condition5
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Dean
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2024
- Threads
- 30
- Messages
- 135
- Reaction score
- 182
- Location
- Mid Atlantic
- Vehicles
- 2024 Mach-E (Premium)
- Thread starter
- #1
Short version: 29 days after delivery, Ford Power Promise delivered L2 power in our garage. It wasn't all smooth sailing.
Details:
-Purchased car on Dec 27th. Sales guy said I would hear separately from Ford (for the home EVSE delivery) and from qmerit (which provides installers under the program).
-Hardware was easy. It arrived on January 11th. I didn't do anything except sit back and wait for the Ford magic to happen. Imagine my surprise when it was the Ford Charge Station Pro (FCSP)...which is basically twice the price of the Ford Connected charger. During electrician discussions (a longer story) I called Ford to ask if they would downgrade me to the Ford Connected hardware...they would not!
-Installation:
-First, in the background, I knew a local electrician with a strong EVSE install business line. He had wired two friends to high satisfaction and indicated that once the charger was in hand, about a two-day turn around to install. This did not account for holidays or a bitter cold spell...with snow. I was inclined to use them even with Ford's consideration under the Power Promise program. I contacted them between Christmas and New Years...their website did not indicate closed for the holidays (which they were...we'll return in a second).
-Next, I first heard from the Ford-arranged, qmerit provider (not as local as my above...one county over). We did a remote inspection of the install environment via my phone. They provided an estimate the same day. It included additional hardware at a total cost of $950 above Ford's standard installation allowance (for load management and because of the length of the cable runs). I approved this the same day...and then they ghosted me about scheduling. I mean...they would not return a call. Since I couldn't get them to return my call to cancel the work, I was able to get this done by one phone call to qmerit.
-So I called my longtime household electrician. They came out and offered three options. The lowest was $5K and the highest (including a panel upgrade) was $10K. I was plunged deep into EV buyer remorse.
-Happily, our closed-for--the-holidays-around-the-corner EVSE speciality guys returned from break in the meantime, and proposed their solution for $1200 (no load management hardware needed). We had a two-day delay for cold weather. Actual install took about 5 hours, most of that running conduit and figuring out the drilling point from basement to garage. I live in Maryland which has a (soon to expire...when the funds run out) EVSE rebate program. You get back 50% ($700 max) of expenses for professionally installed EVSE. Equipment has to be new, you have to show documentation of EVSE installation by licensed contractor and a photo of the energized, installed equipment).
The addition of home L2 charging makes EV driving seem less like a science project now (until it's time for the first road trip!).
Overall, a pretty good deal. I was lucky to have alternatives and some budget flexibility. This isn't true for everybody, and I might STILL be waiting for the qmerit installer (but probably not...I think I could have escalated it...but will save that energy for something else).
Details:
-Purchased car on Dec 27th. Sales guy said I would hear separately from Ford (for the home EVSE delivery) and from qmerit (which provides installers under the program).
-Hardware was easy. It arrived on January 11th. I didn't do anything except sit back and wait for the Ford magic to happen. Imagine my surprise when it was the Ford Charge Station Pro (FCSP)...which is basically twice the price of the Ford Connected charger. During electrician discussions (a longer story) I called Ford to ask if they would downgrade me to the Ford Connected hardware...they would not!
-Installation:
-First, in the background, I knew a local electrician with a strong EVSE install business line. He had wired two friends to high satisfaction and indicated that once the charger was in hand, about a two-day turn around to install. This did not account for holidays or a bitter cold spell...with snow. I was inclined to use them even with Ford's consideration under the Power Promise program. I contacted them between Christmas and New Years...their website did not indicate closed for the holidays (which they were...we'll return in a second).
-Next, I first heard from the Ford-arranged, qmerit provider (not as local as my above...one county over). We did a remote inspection of the install environment via my phone. They provided an estimate the same day. It included additional hardware at a total cost of $950 above Ford's standard installation allowance (for load management and because of the length of the cable runs). I approved this the same day...and then they ghosted me about scheduling. I mean...they would not return a call. Since I couldn't get them to return my call to cancel the work, I was able to get this done by one phone call to qmerit.
-So I called my longtime household electrician. They came out and offered three options. The lowest was $5K and the highest (including a panel upgrade) was $10K. I was plunged deep into EV buyer remorse.
-Happily, our closed-for--the-holidays-around-the-corner EVSE speciality guys returned from break in the meantime, and proposed their solution for $1200 (no load management hardware needed). We had a two-day delay for cold weather. Actual install took about 5 hours, most of that running conduit and figuring out the drilling point from basement to garage. I live in Maryland which has a (soon to expire...when the funds run out) EVSE rebate program. You get back 50% ($700 max) of expenses for professionally installed EVSE. Equipment has to be new, you have to show documentation of EVSE installation by licensed contractor and a photo of the energized, installed equipment).
The addition of home L2 charging makes EV driving seem less like a science project now (until it's time for the first road trip!).
Overall, a pretty good deal. I was lucky to have alternatives and some budget flexibility. This isn't true for everybody, and I might STILL be waiting for the qmerit installer (but probably not...I think I could have escalated it...but will save that energy for something else).
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