hturnerfamily
Well-known member
- First Name
- William
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2022
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- Location
- rural Georgia
- Vehicles
- 22 LIGHTNING PRO IcedBlueSilver 8/23/2022
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- Owner
and, on a second concern, about 'the grid':
while sometimes we wonder if the 'grid' will be able to support our EV charging, my view is that if much of our 'extra' EV charging amperage happens at night, we are then charging AFTER the bulk of the grid's daily requirements are already 'sleeping' for the overnight...
so, if the grid is handling, for instance, 10MW(mega watts) of transmission during the hottest and highest demand of the day(generally 2pm to 7pm,etc), that demand is already built and supported by the grid's infrastructure.
When the nighttime arrives, the demand may fall to 5.
I would doubt that even every EV charging during that time would stress the 'grid'.
The same applies to your local transformers.
If you use, at the daily peak at 5pm, your 240v oven/stove, air conditioning, water heating, etc, and pulling 100amps, max.. then during the overnight hours, when much less is in play, such as only air conditioning, or heating, periodically, you have plenty of capacity for the EV to pull 30-50amps of typical EV charging, without any local or grid capacity issues.
This is even less of a concern for those with gas heating and/or appliances.
while sometimes we wonder if the 'grid' will be able to support our EV charging, my view is that if much of our 'extra' EV charging amperage happens at night, we are then charging AFTER the bulk of the grid's daily requirements are already 'sleeping' for the overnight...
so, if the grid is handling, for instance, 10MW(mega watts) of transmission during the hottest and highest demand of the day(generally 2pm to 7pm,etc), that demand is already built and supported by the grid's infrastructure.
When the nighttime arrives, the demand may fall to 5.
I would doubt that even every EV charging during that time would stress the 'grid'.
The same applies to your local transformers.
If you use, at the daily peak at 5pm, your 240v oven/stove, air conditioning, water heating, etc, and pulling 100amps, max.. then during the overnight hours, when much less is in play, such as only air conditioning, or heating, periodically, you have plenty of capacity for the EV to pull 30-50amps of typical EV charging, without any local or grid capacity issues.
This is even less of a concern for those with gas heating and/or appliances.
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