You can now (as of January 12, 2024) get the full $7500 tax credit when buying a Tesla even if your income was "too low" in previous years.
Electric Vehicle & Energy Incentives / Federal Tax Incentives / Consumer Vehicles / New Vehicles
Customers who take delivery of a qualified new Tesla vehicle and meet all federal requirements are eligible for a tax credit up to $7,500, which can be deducted from the purchase price at time of delivery for eligible cash or loan purchases through Tesla. Customers are limited to two time-of-sale tax credits per year.
It is not true that the income limits do not still apply, according to this article:
Rules for claiming the federal tax credit for electric vehicles have changed for 2024. Here’s what you need to know if you want to buy an EV.
www.kiplinger.com
You have to read down a little to get to the important part, which I quote:
"To pass on electric vehicle tax credit savings to consumers at the point of sale, dealers must be registered with the federal government. However, it's important to remember that MSRP price caps and
income limits for EV tax credits still apply. Electric cars cannot have a price tag that exceeds $55,000, while electric SUVs cannot cost more than $80,000.
To claim a federal tax break on your favorite qualifying electric vehicle in 2023 or 2024, your
modified adjusted gross income (AGI) must not exceed $150,000 (single), $225,000 (head of household), or $300,000 (married filing jointly)."
The article does not discuss what happens if your income is too low to take advantage of the tax credit, but since what the new way of this is basically the buyer assigning to the seller the tax credit, I would bet that is also a requirement to be able to get the $7,500 credit at the point of sale.
I’m using Enelx l2 chargers with load sharing on the same 60 amp switch. I think they are the only ones to offer load sharing tech on the same switch.
I think it is now permissible to connect two Tesla Wall Connectors to the same circuit when using load sharing.
On a 60 amp circuit, if you are using #6 THHN/THWN-2 or #4 NM-B it would be best to use Polaris connectors, or split bolts, in a junction box to tap the wires going to the individual Wall Connectors to the branch circuit wires.