boomer45
New member
- First Name
- Charles
- Joined
- May 31, 2020
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Sayner, WI
- Vehicles
- Audi Q5 / Jeep
- Occupation
- Retired Electrical Engineer
I have seen several references to Elon not wanting to reverse power a house from a Tesla mostly stating it would degrade the batteries. On the other hand, F-150 Lightning will have a 80 amp 240 Intelligent Backup Power System which will power a house for days. I really feel this is an important feature for the Cybertrk given it utility and large battery pack. I have held off buying a generator or Powerwall just with a hope that he will still make this happen.
https://www.cnet.com/roadshow/news/...ectric-pickup-intelligent-backup-power-house/
Turn main breaker off. Plug truck into a dryer outlet. Your lights come on. A few steps skipped (transfer switch etc) for simplicity sake but that’s how.
Where did you purchase the Wall Box QuasarI originally installed a Gen 2 HPWC on a 100 A circuit in my existing garage and later added a second on that same circuit (as one could do with the Gen 2). I later built a separate "charging garage" for anticipated new BEV (R1T & CT) but they finished it before either arrived so it sits empty. In there I put a pair of Gen 3 HPWC each on its own circuit and a Wallbox Quasar unit for the Rivian. The Tesla units will charge the Rivian and the Quasar will charge the Tesla's.
There is absolutely no reason for urgency unless you are building something now and need to get wires in walls for neat concealment or something like that.
This makes me suspect that perhaps you are really asking about how I backup the house and/or charge when the utility is down.
The main house is equipped with solar backed up by the utility and a generator. I don't charge when the sun is in unless I have to and don't charge with the generator unless it is absolutely necessary which it never has been. The new garage is as much an experiment as a place to park and charge the cars. It is not connected to the utility thus it runs completely on solar when the sun is out and on Powerwalls (and I just had a call to the effect that the Powerwalls may be delivered in my lifetime) when it isn't. This system is backed up by a separate generator (and interestingly enough I had another phone message today that the generator has been delivered to the installer).
The main house generator connects to the main house through a transfer switch made by the generator manufacturer (Briggs and Stratton). In the new garage as there is no utility there is no need for a transfer switch as there is no possibility of islanding but the generator must be isolated from the system when solar is operating and so the "gateway" which normally does the transfer switch function in a Powerwall/utility system does generator isolation in an off grid system.
Sponsored