electric-mike
Active member
- First Name
- Michael
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2024
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 55
- Location
- Portland, Oregon
- Vehicles
- Tesla Model 3 Performance
- Thread starter
- #1
I just got my bid for Qmerit to install a Powershare Home Backup Bundle (Universal Wall Connector and Powershare unit) to take advantage of the Cybertruck's Powershare capability.
I already have a Wall Connector that was installed in 2017 for my Model 3 Performance, and it was installed without much difficulty or expense just feet from my electrical panel.
As many others have observed, the bid provided by Qmerit was obviously inflated and much, much more expensive than the going rate for electrical work like this. They bid the total job at over $4,000, and nearly $700 of that was to simply replace the current Wall Connector with the Universal Wall Connector-- even though the wiring and even the mounts are already in place.
I have two questions:
I already have a Wall Connector that was installed in 2017 for my Model 3 Performance, and it was installed without much difficulty or expense just feet from my electrical panel.
As many others have observed, the bid provided by Qmerit was obviously inflated and much, much more expensive than the going rate for electrical work like this. They bid the total job at over $4,000, and nearly $700 of that was to simply replace the current Wall Connector with the Universal Wall Connector-- even though the wiring and even the mounts are already in place.
I have two questions:
- A guy I know at one of the service centers who's always been candid in the past told me Tesla might soon be allowing electricians outside of Qmerit's syndicate to do installs. Has anyone been able to successfully install-- and activate for use-- a Powershare unit installed by an electrician not part of Qmerit's syndicate?
- I can tell that Qmerit is inflating the costs of electrical work, but I can't tell by how much (e.g. a percentage). Does anyone have any inside information on what the added padding is being applied by Qmerit? Or, alternatively, has anyone been able to have a bid done by Qmerit and by an electrician outside of Qmerit to be able to do an apples-to-apples comparison? It looks to me like they are adding at least 20-25% to the cost of of the actual hourly electrical work, but maybe someone here with knowledge can chime in and explain that the Powershare unit itself is really complicated and takes several hours to install.
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