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Advice on EV charging catenary wire.

Hello,

I don't know if this is the right place for this query but here goes.

I have a slightly unusual, (or perhaps not so unusual to you guys), question with regard to a predicament I find myself in.

My son's work wants to provide him with an Electric Vehicle.

We live in a ground floor flat in a block of four and we each have our own garden at the rear of the block. Directly at the rear with a pavement on one side consisting of 3 x 2 slabs laid sideways on. There's a small/narrow single dead-end access road. Which has a couple of street lights and is the property of the local authority. The road is used by all the flat occupants and there's parking at the dead-end.

Around six vehicles use the road including a large Ford Transit van of the neighbours. There's been a skip lorry come up the back road dropping skips once or twice over the years. The lorry just fits the width of the road with 6 inches to spare either side. That's about as big as could get down the road as thee is a very tight bend around the garden ends as the road approaches the rear of the flats.

When the road was laid, the council graciously put in a drop kerb entrance to our garden for the original owners some 50 years ago. One other flat has the same arrangement and we both have an entrance to a small driveway. Our driveway is just wide enough to open the car doors and we have a wooden ship lap garage with green mineral felted roof directly behind the small driveway. The garage stretches 16ft back to the end of our back garden. The cars never been in the garage since we had it built! Its got a bench with a vice, as all good garages should have and just about everything else under the Sun in it.

The distance from our ground floor flat in a straight line to the slightly diagonal end of the garage nearest the house is around 30m.

The road has a gas main running through it and a major drainage pipe for the street of 40 houses too. 

From what I have read, a Catenary wire must be no lower than 5.8m in height above a road?

The neighbour upstairs would never let us attach any anchor or cable to her wall. That's another story...

We have a small area outside our back door that belongs to us around 3m x 2m.

Could a Catenary wire be run from say, the top of a 21ft scaffold tube, (As suggested by a scaffolder I know ), that would be concreted in the ground for a foot or so and fixed up against our wall and secured in a couple of places to the wall but the final bracket further up just short of the flats divisional split. Then the cable would run over the road and the same tube arrangement attached to the side of our garage and finally an EV charger fitted in the garage.

The tube would then reach up to the 5.8m height. The tube would not obstruct any windows or the like upstairs.

Is this the way to go or am I just being silly. Of course a qualified Electrician would be called in to do the job. I have a feeling he would not like the scaffold tube idea...

What is the best solution?

Any Help appreceiated,

Iain

Parents
  • I thought that the cable would just be power from the house terminating at the EV Charging unit in the garage, then the data would just be in the standard 2-3m EV cable from there to the car.

    There are a couple of signal wires in the flex between the charge point and the vehicle (to do things like check that it's plugged in at both ends before energising and negotiating charge rates), and that can be sufficient for a minimal install. The data alongside the main supply cable can be used for a number of different things - either for a simple current clamp on your incoming supply (so the charge point can reduce consumption or switch itself off, if it seems you're about to overload your supply - e.g. because you're cooking or have an instantaneous electric shower at the same time) or as a general Ethernet style connection to the internet so the charge point can get tariff data and so schedule charging for the cheapest times (or to timeshare capacity on the distribution network). There was a recent government diktat saying amongst other things that charge points should have access to the internet - but I can't remember the details and I'm not sure if it's come into force yet.

       - Andy.

Reply
  • I thought that the cable would just be power from the house terminating at the EV Charging unit in the garage, then the data would just be in the standard 2-3m EV cable from there to the car.

    There are a couple of signal wires in the flex between the charge point and the vehicle (to do things like check that it's plugged in at both ends before energising and negotiating charge rates), and that can be sufficient for a minimal install. The data alongside the main supply cable can be used for a number of different things - either for a simple current clamp on your incoming supply (so the charge point can reduce consumption or switch itself off, if it seems you're about to overload your supply - e.g. because you're cooking or have an instantaneous electric shower at the same time) or as a general Ethernet style connection to the internet so the charge point can get tariff data and so schedule charging for the cheapest times (or to timeshare capacity on the distribution network). There was a recent government diktat saying amongst other things that charge points should have access to the internet - but I can't remember the details and I'm not sure if it's come into force yet.

       - Andy.

Children
  • Hi Andy, very interesting info indeed. No doubt to have the most efficient charging system is what's desired. There's a lot in it... I'm obviously new to the EV scene and never knew it could be so sophisticated.

    I better get studying up on this stuff if I'm to transition over to an EV in the future!