HaulingAss
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2020
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- Location
- Western Washington, USA
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3
If the wiring is good, there is no downside to charging at the highest level available and it will be considerably more efficient. I see you live in a warm climate S. California (which, combined with your low daily mileage) is the only reason a 120V outlet would even work). But, depending upon where you live in S CA it can still get cold enough to get a large benefit from having at least 30A @240 volts. The climate control system/Battery Management System can totally overwhelm a 120v 15A outlet. You want enough power that if the BMS requests heat, it can get it from the wall, not your HV battery.Thanks All!
Just to clarify, I have:
- Powershare and wall connector installed from Tesla.
- 32A Mobile connector with 110V adapter came with the CT.
- 40A Mobile connector from Amazon.
So with either Wall connector (48A) or Mobile connector 14-50 (32A) is too much for my daily working week. I believe 110V adapter is enough for me weekdays. But I don't like plug-in every night: worn out quicker with plug/unplug on both ends (I've re-wired my house few years ago).
So which way is better:
1. I'm charging 48A with wall connector (32A Mobile connector while still waiting for Powershare installation) on Fridays only.
2. Or 48A charging when pop-up on screen about % of the capacity that I think ~40 ish %.
The 40A from Amz is used only at my sisters' houses when visiting.
An even better reason to install a 240V solution is because it allows you to keep your SOC comfortably at a lower state of charge. With only 120V and 15A, those miles are hard fought so there is the tendency to charge higher than necessary incase an unexpected trip comes up. With 240V 48A you can just leave it on 50% SOC.
Even in a warm climate 240V charging is considerably more efficient than 120V charging. Tesla just accommodated 120V charging for emergencies.
As to Wall Connectors drawing electricity when not in use, they do have a green LED on, but the draw is nil. I have a Span electrical panel that reports the current draw of every circuit (including three Gen 3 Wall Connectors). A circuit with only three smoke detectors wired to it reports 3W power draw. The circuit with only a washer/dryer plugged in reports 5W power draw. The circuit with only a range/microwave plugged in reports 15W power draw. This is with the appliances not in use. The three circuits with just a Wall Connector on them all report 0W power draw. It's insignificant.
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