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Planning Ahead for an EVSE and a Charging Question

Discussion in 'Prime Plug-in Charging' started by DavidA, Jul 2, 2016.

  1. DavidA

    DavidA Prius owner since July 2009

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    Met with an electrician yesterday about the re-build of the back of our house where the driveway is and asked some questions about 110v and 220v installations ahead of next year's purchase of the Prime, or something like a Prime.

    The good news was there was plenty of capacity in the breaker box for a dedicated 20A 110v and also a 40A 220v breaker and the 5 foot (!) conduit runs to where the new car will be parked. Not unexpectedly, he mentioned that any 110 or 220 outlet must include, by law here, active GFI (Ground Fault Interference) outlet installation in garages or outdoors (no garage in my situation). The outlet(s) is destined to be installed under the rear covered porch to help protect against weather.

    So here's the question: For those of you already doing level 1 or level 2 charging where your EVSE is plugged in to an outlet with GFI protection (GFI not part of the EVSE box itself), has the GFI ever tripped as the charging load changes during the many hours it takes? Should that be a concern? Should I go with something hardwired instead?

    It is very likely that Level 2 charging will be more of a norm for me, due to the house being very near a high school and the car being only a few feet off the road and no garage to charge inside of. Possibly too tempting for some jokester to play with and 5+ hours, especially in twilight or dark is not something I want to babysit through. Cutting that time at least in half allays my paranoia about the pranksters somewhat, or a lot. That, and turnaround for days off errands gets reduced.

    Thanks!
     
  2. mmmodem

    mmmodem Senior Taste Tester

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    Been doing level 1 charging over 3 years on my PiP. The GFI has tripped before. The circuit breaker has tripped before. I lived in an older home with old wires and the trip happened because of overload. On the newer home I just moved into the GFI tripped and wouldn't set with any kind of load. I'm not an electrician so I can't say for certain but I think the GFI was faulty.

    In short, all trips happened due to overload, i.e. 2 EVSE on one circuit or 1 EVSE and 1 room heater on one circuit. When used properly, there were no issues. When used improperly, the safeguards in place prevented disaster.
     
    #2 mmmodem, Jul 2, 2016
    Last edited: Jul 3, 2016
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  3. Jan Treur

    Jan Treur Active Member

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    My charging at home takes place under a 16A 230V breaker, and never any irregularity occurred in more than 3 years almost daily charging. But I use the circuit only for the charging, not for other things at the same time.

    Note that the Prime will take a higher power level during charging, so 16A may not be sufficient in that case.
     
  4. Redpoint5

    Redpoint5 Senior Member

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    Just to clarify, 110v and 220v are legacy specifications in the US. The standard residential mains voltage has been 120v and 240v for some time now.

    The only time I have tripped a GFCI was on a 120v garage outlet when using a laptop that had a malfunctioning ground, and I could feel about 20v DC bleed through me.

    Changing loads should not be a problem for a properly functioning GFCI because it compares outgoing current to the return current, and breaks the circuit if they are not very close to the same (meaning some of the current is returning to ground through some other means than the wire).

    I'd install a 50A 14-50r breaker and outlet, just to future proof. 5ft of cable is cheap enough, and breakers are nearly the same price regardless of amperage.

    As to your specific question, I don't have GFCI on the 50A 240v outlet I wired myself, so I cannot comment on personal experience with charging causing problems with the protection circuitry.

    You might consider installing a more tamper-resistant EVSE so that you don't have to worry about quickly charging and then putting things away. I would think a unit mounted to a steel pole and set into concrete would greatly reduce the likelihood of theft or tampering. Or, mount the unit as high up as possible and secure with tamper resistant fasteners.
     
  5. PriusC_Commuter

    PriusC_Commuter Active Member

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    If you're doing an external installation (no garage), I would look into a hardwire EVSE instead of an outlet. I'd also recommend a 50 amp breaker for future proofing, and a 6.6 kW EVSE also for future proofing. I got lucky on a clearance 6.6 kW GE Wattstation a few months after buying my PiP, which made it a lot easier when I purchased a Leaf a year later (got home and plugged in for full charge speed right away). When I charge both cars simultaneously, I use a 120v outlet on the same breaker as my garage door, and have never had an issue with it. I would consider a security camera as well to deter mischief for an outdoor setup.
     
