AZjeff
$50 Site Donor 2023
This Tesla owner recently moved into this rental house in our neighborhood. I suspect the heavy cord goes into a window in the laundry room and he's using the 240V plug at the dryer if that's possible.
Could just be a heavy duty 120V cord.
They trip howver people do it including sister in law with her RAV4 PHEV where school custodian who likes her runs 120V cord to her car so she can’t get home for “free”.I’ve always heard the you’re not supposed to use an extension cord with the EV or PHEV cord-charger.
Exactly - if it's charging his car, it's fine.If the cord is heavy enough, I don’t see an issue. The wiring in the walls is only so thick too.
The real issue is length and what becomes "too long" leading to voltage drop.I’ve always heard the you’re not supposed to use an extension cord with the EV or PHEV cord-charger.
Correct - the wire doesn't care, it's the plug ends that determine the voltage.I see lots of 240V extension cords in industrial for welders. I believe there either 8 or even 6 AWG. Technically there is nothing stopping 240V going down a extension cord.
Exactly - if it's charging his car, it's fine.
The real issue is length and what becomes "too long" leading to voltage drop.
Correct - the wire doesn't care, it's the plug ends that determine the voltage.
The best "hack" for charging EV's is to run a NEMA 6-20 outlet. All you need is 12 gauge wire and the appropriate breaker. If you have an existing dedicated 120V 20A outlet that was ran using 12 gauge, you might be golden. You can get about 3.8kw from this outlet -- which should be enough to give most smaller EV's around 100 miles of range during an 8 hr overnight charge.I always ask perspective EV owners, "How ya gonna charge?" 120v nets 3-4 MPH. I accounted for charging well before buying the car.