Why is EVSE so expensive?

Cobra427

Well-Known Member
First Name
John
Joined
Jun 1, 2021
Threads
43
Messages
319
Reaction score
350
Location
Ohio
Vehicles
2021 F-150 Lariat Powerboost, 2022 Mustang Mach E
Occupation
Retired
Country flag
Since an EVSE is not really a 'charger', but simply a power supply, why are they so pricey? The low-end ones are $500, and higher-rated ones, like the ChargePoint Home Flex, are $700. For some wires, cables, connectors, and circuitry in a plastic box? Or is it supply and demand?
Sponsored

 

Lord Polymath

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 13, 2021
Threads
9
Messages
710
Reaction score
719
Location
Arkansas
Vehicles
2021 Sienna, '22 Mach-E Premium ER AWD (PWRPONY)
Occupation
Computer nerd
Country flag
Valid question for sure. Lots of copper involved, and the initial cost of tooling/manufacturing would be considerable.
 

slimothyjames

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 7, 2022
Threads
12
Messages
152
Reaction score
147
Location
Ontario, Canada
Vehicles
Mach E Premium AWD
Country flag
I would say materials, tooling, R&D, and of course certification fees. Then they usually build in their profit margin which is usually around 3 times the cost of the unit. Gotta pay people's salaries too. For example the Grizzl-e chargers are "Made in Canada" (with what I assume is globally sourced parts) so the product has to sustain a staff.

There is also some liability in these products - if they sell you a cheap junky charger that bursts into flames, then they are going to get sued.
 

Mach-Lee

Well-Known Member
First Name
Lee
Joined
Jul 16, 2021
Threads
210
Messages
7,957
Reaction score
16,036
Location
Wisconsin
Vehicles
2022 Mach-E Premium AWD
Occupation
Sci/Eng
Country flag
Probably the same reason a Hubbell NEMA 14-50 receptacle was going for over $150 on Amazon earlier this year, whereas 5+ years ago they would only cost $50. They went up dramatically after Tesla started recommending them for home installs.
 

MacherAWD

Well-Known Member
First Name
Erik
Joined
Mar 29, 2022
Threads
11
Messages
1,131
Reaction score
1,495
Location
North Shore MA
Vehicles
2021 AWD Select C&T, 2020 Bolt Premier
Occupation
Software Implementation Manager
Country flag
I bought this one 8 years ago, it cost a bit more back then, and have never had an issue, it charged my Leaf daily for 4yrs, then my Bolt, now my MME. 25 ft long cable, very thick, well built, nothing fancy. But for $250 I would say I have gotten my money's worth.
https://jadaniell.com/
 


Guss-E 2021

Well-Known Member
First Name
Pierre
Joined
Aug 12, 2021
Threads
52
Messages
1,388
Reaction score
1,530
Location
New Hampshire
Vehicles
2022 Mach-E Prem AWD ER
Occupation
Compliance Specialist
Country flag

Logal727

Well-Known Member
First Name
C
Joined
Aug 23, 2021
Threads
101
Messages
7,327
Reaction score
11,273
Location
Florida
Vehicles
‘21 Carbonized Gray Mustang Mach-E Premium AWD Ext
Country flag
Since an EVSE is not really a 'charger', but simply a power supply, why are they so pricey? The low-end ones are $500, and higher-rated ones, like the ChargePoint Home Flex, are $700. For some wires, cables, connectors, and circuitry in a plastic box? Or is it supply and demand?
UL certification is expensive
 
OP
OP
Cobra427

Cobra427

Well-Known Member
First Name
John
Joined
Jun 1, 2021
Threads
43
Messages
319
Reaction score
350
Location
Ohio
Vehicles
2021 F-150 Lariat Powerboost, 2022 Mustang Mach E
Occupation
Retired
Country flag
I bought this one 8 years ago, it cost a bit more back then, and have never had an issue, it charged my Leaf daily for 4yrs, then my Bolt, now my MME. 25 ft long cable, very thick, well built, nothing fancy. But for $250 I would say I have gotten my money's worth.
https://jadaniell.com/
Does it still sell for $250? If so, this tells me that ChargePoint can charge (charge?) $700 for theirs just like Apple can charge $1000+ for an iPhone. People will pay it.
 

4sallypat

Well-Known Member
First Name
Pat
Joined
Mar 30, 2022
Threads
67
Messages
2,095
Reaction score
1,603
Location
Southern California
Vehicles
'23 MME delivered May '23 + '22 Lightning July '22
Occupation
Network Tech
Country flag
I can't believe Ford is now charging $500 for a 32A mobile charger when you order a 2023 Lightning when it used to be standard equipment on a 2022.

