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Yeah $200 was nothing amazing, it was no mates rate. To install the HPWC it takes less than a hour and the extra parts needed don't cost much, of which the RCD breaker was the most expensive part. Basically whatever his hourly call out rate was and I think it was like $50 in parts.
Wouldn’t be too concerned about that. Just make sure you use a qualified electrician. All they have to do is connect it like any other appliance.Jsut that on Tesla site it says to use a Tesla approved electrician.
You'd be able to supply a 32A circuit, but what you can't tell without a "maximum demand calculation" is whether you'd be prone to "nuisance tripping", where the main breaker trips while charging and other big loads are active simultaneously.Would I be able to tell if it can support single phase 16A or 32A from just this one?
Thank you, appreciate it.You'd be able to supply a 32A circuit
If it's not too pricey, this is the option I'm going for as well.Personally I would be willing to accept the risk of nuisance tripping and just ensure I only charged at full 32A
32A will effectively use half the load.Would I be able to tell if it can support single phase 16A or 32A from just this one?
If you have a resistive hot water heater, that's usually the biggest individual load by a considerable margin.So you wouldn't want to charge on a summer night with the a/c on while baking for example.
I would have thought the electric stove (Or hot plates/oven) if you have one would beIf you have a resistive hot water heater, that's usually the biggest individual load by a considerable margin.
Oven about 3kW, HWS about 5kW. Obviously can vary though.I would have thought the electric stove (Or hot plates/oven) if you have one would be
It would probably have a 70 amp supply fuse, so you would have to be careful how far you pushed itIt say you would be able to run a 63A CB at 70A-75 amps for a couple of hours without it tripping.
Tripping Curves
The current rating of the supply fuse will depend on the size of the mainsThe supply fuse will be 80A or even 100A, and a similar curve will exist for the triping "blowing" of the fuse, so the CB Main switch will go first.
The current rating of the supply fuse will depend on the size of the mains
16 mm2 mains which is common in older houses are rated for 70 amps, which is why they have a 63 amp main switch, which was just a switch and not a CB
Via the Tesla App it shows usageHey guys, Is there a “smart meter” I could use to monitor how much I’m spending to charge my Tesla at home? This is for novated lease purpose so I could claim my charging cost pre tax. Thank you in advance