A day or so ago,
@dreamweaver gave me a gentle nudge asking that I update my review on the Emporia Pro EVSE with Vue 3 energy monitoring.
After making a couple mistakes and allowing my Ford Charge Station Pro to charge at its full power during peak demand time of use, costing us a pretty penny, I decided to buy an Emporia Pro EVSE with Vue 3 energy monitoring and configure it to only charge the Lightning with excess solar.
Unfortunately for managing excess solar, the calibration for the unit requires that only grid power be operating when it’s set up. When I installed it, I did it during the day when solar was powering everything so I wasn’t able to properly run the calibration.
Because of this, the EVSE wasn’t able to properly charge ONLY when there was excess solar. It would charge just fine, it just wouldn’t limit its charging times to when there was excess solar. And I’m an absent-minded person, so I would often forget I was charging the truck and then remember to stop the charge in the late afternoon or evening after the truck had been charging when I didn’t want it to. This could be mitigated by managing the charging schedule in the truck, but each time we were charged for high demand was when I had foolishly changed or deleted those times from the truck for various reasons I can no longer remember.
Well, this weekend I finally ran the Emporia's calibration properly. I finally got the charger to charge only when there was excess solar.
It’s working great now.
And now that that’s working, I can give it a proper review:
It’s simple to install (like any uni-directional EVSE would be where I installed it). I chose to install on a plug, but will eventually re-install hardwired. Because it can operate from 6 Amps to 48 Amps, it can be fit into pretty much any panel that has even a very small amount of load available. I installed it on a 50 Amp breaker with a 60 Amp-capable circuit. Eventually I can run it at 48 Amps when I get around to buying a 60 Amp breaker and hardwiring it. It’s currently set at a maximum of 40 Amps.
The EVSE does require an app to configure and operate. It’s pretty straightforward, but it’s yet another app…
Operation—once the EVSE is calibrated properly—is also easy. You can use the app to slide the amperage from 6 Amps all the way up to the maximum amperage (set using an internal switch). Or you can let the system manage itself so it only provides as much amperage as your solar system is generating in excess of the rest of the system’s use. You can also easily use the app to start or stop charging or override the excess solar setting and charge whenever you need it.
I have had our ChargePoint HomeFlex for almost 4 years. I don’t yet know which one I like better, the Emporia or the ChargePoint. The ChargePoint has just worked. But it’s also not as sophisticated as the Emporia, and the ChargePoint doesn’t allow excess solar management.
Side-Note 0: The Emporia Pro does not require a solar system to operate. It’s just a great addition to a system that does have solar.
Side-Note 1: When a load is run for three hours or longer, it’s called a continuous load. The circuit size and breaker size are required—by code and for safety reasons—to be capable of accommodating 125% of that load. So a 40 Amp draw requires 1.25 * 40 Amps = 50 Amps breaker and circuit. A 48 Amp draw requires 1.25 * 48 = 60 Amps breaker and circuit. I might have mentioned this earlier in this thread, but it’s here again.
Side-Note 2: The number of breakers in your panel doesn’t determine if your panel is “full.” It’s the amount of load that you would reasonably use all at one time. If you have a 100 Amp panel and have 100 Amps worth of breakers installed, you may very well have lots of space left on the panel to install additional branch circuits. You might have to have an electrician install tandem breakers