Sponsored

14-50 vs Charge Station Pro - charge rate difference?

xycarp

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 21, 2022
Threads
22
Messages
58
Reaction score
48
Location
SE Michigan
Vehicles
2021 Bronco Sasquatch, Lighting Lariat ER on order
I’ve got a Lariate ER on order that will come with the charge station pro. My electrical panel has limited space. I’m trying to decide if I should just install a 14-50 plug now, or wait for my charge station pro to come in and upgrade my service.

What’s the difference if effectiveness and charge rate when using the mobile charger on a 50amp NEMA 14-50 vs the charge station pro on an 80 amp circuit?
Sponsored

 

FlasherZ

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 10, 2022
Threads
9
Messages
915
Reaction score
1,023
Location
St. Louis Metro
Vehicles
F-150 Lightning, Tesla Model X, F250 SD diesel 6.0
The mobile connector charges at 30A. This can take close to 14-16 hours from completely empty. As long as you're not needing to use the entire truck's range every day, or you aren't going to be in a rush to get it charged during cheaper time-of-use electrical rates, you'll probably be ok with the 14-50.

That's what it really comes down to - how much do you drive and how fast do you need to have it charged back up again?
 

DarkAirforce

Well-known member
First Name
Al
Joined
May 27, 2022
Threads
0
Messages
55
Reaction score
75
Location
North Carolina
Vehicles
Ford Fusion Hybrid
Also don't bet on having your charge station pro before your truck, so have something as a back up either way.
 

O’Majestic1’slightnigF150

Well-known member
First Name
Robert
Joined
May 22, 2021
Threads
17
Messages
237
Reaction score
228
Location
Hondo, Texas
Vehicles
F350 F250 F250 Taurus Cessna Super Air Natique
Occupation
Retired Engineer & Product Developer
Most over the counter chargers are 16-40 amps “plugged” into a 14-50. Hardwired you can get close to 50 but then you loose the flexibility of unplugging and taking the charger with you.
 

Sponsored

Firestop

Well-known member
First Name
Firestop
Joined
May 6, 2022
Threads
13
Messages
1,033
Reaction score
997
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
2022 F-150 L Lariat ER; Honda Accord Touring
…..and, don’t count on being able to charge at 80A until Siemens & Ford figuire out the overheating issue….
 

metroshot

Well-known member
First Name
Pat
Joined
Aug 26, 2021
Threads
97
Messages
2,127
Reaction score
1,747
Location
Montclair, CA
Vehicles
2022 Lariat F150L + 2023 MME
Occupation
Networking Tech
SInce you are getting the 80A charger, have your electrician wire for 100A service, temporarily install a 14-50 outlet for the travel charger and 40A breakers.

When you get the 80A charger, have the electrician remove the outlet and breakers, hardwire the 80A and have the electrician put in 100A breakers.
 

beatle

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2021
Threads
23
Messages
885
Reaction score
988
Location
Springfield, VA
Vehicles
Model S, Ridgeline, Miata, motorcycle(s)
Keep in mind if you go with a 14-50 and follow code, you'll need to run 3 conductors and install a GFI breaker. If you install the CSP, you only need two conductor and no GFI breaker is needed. It is also not the best idea to plug/unplug things from a 14-50 on a regular basis if you are planning to take the mobile connector with you each time you leave, though if this is temporary it should not be a big deal.

Speaking of temporary, in the meantime you could wire in a 14-50 with no neutral and just run a regular 50A breaker. I know of at least one person who has done this...

Depending on what plans you have for the truck before your CSP arrives though, I would just suck it up and use DCFC or even a 120v outlet in the meantime.

To answer the OP's original question, I'll quote myself from an earlier post. I did some napkin math about charge rates @ 240v and how quickly each one fills your battery:

Here is the max you can put into the 131kwh ER truck in a 5 (10) hour window given different charge rates and a 91% charge efficiency (rounding differences show some numbers are not doubled for 10 hour windows):
16A = 13% (27%)
24A = 20% (40%)
32A = 27% (53%)
40A = 33% (67%)
48A = 40% (80%)
64A = 53% (full)
80A = 67% (full)
 

Maquis

Well-known member
First Name
Dave
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
8
Messages
3,367
Reaction score
4,194
Location
Illinois
Vehicles
2021 Mach-E E4-X; 2023 Lightning Lariat ER
…..and, don’t count on being able to charge at 80A until Siemens & Ford figuire out the overheating issue….
Many people are having the same issue with the FMC, so there’s no guarantee you’ll be able to get 30A from it, either. Especially in high ambient temps.
 

Amps

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 21, 2022
Threads
5
Messages
1,332
Reaction score
1,500
Location
Mid-Atlantic
Vehicles
Bolt
wait for my charge station pro to come in and upgrade my service.
Do you mean that you are going to have to have a new service panel and/or utility upgrade?

