- Joined
- Nov 19, 2021
- Messages
- 11,506
- Reaction score
- 13,994
- Location
- Cupertino, CA
- Cars
- Air DE-P, Gravity DE
- Air DE Number
- 241
- Gravity DE Number
- 013
- Referral Code
- Q1BTN5Y3
As a counterpoint, I hate Chargepoint. They’re the only ones that are constantly in a state of “broken in some way” in my experience. And whether the wifi hooks up easily is a BIG question, haha, though evidently @Worldwide Beagle has had good experiences so YMMV.
For chargers, a few great options:
1. Grizzl-E: https://grizzl-e.com/products-overview/grizzl-e-ultimate-48/
2. Wallbox Pulsar Plus: https://shop.wallbox.com/products/pulsar-plus
3. OpenEVSE: https://store.openevse.com/products/advanced-station
4. Emporia Classic: https://shop.emporiaenergy.com/products/emporia-ev-charger?variant=44861002088703
5. Emporia Pro: https://shop.emporiaenergy.com/products/emporia-pro-ev-charger?variant=46762104914175 (this one comes with energy management for your panel, etc., so you can track usage and electricity throughout your home)
These may be cheaper on Amazon, Costco, or elsewhere.
I *highly* recommend installing it hardwired, so you get the full 48A of charging speed, and because it is safer. If you use it as a plug-in, you will only get 40A (by electrical code) and it is slightly more hazardous (and you must get a commercial or EV-ready outlet).
Some will have more or fewer features than others, you’ll have to do the research and see if those features matter for you.
For example, depending on the size of your panel, the Wallbox can adjust the charging current in real-time using a meter that measures the current in your panel, using as much as it can, or as much as is available at the time. That’s a feature we use, but you may not need; you may just have the spare capacity in your panel for the full 48 amps.
OpenEVSE is neat because it is fully open; you get schematics and everything else you might want. You can even build it yourself from a kit, which is fun to do: https://store.openevse.com/collections/all-products/products/advanced-bundle
But what it really means is just that if a component fails you can replace it yourself instead of having to deal with the whole company and send back the whole charger, etc. I know @segbrk uses one and likes it.
But yeah, stick to well-known brands.
For chargers, a few great options:
1. Grizzl-E: https://grizzl-e.com/products-overview/grizzl-e-ultimate-48/
2. Wallbox Pulsar Plus: https://shop.wallbox.com/products/pulsar-plus
3. OpenEVSE: https://store.openevse.com/products/advanced-station
4. Emporia Classic: https://shop.emporiaenergy.com/products/emporia-ev-charger?variant=44861002088703
5. Emporia Pro: https://shop.emporiaenergy.com/products/emporia-pro-ev-charger?variant=46762104914175 (this one comes with energy management for your panel, etc., so you can track usage and electricity throughout your home)
These may be cheaper on Amazon, Costco, or elsewhere.
I *highly* recommend installing it hardwired, so you get the full 48A of charging speed, and because it is safer. If you use it as a plug-in, you will only get 40A (by electrical code) and it is slightly more hazardous (and you must get a commercial or EV-ready outlet).
Some will have more or fewer features than others, you’ll have to do the research and see if those features matter for you.
For example, depending on the size of your panel, the Wallbox can adjust the charging current in real-time using a meter that measures the current in your panel, using as much as it can, or as much as is available at the time. That’s a feature we use, but you may not need; you may just have the spare capacity in your panel for the full 48 amps.
OpenEVSE is neat because it is fully open; you get schematics and everything else you might want. You can even build it yourself from a kit, which is fun to do: https://store.openevse.com/collections/all-products/products/advanced-bundle
But what it really means is just that if a component fails you can replace it yourself instead of having to deal with the whole company and send back the whole charger, etc. I know @segbrk uses one and likes it.
But yeah, stick to well-known brands.