Ostrichsak
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2022
- Threads
- 9
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- 137
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- Location
- Colorado, USA
- Vehicles
- 2023 F150 Lightning Lariat
- Thread starter
- #1
I've seen a couple of people in various threads now mention having a NEMA 14-50 outlet and plugging a 48A mobile connector into this to charge their Lightning at 48A @ 240v. Do NOT do this.
A 20% buffer of whatever the circuit is rated at needs to be left for safety. This means that since a NEMA 14-50 receptacle is 50A @ 240v you want to keep your charge rate at or below 40A. Anything above that is dangerous and is asking for trouble. Having a 50A breaker doesn't mean you can run 48A. To safely run a 48A charge you'd need a 60A circuit for the proper safety margin.
I was going to reply directly to the posts I saw but this is a fundamental tenant of EV ownership and a safety concern that needs to be seen by anyone who's newer to the concept. I think this forum will have a lot of members new to EVs so it's an important message that needs to be heard.
While we're on the subject, make sure that whomever installs your EV charger outlet does so properly. Many of the melted receptacle stories you read about are caused by a receptacle that was carelessly installed. The lugs need to be fully secured to prevent the wires from loosening over time & charge/heat cycles creating resistance that will cause excess heat.
The absolute last thing I want to read about is another "EV causing a fire" when it's super rare and almost always caused by operator error of some sort that could have been avoided.
A 20% buffer of whatever the circuit is rated at needs to be left for safety. This means that since a NEMA 14-50 receptacle is 50A @ 240v you want to keep your charge rate at or below 40A. Anything above that is dangerous and is asking for trouble. Having a 50A breaker doesn't mean you can run 48A. To safely run a 48A charge you'd need a 60A circuit for the proper safety margin.
I was going to reply directly to the posts I saw but this is a fundamental tenant of EV ownership and a safety concern that needs to be seen by anyone who's newer to the concept. I think this forum will have a lot of members new to EVs so it's an important message that needs to be heard.
While we're on the subject, make sure that whomever installs your EV charger outlet does so properly. Many of the melted receptacle stories you read about are caused by a receptacle that was carelessly installed. The lugs need to be fully secured to prevent the wires from loosening over time & charge/heat cycles creating resistance that will cause excess heat.
The absolute last thing I want to read about is another "EV causing a fire" when it's super rare and almost always caused by operator error of some sort that could have been avoided.
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