yea, must be more involved as they said that sunroom is partnered to do the charger installs.you need an ATS that it talks to. no details on if its a 2 wire hook up or if its something ford integrated more tightly.
yea, must be more involved as they said that sunroom is partnered to do the charger installs.you need an ATS that it talks to. no details on if its a 2 wire hook up or if its something ford integrated more tightly.
yea, must be more involved as they said that sunroom is partnered to do the charger installs.
I was referring to the new pro charger model that does bi-directional charging/backup. Most likely has some type of interlock.you technically dont need anything fancy to charge at home. the fancy charger can operate on its own. or if you're buying the basic model you only get 9.6kw charging anyways.
here is an 80a J1772 home unit.
here is a more reasonably sizes 9.6kw unit: thats still 115kwh delivered in a 12 hour session. Likely plenty for most people.
it has an ATS between the meter and the main panel. a totally separate unit that will need to be installed in conjunction with the pro charger. its unclear if its a specific unit ford and an ATS company have worked out OR if the pro charger will take a 2 wire input from any ol ATSI was referring to the new pro charger model that does bi-directional charging/backup. Most likely has some type of interlock.
The "standard," which I would expect to remain so, is a 14-50 outlet for either a 32 or 40 amp charger. Remember, though, that an electric vehicle is just find charging below its maximum rate, and for most people that don't deplete the battery daily, that is fine. My wife is one of those people who drives more than average, so we have a 32-amp EVSE for her, but I get by fine charging off of the 12-amp 240-volt EVSE that came with my Volt. Since it is a plug-in hybrid with a small battery, it fully charges in about 5-6 hours, and would be good for about 100 miles overnight in something with a larger battery. Plus the total load comes to 44 amps and doesn't overload our 60-amp subpanel.
That would definitely have been an option had we both been planning on getting EVs when we installed the first charger.clippercreek makes a 2 cord - 32a j1772 charger that plugs into 1- 14-50 outlet. IMO that's a really solid solution for 2 car family. it handles all the sharing between the two. when one finishes it kicks the other up to full 32a.
That would definitely have been an option had we both been planning on getting EVs when we installed the first charger.
EDIT: Ah, I see, $1,350. Since we have enough power available in the garage, I'd rather just go with the $500 one we bought and the free one that came with my Volt.
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It will look the same in 5 years. Houses are all different and have different electrical panels/capacities. Therefore chargers will continue to just work off whatever voltage/current you have available and your charge times will be a reflection of that.Man, this is alot of discussion on this. If I was worried about it and closing up the wall, I'd run conduit to a box so I could do it later and avoid snaking the wall. Super cheap and future proof. Who knows what charging will look like even 5 years from now.
So if I were to install NEMA 14-50 outlets for future charging needs I'd also have to replace the entire 70's vintage Load Center. That will have to wait, finances wise, and I'll likely sell the house before that happens.
As long as tandems fit and are listed for your panel you should be good. Not all panels take tandems and for those that do, not all spaces will take them. Look at the sticker on your panel. Note that there are non-CTL tandems that might fit but are not listed/approved. Also with CH panels sometimes older panels won't take newer breakers.Anyone else have concerns with tandem breakers?
Or, you develop the habit of watching the gauge and don't let it get much below half full. Those of us in hurricane country should know that.what do you do when the "fuel" runs out due to not watching the fuel gauge.
Y'know, one aspect of EV versus internal combustion engines with little discussion is what do you do when the "fuel" runs out due to not watching the fuel gauge. In the good old days, you walked a distance to buy a gallon or two of gas, poured it in and once the car starts you drive to a close by gas station and fill up. Maybe call a friend or family member to bring you some fuel. Sure you suffer some embarrassment, loose a few hours time, but you're back on the road and rolling.
With an EV, if you run out of juice on the road, IF you can get a tow truck to a local super-charge station, IF the super-charge station is available, you're going to be there for a number of hours before you gather just enough charge to get to another super-charge station, or to home. Then you are car stranded until the EV is fully charged again. Unless, that is the aspect of fast change out battery stations becomes the EV equivalent of a gas station:
https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a35717014/ample-battery-swapping-station/
But to us gas station enthusiasts, an EV battery change out station has none of the allure of the traditional gas stations. Doubt there will ever be the modern equivalent Super-charger "pump" like the classic Tokheim, Wayne, Bowser, Bennet vintage gas pumps.
Not to mention incapable of staying on-topic.XJ, the internet is full of people with no EV experience talking about the EV experience!
Y'know, one aspect of EV versus internal combustion engines with little discussion is what do you do when the "fuel" runs out due to not watching the fuel gauge. In the good old days, you walked a distance to buy a gallon or two of gas, poured it in and once the car starts you drive to a close by gas station and fill up. Maybe call a friend or family member to bring you some fuel. Sure you suffer some embarrassment, loose a few hours time, but you're back on the road and rolling.
or any subject...XJ, the internet is full of people with no EV experience talking about the EV experience!
I watched this also. Found the video posted on YouTube today :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.
I watched this also. Found the video posted on YouTube today :
What's New with EV Chargers | Ask This Old House
Jun 2, 2021
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.
Just as Photo Voltaic (Solar Electric) wiring is now being mandated in some states as a requirement during new construction; pre-wiring for ca chargers is certainly soon to follow.
If you have the walls open; future proof your project, for example; prepping for A/C by running a Line Set during construction is much cheaper to install than doing it later.
One county in MD that I was building new homes in that had adopted 2015(?) NEC requires us to provide this.I thought NEC was gona require new construction to have a 20a per spot in garages for EV.
One county in MD that I was building new homes in that had adopted 2015(?) NEC requires us to provide this.
I don’t see anything explicit in the code supporting this. It does not require an individual circuit for each bay, just that at least one receptacle outlet per bay be provided on a 20 amp circuit with no other receptacles. It then allows an exception “This circuit shall be permitted to supply readily accessible outdoor receptacle outlets.” That would seem to preclude provision for future upgrading to 240v.home runs right? so you can swap it out for a 240-20a. 3.8kw charging is a decent amount. plenty for most commutes
I don’t see anything explicit in the code supporting this. It does not require an individual circuit for each bay, just that at least one receptacle outlet per bay be provided on a 20 amp circuit with no other receptacles. It then allows an exception “This circuit shall be permitted to supply readily accessible outdoor receptacle outlets.” That would seem to preclude provision for future upgrading to 240v.
home runs right? so you can swap it out for a 240-20a. 3.8kw charging is a decent amount. plenty for most commutes
No the outlets one per bay were not dedicated 20a’s. They were ganged together and included the garage door openers.I don’t see anything explicit in the code supporting this. It does not require an individual circuit for each bay, just that at least one receptacle outlet per bay be provided on a 20 amp circuit with no other receptacles. It then allows an exception “This circuit shall be permitted to supply readily accessible outdoor receptacle outlets.” That would seem to preclude provision for future upgrading to 240vThese are not dedicated outlets. These extra outlets one per bay are all common with the garage door motor(s) above and how knows what else. A single GFI in the garage trips them all.
My experience with modern AFI/GFI (combo) breakers has been craptastic. They don't seem to like anything that hits with a hard start-up load - dunno if most EV chargers have a ramp or not...