▲ | barbazoo 5 days ago | |||||||
> And since your car needs so much power stored in its battery to drive, it will probably pull more power than any other electrical appliance in your home. Probably? No, it pulls less than my dryer which runs at 240V15A I think but also just the same as my 1500W space heater. You can totally control how much power the charger should draw. > With that much power, there’s a risk of overheating and fire. Unlike a dedicated EV charger, a socket is simply not equipped to handle the amount of electricity needed to charge a car battery. Wrong assumption leads to wrong conclusion. Any charger you can physically plug in will work in a house that's wired up to standard. | ||||||||
▲ | msh 5 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Your dryer will load the socket for far less time than a car charger and will probably not use 15A for the entire drying cycle. It’s the long charge time that leads to heat buildup, not the max amp. Where I am from standard outlets can deliver 16A but are not rated for more than 6A if the load is longer than 2 hours. | ||||||||
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