UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
EV cars, home chargers, energy providers
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Hello all,
My wife is wanting to get an EV car through her work car scheme. Currently she has a Peaugot 108 60000 miles, and she's wanting to change. She spends about £250 a month on fuel, tax is free, £300 a year insurance plus yearly service and Mot. She's almost settled on the MG 4 as the price is right, reviews are great and it comes in blue. £388 per month, no deposit, all bills taken care of except power (maintenance, breakdown, tyres, insurance, tax - if there was any, etc) plus she'll get to sell her current car.
We quickly realised using home 3 pin plug for charging will not cut it so will be needing a charger box.
We saw that octopus energy do a thing where they sort you a box and also put you on a super cheap night rate for charging. Has anyone used this? Is daytime rate super expensive? We're at work during the day anyway, just use home electric 5-10pm then probs similar on a weekend if we're out.
Any thoughts on the whole thing?
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You WILL need a proper charge point, no doubt whatsoever. I got one from Podpoint installed but they are all much of a muchness. a 3-pin plug would do with daily charges but it's so... slow...
I got a 7kw one. Be prepared, it does whack up your energy bills a chunk but still quite a bit cheaper than petrol or diesel. Not sure what the recommendation is on the MG4 but mine you are supposed to maintain between 40 and 80% charge, charging to 100% for long journeys. Dead easy, just charge every other day for me when get home, usually can put the charge cable away before bed.
So you need to make sure you have socket close enough.
You can charge an electric car with a UK domestic extension lead, but only one that is rated for 13A continuous use, sold as heavy-duty. Keep the cord as short as practically possible. Check the cord frequently for heating up. Best practice is to only use this method in an 'emergency' situation.
https://topcharger.co.uk/how-to-use-an-extension-lead-to-charge-an-electric-car/
https://evzone.shop/can-i-extend-my-ev-charging-cable/
The 3 pin plug lead is for occasional and emergency use. Frequent use WILL shorten the life of your sockets (cheap to replace) and your sockets wiring (rewiring the house is definitely not cheap!). Although sockets are rated to 13a, continuous high loads should have a dedicated circuit. Your kettle/toaster may run at similar loads but that's only on a for a few minutes, not for what is likely to be up to 10 hours or more at a time, running your house wiring at high temperatures. Especially worth considering you'll be asleep in bed most of that time.
Get a proper 7kw smart charger and have it installed by a decent company. Ohme's home pro and Epod work especially well with Octopus. It doesn't integrate with solar or battery though.
Others I would recommend are Hypervolt and Myenergi Zappi, especially if you have solar.
Podpoint, EO, Zaptec are all OK. Indra is smart but a bit troublesome.
Tesla's own is really a bit pants and has hidden installation costs as it doesn't feature PEN fault protection so requires a separate O-PEN device unless you're very lucky and have the right local geology for a sub 20ohm earth reading for an earth electrode that will be otherwise required (not likely).
If your installation is simple you're looking at between £950-£1400 depending in your choice of charger and the length of the cable run between the consumer unit and chargepoint position. You may, however, get this lumped into the price of the car if you shop smart.
There are no such things as emergencies, even when this was clearly marked in inverted commas to show the lack of seriousness of the comment, yet some people cannot appreciate such subtleties...
Installed and signed off by my DNO all in cost me £850.
Mrs has ordered one as a company car, so we have to source the charger ourselves. We'll probably just use Octopus for everything to be fair! Can you program the Ohme charger to come on during the cheap hours?
You can link the Ohme to your Octopus tariff and set it so that it only used the off peak hours. You can set charging schedules as well. If for example you set a schedule to charge to 80% but it won't reach that in the off peak hours, the Ohme will reduce the target automatically. You can also override all of that with the "max charge" button which just charges there and then.
All of that is from the app.
The Ohme doesn't need wifi as it has it's own sim card. You can also lock the button and set it to approve plug ins to safeguard against other people using it.