Do I need an EV charger at home?
Electric vehicle owners have the option of charging their car at home using a standard power plug, a portable charger, or a fixed charger.
Most electric vehicle owners will do most of their charging at home – at least those with access to off-street parking.
But a big question for many new to the technology is what sort of home charging facilities they need: Do they need to install a dedicated wall charger, or will a standard plug do the job?
In countries that use three phase electricity supply systems, there are three options for EV charging – these are referred to as Modes 2, 3 and 4, as shown in Figure 1 below.
Mode 2 is where you plug a portable charger – that usually comes with the car – into a standard power point.
Mode 3 chargers are permanently fixed in position and directly wired. Whilst Mode 3 chargers generally provide higher charging speeds than Mode 2, this is not entirely true as you can buy portable chargers to use with bigger power outlets than can charge at the same rates as any Mode 3 charger.
I am leaving Mode 4 out of this discussion of home charging as even the smallest DC charger requires way more power than most home electricity connections are capable of delivering.
So the choice comes down to using a power point for EV charging (Mode 2) or installing a dedicated wall charger (Mode 3).
The first thing to note is that there is nothing wrong with regularly using the same power point for EV charging (as opposed to occasional use).
You do need to make sure that:
A: The power point is in good condition and installed as per the Wiring Rules for outlets used for EV charging. (It's wired direct to the switchboard on its own circuit).
B: You do not need to charge a lot. 1 to 4 hours a couple of times a week is a good rough yardstick for ‘not a lot’. It is worth noting here that most portable chargers now supplied with the car charge charge at a rate of 1.8 kW – earlier ones were up to 2.4kw (although you can still buy aftermarket ones that do 2.4 kW).
At 1.8 kW, you will get around 12 km charger per hour – or around 50 km in a four hour period. If you regularly charge for longer than 4 hours though, you might bump into not being able to charge at the cheapest electricity tariff all the way through the charging period.
This especially applies if you need to charge for longer times, as most off-peak tariffs max out at around 8 hours. Six to eight hours is also roughly the time of highest solar output if you are charging off your own solar PV.
C: Your EV or portable charger has the capacity for timed charging, so you can set and forget the charge when you arrive home … and not need to get out of bed to switch on the charger at the start of the night off-peak period. (This avoids charging at peak cost/grid stress periods, like on a hot summer afternoon when the grid may be struggling under local air-conditioning loads).
If you do choose Mode 2 or standard power point charging as your home charging method, I would urge you to buy a second charger to use at home and leave the charger that came with the car in the boot.
In fact, I recommend treating the car’s charger in the same way as you do a spare tyre (if you are one of the lucky few to have a late model car with a spare tyre) and only use it for emergencies.
Otherwise Murphy’s Law will prevail and the one day you leave the portable charger from the car at home, it will be the day you want to do an emergency top-up somewhere when you’re out and about!
However, you should install a Mode 3 charger if you:
A. regularly need to replenish more than 50 km worth of charge in a day,
B. want to install a charger that can avoid overloading your switchboard by temporarily reducing your charging speed at times of high household power demand (such as when using an induction cooktop),
C. Want to install a charger capable of sensing your solar output to enable you to charge using only (or mainly) your own solar generation,
D. Want a more convenient charging experience than on arrival pulling the charger from its storage location, unrolling and plugging it in … then unplugging, rolling up and putting it away again in the morning.
This advice is tempered by the fact that there are no true ‘smart’ Mode 3 chargers yet. By ‘smart’, I mean ones that can be controlled by the grid to turn on/off or ramp the charging speed up or down depending on grid under or over supply conditions.
There are also no vehicle to grid (V2G) options yet (For an explanation of V2G options – click here). Chargers with both of these functions will likely become available in Australia around 2026 – although the first EVs capable of V2G should be available here within the next 12 months.
There are some ‘smart-ish’ Mode 3 chargers on the market now. These are the ones I referred to earlier regarding sensing the total load on the house to temporarily reduce EV charging to avoid overloading your home’s supply, as well as ones that can sense your solar PV output to maximise your solar EV charging.
Also, as briefly mentioned at the start – there is a third option of buying a higher power Mode 2 portable charger and installing a bigger outlet to suit.
This will give you some (or even all) of the shorter charging times that Mode 3 chargers offer, but it won’t give you the control that many Mode 3 chargers can do as a Mode 2 charger will never be ‘smart’. Nor will it eliminate the need to plug it in and later put it away if it is in a location where it can be stolen.
Summing up
For low-use EV owners with power points wired properly to be EV charging outlets, Mode 2 is fine, but it has its limitations.
Mode 3 is the choice for higher power EV users, as well as a generally more convenient charging experience – especially if you live in an all-electric household and/or have solar PV.
If you want the option to have a true smart charger that does V2G and smart grid control options (and don’t yet need solar and/or charge speed control in an all-electric house), perhaps wire the EV charging point as for a Mode 3 charger (including a data cable back to the switchboard), but install a 15, 20 or even 32A outlet on it and buy a higher power portable charger.
That way you can wait for the V2G charger whilst getting:
- faster Mode 2 charging speeds now,
- that spare charger I suggested to enable you to keep the low power one in the boot AND
- a useful charger to take away on long trips to use at caravan parks or three phase power outlets when you’re ‘off the beaten DC-charger track’.
This article was first published by The Driven. You can read it here.