to use electric big enough to have this ability as some would not be aware.
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I think it's pointless to try to plan for 20~30 years ahead. And even if you knew what that looked like, it would be pointless to build for it now.
My Tesla has a large enough battery pack to power my house for several days. I would love to be able to tap into that power if we had a large outage. It would be dead silent unlike a normal generator and it would be 75% cheaper to run than my backup generator which can **** down 5 gallons in a couple hours.
Hmmm? So I wonder why you don't have to google very long to find people that have used Tesla batteries in their solar systems, only to replace them within just a couple years?
Next question after that is 200 amp service Adequate to handle two charge stations and the rest of the home ? Bigger more capacity batteries are going to demand two 60-90 amp lines to the garage area.
Trying to charge a tesla battery with a limited solar input and then high depth of discharge will kill any battery.
Why? I get it if you mean slow recharge and deep discharge... But my understanding is that Tesla's charging algorithms are very conservative.
Wouldn't slow charge be better than supercharging and high discharge?
Without solar or a backup generator, it would **** to end up with no power at home and a dead car
Without solar or a backup generator, it would **** to end up with no power at home and a dead car
Hopefully you have a neutral as well. 14-50 is a dual voltage plug and you'll likely want a neutral at the sub too

So next question is one charge location in the garage enough ?
Especially if your planning for 20-30 years ahead.
Next question after that is 200 amp service Adequate to handle two charge stations and the rest of the home ? Bigger more capacity batteries are going to demand two 60-90 amp lines to the garage area.
oh no. you gona upset people around here not saying how good a manual choke is.It is an excellent idea. My wife and I bought a Tesla 3 years ago. It is the best car we have ever owned, and by far the cheapest to operate.
I started to get interested in solar and did not know that.Common misconception that solar provides power in the event of a grid failure. Unless you've got a battery system or a specialized inverter (which usually only gives you a single outlet) when the grid goes down, solar goes down and stays down. Works this way because the inverted can't "sync" to the grid and to prevent backfeeding if linemen are working on the grid.
A portable generator could be used to charge an EV... I'd be "ready" for it with the appropriate adapters though.
They had bi-directional charges in the works for some EV, but dont think they ever gained much traction. https://www.popsci.com/story/technology/dcbel-home-electric-car-charger/My Tesla has a large enough battery pack to power my house for several days. I would love to be able to tap into that power if we had a large outage. It would be dead silent unlike a normal generator and it would be 75% cheaper to run than my backup generator which can **** down 5 gallons in a couple hours.
I was watching This Old House last night and they were talking about the next thing in home charging may be non-contact inductive charging, from a pad built into the floor. It's anyone's guess when and if that will become common, but it's an example of how the charging and installation requirements may change in the future.
They also touched on being able to use an EV to provide power to the house in the event of an outage. Of course it wouldn't be practical for a long term outage, and also not for running large inductive loads like air conditioning, but for short term (like a few hours, which is what most people probably face) being able to run a few lights , a gas furnace, and the fridge it would be useful.
And do you basically have to install it with an interlock in the breaker panel? Seems to me that any V2H would need something like that.new Ford lightning with the home generator is 80A charging, so looks like a 100a circuit will be needed for its full potential.
https://evcompare.io/charging-calculator/
I found the concept of "miles per hour" in a charging scenario interesting. ie 12.5 miles per hour is that you can add charge that will carry you 12.5 miles in a charging hour is a great way to look at the scenario.
And do you basically have to install it with an interlock in the breaker panel? Seems to me that any V2H would need something like that.