Thanks for responding. Hope this helpsGot a pic or two of your wiring and setting?
As long as the two hot wires from the panel are connected to the FCSP terminal A and B then it is wired correctly. The hot wires can swap positions. The instructions are confusing since it references L1 and N. Those don't apply for this residential 120/240V single-phase panel.Both the #3 wires on the 100 amp breaker are black and wrapped with black tape. The 2 black #3 wires to the ford charger are also black. So which one is dictated to red? See instructions on attached photo. Is it possible the connection to the ford charger are switched?
It was not tripping. Initially I had it on 80 Amps breaker and thought that was the issue to which I switched to 100 Amps. btw even I thought the same for the hot wires but swapping them around made a difference for me.As long as the two hot wires from the panel are connected to the FCSP terminal A and B then it is wired correctly. The hot wires can swap positions. The instructions are confusing since it references L1 and N. Those don't apply for this residential 120/240V single-phase panel.
@djteotancolis - is the 100A breaker tripping? I can't tell what your video is attempting to show.
check out the photo below and see if what lights you are receiving on the ford charger.I still have no LED lights but with the charger plugged it, its charging the truck. I will take that for now since I dont have to visit a EA charger anymore.
I think the fact that you disconnected and connected the wires is what caused that behavior. Maybe there is a bad wire connector or something. There is absolutely no polarity on AC voltage. However the voltage level of the two legs could be different. Do you have an AC voltmeter? If so you should measure the voltage between A and Ground and then between B and ground. Each should be around 120 Volts. Between A and B you should get about 240. I'm not bragging but I'm a EE who worked for 35 years at a power company but I realize that doesn't make me a forum expertIt was not tripping. Initially I had it on 80 Amps breaker and thought that was the issue to which I switched to 100 Amps. btw even I thought the same for the hot wires but swapping them around made a difference for me.
Since there’s no neutral connection, voltage imbalance between the legs shouldn’t matter. The only thing the EVSE sees is leg to leg.I think the fact that you disconnected and connected the wires is what caused that behavior. Maybe there is a bad wire connector or something. There is absolutely no polarity on AC voltage. However the voltage level of the two legs could be different. Do you have an AC voltmeter? If so you should measure the voltage between A and Ground and then between B and ground. Each should be around 120 Volts. Between A and B you should get about 240. I'm not bragging but I'm a EE who worked for 35 years at a power company but I realize that doesn't make me a forum expert![]()