$500 price point for the Ford mobile charger is ridiculous IMO.

Have never opened the Ford mobile charger bag so far...

OTOH, my EVSE is an $450 Emporia L2 UL listed and charges my Lightning at full 48A (11kW) rate even in the blazing hot temps of summer.

It will also charge my incoming MME so well worth a single charger doing double duty...
 

SnBGC

Well-Known Member
First Name
Greg
Joined
Apr 20, 2020
Threads
46
Messages
5,958
Reaction score
9,755
Location
Phoenix
Vehicles
2021 Mach-E FE, 2021 Wrangler 4xe High Altitude
Occupation
Manager
Country flag
Since an EVSE is not really a 'charger', but simply a power supply, why are they so pricey? The low-end ones are $500, and higher-rated ones, like the ChargePoint Home Flex, are $700. For some wires, cables, connectors, and circuitry in a plastic box? Or is it supply and demand?
Check out openevse.com and see what is involved. There is a little more involved than you list above.
 

MacherAWD

Well-Known Member
First Name
Erik
Joined
Mar 29, 2022
Threads
11
Messages
1,131
Reaction score
1,495
Location
North Shore MA
Vehicles
2021 AWD Select C&T, 2020 Bolt Premier
Occupation
Software Implementation Manager
Country flag
Does it still sell for $250? If so, this tells me that ChargePoint can charge (charge?) $700 for theirs just like Apple can charge $1000+ for an iPhone. People will pay it.
Yeah, the site is up, I think it was $300 or maybe $350 when I bought it, so he has lowered the price, and even made an improvement since I bought.
 

21st Century Pony

Well-Known Member
First Name
Martin
Joined
May 21, 2022
Threads
31
Messages
1,755
Reaction score
1,816
Location
Arlington, Virginia
Vehicles
Ford Mustang Mach E 2022 Premium AWD ER
Country flag
When I junked my 2012 Leviton 16-amp permanent wall EVSE for the Grizzly-E, I opened it up. This well-built steel wall box was about 90% empty inside. It had one fairly small printed circuit board, several connectors for the two cables, one electric winding, and two sizable (not too sizable) thick metal donuts around the several wires. Again, 80 - 90% open space in there. Let's remember, that was a 2012 era "dumb" EVSE. The Grizzly-E, which I also opened to hard-wire it, has several printed circuit boards but is about 1/2 the size of the old Leviton box, so its inside space is much more filled up.
 

bshaw

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Threads
12
Messages
1,319
Reaction score
1,802
Location
Boston, MA
Vehicles
2021 Mustang Mach E 4X (Job 1)
Country flag
Keep in mind, the Chargepoint and other "smart" EVSEs have a lot of software that it takes to run them. People have to develop and maintain that software and maintain the apps you expect to use on an ongoing basis.

To me, that's an unnecessary complication on what should be a basic device. Plug it in, and it supplies the requested amount of power. Anything more is just bells and whistles, and adds to the things that can go wrong.

The utilities should be coordinating with the car manufacturers to control TOU discounts, etc.
 

RickMachE

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 1, 2021
Threads
204
Messages
13,353
Reaction score
18,232
Location
SE MI
Vehicles
2022 Mach-E Premium 4X, 2022 Lightning Lariat
Country flag
Keep in mind, the Chargepoint and other "smart" EVSEs have a lot of software that it takes to run them. People have to develop and maintain that software and maintain the apps you expect to use on an ongoing basis.

To me, that's an unnecessary complication on what should be a basic device. Plug it in, and it supplies the requested amount of power. Anything more is just bells and whistles, and adds to the things that can go wrong.

The utilities should be coordinating with the car manufacturers to control TOU discounts, etc.
Well, not quite.

You want the utilities to coordinate TOU discounts. The utility has two ways to do this.

1) Coordinate charging with the car company. My utility has a program to do this. They have "no charge" events lasting 2 hours, in which they tell Ford to prevent my car from charging. Ford does this by lowering the threshold to 50% charge (it appears). 2 hours later, they put it back. They also have "must charge" events lasting 2 hours, in which they have surplus power and want me to charge. They do this by forcing the car to charge via Ford. They also don't differentiate between peak hours, so they do this often during then. By me having a smart charger, I can stop the car from charging during peak hours no matter what Ford tells the car to do.

2) Controlling the EVSE. My utility gave me a $500 rebate to get the data, but they haven't made an attempt to control charging, and I won't agree to that. The rebate was only for the data. They didn't provide any conditions on the rebate except being in a TOU program (which I already was), so they cannot ask to control the charging.
Sponsored

 
 




Top