swtaylor89
Member
- First Name
- Scott
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2022
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 17
- Reaction score
- 9
- Location
- San Bernardino
- Vehicles
- 22 Ford Lightning
- Occupation
- Business Owner
- Thread starter
- #1
Finally took the plunge and self installed the Ford Pro Charger after having it sit in the garage for 8 months, as well as adding a generator inlet to use for backup home power. Thanks to others here, a few youtubers and existing knowledge of electrical work was able to make it happen. See below for pics, open to feedback and or questions. Was sharing the Tesla charger all this time which ran into some issues sometimes when both our vehicles were low. As well the Lightning was causing the Tesla to overheat and it would throttle down to 4kwh which was painful. Getting pretty steady 16kwr charge rate on the Pro and back to 8kwh on the Tesla. Anybody seeing anything different?
Main parts
Pro Charger Tesla Charger(existing)
1" Liquidtight 3/4
3awg wiring 6awg
100 amp 50amp
1 1/2" conduit body to make the turn into the wall, and then up to the bottom side of the main panel. Could not line up the back of the sub with the main due to the expanded wall area, so had to go out the bottom, the a small service loop in the wall to make the 90 into the body then panel.
30 amp Reliance generator inlet. Grounded body to house ground, but not to plug so as to not double up on the Lightning's ground. 10 gauge wiring.
Didn't go the route of a neutral switch panel because I didn't want to limit to only 8 circuits. Home has a ton of circuits and really didn't want to just pull 8 out.
125 amp Square D Homeline Sub 8 slots. 2 awg aluminum service wire used to power sub, used aluminum for flexibility in making those turns.
Some main points:
Had to rearrange multiple breakers in main panel to make room for a 30amp dual pole for the gen inlet so that I could use the interlock kit. As well as add a 125amp subpanel to power the pro charger and existing Tesla charger. Plus to make room for an under construction pool.
Subpanel now holds the two car charger breakers and a couple garage ones, with some room for expansion. Surface mounted everything to avoid annoying drywall work later, plus house ground and fire suppression system also already routed in this wall.
Ran the truck on Pro Power for 2 hours, noticed no issues at all! HAVE to remember to turn off Solar, as if you are drawing less than you're generating, then the truck will get upset as it's not designed to get backfeed on power in that outlet. Wish there was some sort of double interlock for this situation.
Would really like to be able to run ACs off the truck. Need to look further into soft starts for our unit to see if it can keep it below a 30 amp draw. We don't have a lot of power outages, but we do have a lot of demand response events from SCE where the ACs are turned up higher or off. Would also like to look into, when I'm home, powering the home from the truck during 4pm-9pm and then recharging after 9pm to cut our elec rate down by half during that time. I just don't know if that would be more of a cost savings then not doing so and keeping solar on during that time.
Main parts
Pro Charger Tesla Charger(existing)
1" Liquidtight 3/4
3awg wiring 6awg
100 amp 50amp
1 1/2" conduit body to make the turn into the wall, and then up to the bottom side of the main panel. Could not line up the back of the sub with the main due to the expanded wall area, so had to go out the bottom, the a small service loop in the wall to make the 90 into the body then panel.
30 amp Reliance generator inlet. Grounded body to house ground, but not to plug so as to not double up on the Lightning's ground. 10 gauge wiring.
Didn't go the route of a neutral switch panel because I didn't want to limit to only 8 circuits. Home has a ton of circuits and really didn't want to just pull 8 out.
125 amp Square D Homeline Sub 8 slots. 2 awg aluminum service wire used to power sub, used aluminum for flexibility in making those turns.
Some main points:
Had to rearrange multiple breakers in main panel to make room for a 30amp dual pole for the gen inlet so that I could use the interlock kit. As well as add a 125amp subpanel to power the pro charger and existing Tesla charger. Plus to make room for an under construction pool.
Subpanel now holds the two car charger breakers and a couple garage ones, with some room for expansion. Surface mounted everything to avoid annoying drywall work later, plus house ground and fire suppression system also already routed in this wall.
Ran the truck on Pro Power for 2 hours, noticed no issues at all! HAVE to remember to turn off Solar, as if you are drawing less than you're generating, then the truck will get upset as it's not designed to get backfeed on power in that outlet. Wish there was some sort of double interlock for this situation.
Would really like to be able to run ACs off the truck. Need to look further into soft starts for our unit to see if it can keep it below a 30 amp draw. We don't have a lot of power outages, but we do have a lot of demand response events from SCE where the ACs are turned up higher or off. Would also like to look into, when I'm home, powering the home from the truck during 4pm-9pm and then recharging after 9pm to cut our elec rate down by half during that time. I just don't know if that would be more of a cost savings then not doing so and keeping solar on during that time.