  6. drash

    drash Senior Member

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    The GFCI circuit that the EVSE is on has never tripped. However the EVSE that I have (Clipper Creek) trips from noise on the line caused by our Keurig. Whenever we brew a cup of coffee with the Keurig and it is less than 3/4 full the EVSE shows a Line Fault. It resets after 15 minutes. Odd but I appreciate the EVSE sensitivity. Better than replacing the EVSE circuitry or worse, the charger in the car.
     
  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    probably why they recommend a dedicated circuit. coffemakers require an amazing amount of wattage to heat water.
     
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  8. drash

    drash Senior Member

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    Not on the same circuit as the EVSE. The EVSE has it's own dedicated GFCI 50 Amp circuit. Just shows how noisy Keurig coffee makers are. Nothing else causes the EVSE to trip. Not my drills, 2 air compressors, compound mitre saws, 2 refrigerators, freezer, coffee grinders, a real coffee maker with a broken switch, vacuum cleaners, 3 different shop vacs, microwave, fans, electric razors, hair dryers, dishwasher, washer and dryer or the central air conditioner/furnace. Just the Keurig.
     
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  9. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    that's crazy.
     
  10. DavidA

    DavidA Prius owner since July 2009

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    Oh my! That has to be the most obscure car charging problem in history. If awards were given, that would win.
     
  11. DavidA

    DavidA Prius owner since July 2009

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    Thanks, everyone! Reading, learning, taking notes. Keep the stories coming.
     
  12. Tumo135

    Tumo135 Junior Member

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    Sorry to bump up an old thread. I formally had a prius plugin and now a BMW i3. After a lot of trouble shooting I narrowed my power fault issues on my clipper creek down to my Keurig also. I thought i was the only one. Were you ever able to find a solution?
     
  13. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    wait until charged, then drive to starbucks?
     
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  14. MikeDee

    MikeDee Senior Member

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    Are you sure about needing a 240 V GFCI outlet? Have you priced one of these breakers?
     
  15. EV-ish

    EV-ish Active Member

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    I have a Clipper Creek 14-50, 9.6 kW plug-able in my garage. I seem to remember (but perhaps incorrectly) that the EVSE specified that NO GFCI be used. The manual tells the tale, and the support folks at the company are quite helpful.
     
  16. drash

    drash Senior Member

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    Kind of. Just keep the Keurig full. Apparently the motor must not have to work as hard when it has a little gravity assist. I put a ferrite core around the cord close to where the power cord comes out from the coffee maker but that only dampened it a little. I'm thinking maybe I should put another one closer to the plug.


    Unsupervised!
     
  17. DavidA

    DavidA Prius owner since July 2009

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    I have to ask.... Keurig ver. 1 or Keurig 2's?
     
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  18. PT Guy

    PT Guy Senior Member

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    It looks like a 240 volt GFCI breaker is in the $100 price range, while a non-GFCI breaker is in the $10 range. But, if code calls for it, you gott'a do it.
     
  19. jerrymildred

    jerrymildred Senior Member

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    Old post, but it brought me back to when I was an electrician in Ohio working at a beverage can making factory. We had probably hundreds of Toshiba A/C inverters providing variable speeds to almost all our conveyors and lots of other machines. Suddenly, the drives started shutting off randomly with various faults. We started to wonder if it was a design problem. We soon discovered it was hash on the power lines but it took a while longer to learn that it was coming from a new welder at a factory on the other side of the railroad tracks. I decided that rule #1 when weird things happen is to check the neutral. If that's OK, put a scope on the power lines. :D
     
  20. MikeDee

    MikeDee Senior Member

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    I kinda doubt the code calls for it, but it's best to check with the local building inspection department to be sure.