Maximum power for kitchen appliances?

  • Erstellt am 2023-01-18 16:41:32

Pianist

2023-01-19 20:58:21
  • #1
When loading the car or baking the crepes? :)

Well, I tend to be a bit more cautious with such things. Of course, I won't operate a kettle on the same circuit at the same time. Still, I will probably limit myself to a 2 kW device.

By the way: My electric car can charge with 11 kW. But I also installed a 5x16-square feeder cable because the garage is a bit further away from the house. For mobile charging at regular household sockets (which happens extremely rarely), I have a Juice Booster with various adapters, and they are coded so that the device never draws more than allowed. So when I connect the Schuko plug, the charging current is automatically limited to 10 A. When I have a blue CEE plugged in, 16 A flow, and with a large red CEE, it’s 32 A.

Many thanks to all contributors!

Matthias
 

KarstenausNRW

2023-01-20 08:13:47
  • #2

That has nothing to do with being cautious. It's simply irrational fear. Like the retirees who cruise through town at 35 km/h because they're scared.
Buy a reasonable device with proper power and that's it. Anything with a normal Schuko plug you can connect without worry. The device only draws full power during the warm-up phase (5 minutes?), afterwards you can leave it on for hours since it only maintains the temperature.

P.S. Please throw away your oven quickly. It likely draws up to 3.6 kW and is also only connected to a normal outlet with the Schuko plug. A miracle that your place is still standing! *Irony off*
 

MayrCh

2023-01-20 09:00:20
  • #3
Most electric cars can draw 16A single-phase. However, the included EU AC chargers are limited to 13A single-phase. But if the vehicle does not specify otherwise, they will draw that as well. Continuously.
 

Pianist

2023-01-20 09:57:30
  • #4
Since when are ovens/stoves connected via Schuko plugs? They are usually connected three-phase permanently. Well, most probably are no longer today. I find that quite a pity with the Ioniq. My Tesla Model 3 charges with up to 11 kW three-phase. Matthias
 

andimann

2023-01-20 10:02:32
  • #5
Hi,



A pure oven does not draw more than 2.5-3 kW and is connected to the mains via a normal socket. The cooktop can easily have 5-9 kW, which are then hardwired three-phase.

This is quite normal with the nowadays common separation of oven and cooktop.

Best regards,

Andreas
 

MayrCh

2023-01-20 10:23:56
  • #6
I can’t follow you. 16A/phase is actually standard for AC. The Ionic (without 5) just charges with 2 phases at the (AC wallbox).
 

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