I think that you have lost track of what we are discussing. This is a home and, therefore, will be single phase. Of course we understand how to get electricity from the circuit box to the EVSE. The original poster has a quote for that. The issue is the expense of digging a trench for the wire. The OP is asking whether he can install the EVSE closer to his house and save the cost of the trench. In that case, he would need to extend the cable from the EVSE to his car, a distance of 80 feet. You are proposing a cable that is meant for dry installations to be used in an outdoor environment. Not a good idea. The reason these cables are so thick is that they have to be weather-proof. The OP will not find a 80 foot extension cable and, therefor, should focus on other solutions. |
100% And 12 gauge wire cannot be used for the 40-60A circuit that is required for a charger, even if dry… Though, technically, I think 240v uses 2 phases. The third phase exists out on the pole and is used for commercial purposes and 2 phases are run to standard residential meters. Though it’s never called that… |
It's even stranger than that. There's no third phase on the pole, or the two phases at the home would only be 120 degress out of phase. Our 120/240V system is sometimes called single phase because the two phases are at 180 degrees. Commerical and industrial locations can have three-phase power. Between two phases it is 208V which is usually close enough to 240V to not matter in most cases. |
| DP re the trench (can’t speak to phases). Get multiple estimates. When I had a level 2 charger installed, the estimates were all over the place. One company wanted to run the line up into my basement ceiling and then down outside the house into a trench—the box was on the other side of the house wall from the car so all that was needed was a hole and a 3 ft trench. |