The main electrical service normally comes into the main panel but when you put in a transfer switch (which is what the powershare gateway is) between the main and the panel, suddenly that main panel is considered a sub-panel. What our electrician told us when he installed our generator is that there are some things that are allowed in main panels that are not allowed in sub-panels which required him to re-wire some things to make it compliant. So it’s possible the main panel becomes a sub-panel with no significant drama other than routing the main service into the gateway and then wiring from the gateway to what was the main panel and is now the subpanel.Understand it has to be a 200A sub panel, not just a 200A panel. Hoping that’s not the case. I have a 200A panel and 60A sub panel, and I don’t know if that will be enough. Hopefully.
That explanation worries me that I may need 2 sub panels?The main electrical service normally comes into the main panel but when you put in a transfer switch (which is what the powershare gateway is) between the main and the panel, suddenly that main panel is considered a sub-panel. What our electrician told us when he installed our generator is that there are some things that are allowed in main panels that are not allowed in sub-panels which required him to re-wire some things to make it compliant. So it’s possible the main panel becomes a sub-panel with no significant drama other than routing the main service into the gateway and then wiring from the gateway to what was the main panel and is now the subpanel.
What I mean is that I already have a main and a 60a sub panel And the 60A is a smaller physical size. It does have 2 spare spots. My sub is fed by a 60a switch from my main. No idea if the sub is physically capable of handling more than 60A.Probably not, just what you used to call your main panel would now be called your sub-panel.
Ok let's get this right for you. Gateway is not a subpanel. Your main panel is where your power company is located and main breaker shutoff is located. The subpanel for solar, batteries, generator is needed to isolate equipment, gateway and air panel from.house etc...if you get powershare you will need to have your 60amp subpanel upgraded to 200amps required by Tesla and Electrical code. You need to have 20% more amp rating than what you are using. Hope that helps.What I mean is that I already have a main and a 60a sub panel And the 60A is a smaller physical size. It does have 2 spare spots. My sub is fed by a 60a switch from my main. No idea if the sub is physically capable of handling more than 60A.
Gateway v3 has a mini sub panel in it. All the backup loads you want connect there.That explanation worries me that I may need 2 sub panels?
So you have an option to take free supercharging (for how long?) or the powershare?I think I’d rather take the free supercharging. Haven’t heard anything since my initial survey. Took delivery a week ago.
Someone living in a condo posted he was disapproved.What if you live in an apartment complex? ?
Tell that to the Tesla Installer who has installed 3 systems to employee only homes....... My source completely blows your non source source out of the water. Man you just hate, angry and can't accept facts can you? get yourself a bao bao tea and take a deep breathe.
Nothing, but you won’t get the automated failover support. As well as whatever features they implement with the bidirectional system.Without the PowerShare option, what’s to keep someone from just plugging into the bed outlet and running the house or a portion of the house on either a transfer switch or a completely isolated secondary circuit?
What’s the deal with using the rear outlets, especially the 50 amp 240. Does the truck need to be put into a certain setting that allows it to operate? Can you just leave it powered on overnight if need be?
Rick