Yesterday morning this is not what I'd have told you was going to be my first job today after making coffee:
Bejezzus this thing is complicated. I spend most of yesterday evening reading the handbook, trying to learn the 1001 settings and controls on the car. What happened to "Stick the key in, turn it, go"?
You do realise that is unsafe, right?
Trip hazard aside, that is a fire risk. The EVSE lead has a temperature sensor in the plug. It will reduce the current or even stop the charge if the plug or socket overheats.
An extension lead does not.
[sarcasm on]
Gosh no, I never considered that reading the rating plate on the back of the charger first (which says 10A) which is explicitly designed for charging from a domestic 13A supply, and plugging it into a 13A rated extension cable that had been fully unwound, with a properly fused plugtop, plugged into a radial circuit with a 16A ELCB wouldn't be OK. Thanks for educating me. I'm also having problems learning how to suck eggs. Could you help?
[sarcasm mode off]
There is no fire risk, at least no more than the 3kW kettle in my kitchen also presents.
There's a world of difference between a one off, let's see if this PHEV charges, to a permanent installation that can be used any time, unsupervised, in any weather. It's a dry day, I was pootling back and forward cleaning windows, exploring features found in the manual, and generally keeping an eye on things, and
of course I checked ratings, loads etc. before starting, heck I even put the car in "reduced charge demand" mode beforehand so that it only asked for 7.5A, just in case. I ought not to need to point out the minutiae of all that, here of all places, before someone takes it upon themselves to offer ill-founded advice and implicit criticism. I'd like to think I've demonstrated my technical chops often enough here to avoid that.
So, no fire risk. Fully supervised, so if I saw someone coming who it looked likely that would present a genuine trip hazard to (the old, very young, infirm, or congenitally stupid) I was on hand to say "
Carefully now" and "
Down with this sort of thing".