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Monitoring Power Consumption of Charging Outlet

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Has anyone figured out a way to monitor the power consumption of the charging outlet used for their car? I am aware of a number of energy monitors, but I would like to collect data specifically on how much power is consumed from that particular outlet, and at what time. I'm looking for an independent monitor that is not associated with the car.
 
As part of my solar installation, I got one of these:
eGauge Home Page

It currently has 3 monitored inputs: whole house consumption, solar generation, and car charging consumption. I get red spikes (see the chart on the web page) every time the car charges.

For "car charging consumption", it's associated with my 14-50R and my HPWC.
 
I've currently got a Ted 5000 system with three sensors from The Energy Detective (TED). These sensors get installed inside the breaker panel. This looks like a similar product to the eGauge product listed above. I added the 3rd sensor when I installed the EVSE a week ago to monitor power usage (and thus money spent) charging the Leaf. This will allow me to keep using my spreadsheets that I started 20 years ago to calculate cost/mile (includes depreciation, insurance, taxes, tags, maintenance, fuel) of every vehicle I've owned.
 
I would really love to hear what the actual Kwh per "projected range" really is. My Roadster provides me actual Kwh hours, which I understand is accurate, and I "lose" about 25% to conversion heat. By that I mean I get about 750 watt hours into the battery for every Kwh from the outlet. I've heard that Tesla claims about a 9% lose with the MS but I have not heard of any great improvements in charging conversion so I'm skeptical. Maybe the 9% is the lose using a DC to DC Supercharger?
 
Alligator

Check out my thread I started back in the winter when I installed an Efergy Energy Monitor with Internet Gateway on my Nema 14-50 outlet. It's been amazing and tells me daily and monthly the averages of how much power and the cost.... I currently monitor it via the web and an app on my iPhone. No monthly fees!

http://www.teslamotorsclub.com/showthread.php/13366-Efergy-Energy-Monitor-System?p=265920&viewfull=1#post265920

Aaron

Some web gateway pics:
Screen Shot 2013-09-06 at 4.50.21 PM.png
Screen Shot 2013-09-06 at 4.50.46 PM.png
Screen Shot 2013-09-06 at 4.50.54 PM.png
 
Plug-In North Central Washington selected the Efergy E2 Energy Monitor to track usage at our haL2 EVSE sites. It has very good transmission/reception range even with the transmitter mounted inside the ClipperCreek CS-90 EVSE unit. These are simple to install and the data is stored for download and analysis. Usual price is around $115 we have eight of them and have not experienced any issues as of this date. We do not use the Internet gateway because many of our installations are not near access points. We simply visit the sites every month and download the data to a netbook. For home use, one very useful feature is that you can connect the sensors to your main leads at the load center then carry the monitor around the house turning on specific devices and observe the load increase. We have used a much narrower approach because we only want to see what the EVSE use is.
 
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If you are much of a hacker type at all, I recommend getting the Brultech Green Eye Monitor, which gives you 32 channels of load monitoring in a nicely inexpensive and compact box. I installed one to monitor several solar inverters, two car chargers, PGE, and went ahead and hooked up just about everything else in my main panel while I was at it because the cost was so low. Nice easy open interface I have feeding data to MRTG at the moment, but there are a few options if you don't want to DIY either.

Its about $320 for the 32 channel monitor without CTs, and $500 with CTs.

GreenEye Monitor
GreenEye Monitor - Brultech Store