Monkey
Well-Known Member
Yeah, 2-2-2-4 is overkill and what you want if you're feeding a 120A sub-panel in your garage.Well the 2-2-2-4 is out... I didnt read the fine print for the Rivian charger only having a lug large enough for a 6.
So 75 should do it. At least for a ballpark price estimate.The run from the outside fuse panel to the side garage is about 40-50 feet (guessing). I would prefer it to be in the front of the garage, so I can park outside if I have a project in the garage. That would add another 20ish feet.
You don't need 6-6-6-6. I would run that by an electrician, but I don't know if the aluminum wire is going to be the right choice here. They do have 6 gauge aluminum with the proper ratings as far as I can tell, but not 100% sure. For your dedicated charger circuit, you just need the two hots and a ground. If you can do 6/2 aluminum THHN, it's only $1.10/ft here:Just a quick search shows a 6-6-6-6 at $1.91 a foot. Code requires a ground and earth. So using my guess of 50 ft, wire is at $95
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Southwire-...r-Service-Entrance-Cable-By-the-Foot/50333145
https://www.wireandcableyourway.com/6-2-6-ground-ser-aluminum-building-wire
That's the wrong stuff. It's 6 gauge, but once again has an extra conductor you don't need to pay for and it's NM/B or Romex and not rated to 90C at the proper amperage. This is what you would run for a 50A circuit. In that case it would work for a car charger that can charge at 40A or your electric range on a 50A plug.Where as the same in copper is $300 as a spool
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Southwire-Romex-SIMpull-50-ft-6-3-Non-Metallic-Wire-By-the-Roll/50188983
I think UF-B wire does qualify, here but its intended use is power transfer between buildings. It's expensive.at $6.98 a foot = $349
https://www.lowes.com/pd/6-3-UF-Wire-By-the-Foot/3345390
You're in conduit no matter what if you're running it on the exterior. But yes, conduit for it all unless you can run MC cable, but that just comes in flexible metal conduit however it's not rated for exterior use so isn't what you want here.Both cases would require a conduit.
Ideally, you would you would use this wire:
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Southwire-SIMpull-6-AWG-Stranded-Black-Copper-THHN-Wire-By-the-Foot/3129547
You would buy a separate 75ft (or whatever length you end up needing) in black, another in red and one in green. Then pull the three of them through your conduit. Lowe's isn't the greatest place to buy wire except for the usual 14 and 12 AWG Romex. You can buy this 6 gauge THHN wire for a lot less elsewhere:
https://www.wireandcableyourway.com/6-awg-thhn-building-wire
The amp rating is for the whole circuit at 240V 60A. You have both 120V legs plus ground. So you would be using a 60 Amp dual-pole breaker. Like this one, for example, but you need the right one to fit your panel:Labor actually isnt to bad. as its all outside the house.. Fuse box to garage. Just have to drill thru the masonry at the garage to feed it into the garage.
Edit:
I do have an additional question. When we say 40 or 50 or 60 amp... Are we talking total amps, or per leg? So for a 40 amp, 20/20 total 40 or 40/40 total 80? I am assuming its the 20/20, but looking for clarification. That might be why the GC was going the aluminum route to run to another breaker box.
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Eaton-Type-BR-60-Amp-2-Pole-Standard-Trip-Circuit-Breaker/1114115
And you're fine with a standard breaker (not a more expensive GFCI) as the Rivian charger has fault protection built in.
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