If so, and you can currently install a 50A circuit for the 14-50, how much do you have left with existing service between a 50A and 100A circuit? I'd use the Post #7 @metroshot method and de-rate the Charge Station Pro to the appropriate charge level and breaker when it arrives.
 

Sponsored

luebri

Well-known member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jun 15, 2022
Threads
32
Messages
949
Reaction score
1,510
Location
Neenah, WI
Vehicles
22' F150 Lightning (Lariat ER), 22' Pathfinder SL
For those planning to wire Charge station pro are you...

a) having the electrician come in and do prep work so that when the charger comes in there is minimal work to finish it up with a 2nd trip?

or

b) are you just waiting until you get the Charge Station Pro comes in and then having him do it all in 1 trip?
 

FlasherZ

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 10, 2022
Threads
9
Messages
915
Reaction score
1,023
Location
St. Louis Metro
Vehicles
F-150 Lightning, Tesla Model X, F250 SD diesel 6.0
Keep in mind if you go with a 14-50 and follow code, you'll need to run 3 conductors and install a GFI breaker. If you install the CSP, you only need two conductor and no GFI breaker is needed. It is also not the best idea to plug/unplug things from a 14-50 on a regular basis if you are planning to take the mobile connector with you each time you leave, though if this is temporary it should not be a big deal.
Not to go too hard on the semantics, but 14-50 requires 4 conductors - 2 ungrounded ("hot"), 1 grounded ("neutral"), and 1 equiment grounding ("ground"). I don't want anyone to get the impression they should install a 14-50 without a neutral, which is one of the bad recommendations that pops up constantly in some forums. :)

Speaking of temporary, in the meantime you could wire in a 14-50 with no neutral and just run a regular 50A breaker. I know of at least one person who has done this...
Mark that sucker 6 ways from Sunday "FOR EV CHARGING ONLY - NO NEUTRAL - WILL DESTROY OTHER EQUIPMENT". If you plug an RV or a stove into it which requires some 120V, it's bad news.

A good electrician will refuse to do that for you. I'm looking at YOU, cost-cutting homeowners. And don't use ground as a neutral at the receptacle either, bad things can happen there, too.

To answer the OP's original question, I'll quote myself from an earlier post. I did some napkin math about charge rates @ 240v and how quickly each one fills your battery:

Here is the max you can put into the 131kwh ER truck in a 5 (10) hour window given different charge rates and a 91% charge efficiency (rounding differences show some numbers are not doubled for 10 hour windows):
16A = 13% (27%)
24A = 20% (40%)
32A = 27% (53%)
40A = 33% (67%)
48A = 40% (80%)
64A = 53% (full)
80A = 67% (full)

Excellent information. I'm hoping my home being at 248V will help too. :)
 

FlasherZ

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 10, 2022
Threads
9
Messages
915
Reaction score
1,023
Location
St. Louis Metro
Vehicles
F-150 Lightning, Tesla Model X, F250 SD diesel 6.0
The neutral is actually considered "bonded", not grounded.

A ground conductor is termed as a non current carrying conductor. A neutral carries current.
The NEC uses the terms "ungrounded conductor" for hot, "grounded conductor" for neutral, and "equipment groundING conductor" for ground. I was using the NEC notation, although a lot of people confuse "grounded conductor" with ground, which they aren't.

It is true that the "equipment grounding conductor" (a/k/a "ground") is a "non-current-carrying conductor" for the purposes of the ampacity rules / conduit rules. It is also true (as you note) that the "grounded conductor" (a/k/a "neutral") is a "current-carrying conductor" for those purposes, except under certain conditions (for example, a multi-wire branch circuit uses 2 "hots" and a neutral, but the neutral only carries the difference of current in the two "hots", so you don't have to count the neutral in a MWBC as a current-carrying conductor).

In the NEC, bonding is simply defined as "connected to establish electrical continuity and conductivity" and is usually referenced in connection with equipment grounding, so there is always a fault current path to ground (to allow for OCPD's to work and to reduce shock effects). It also refers to the singular point at which neutral and earth ground (via the equipment grounding electrode) are interconnected.
 

bryan995

Well-known member
First Name
François
Joined
Jan 20, 2022
Threads
4
Messages
220
Reaction score
289
Location
San Diego
Vehicles
F150 Lightning
30A x 240v = 7.2kw

80A x 240v = 19.2kw

You are going to be charging a 131kw hour battery.

How fast do you need to charge it will determine which works best for you.
I think the sweet spot is 48A charging, on a 60A breaker.
Tesla wall connector +J-1772 adapter being the winning combination.
https://www.tesla.com/support/home-charging-installation/wall-connector
(then you will be all setup for your next tesla vehicle :))

48A x 240v = 11.5kw

Most homes are incapable of adding a new 100A dedicated charging circuit to run the pro.
Sponsored

 
 





Top