Hello
We are currently building a new house and want to prepare for a wallbox right from the start.
It needs to support company car billing with the employer (I always have a company car).
I have the Easee wallbox, which can be prepared with Easy Ready and then simply have the ChargeBerry plugged in later, so no electrician is needed afterwards.
Or should I have a red high-power socket (three-phase socket) installed in the garage and just plug in a mobile wallbox, for example, a Go E Charger wallbox, and then use it?
Is a cable for 11 kW sufficient?
I will also have an Ethernet cable laid to the wallbox.
We are currently building a new house and want to prepare for a wallbox right from the start.
It needs to support company car billing with the employer (I always have a company car).
I have the Easee wallbox, which can be prepared with Easy Ready and then simply have the ChargeBerry plugged in later, so no electrician is needed afterwards.
Or should I have a red high-power socket (three-phase socket) installed in the garage and just plug in a mobile wallbox, for example, a Go E Charger wallbox, and then use it?
Is a cable for 11 kW sufficient?
I will also have an Ethernet cable laid to the wallbox.
B
Benutzer20021 Mar 2022 08:35Martial.white schrieb:
The Go-e charger does not have a MID-compliant, calibrated meter. However, the tax office requires exactly such a meter for billing purposes. Why? And what does the tax office have to do with your employer reimbursing your expenses (either through a leasing company or directly)? The tax office couldn’t care less. Yes, I know about this because I also use—or have to use—a non-calibrated charging station.
B
Benutzer20021 Mar 2022 09:29Patricck schrieb:
As far as calibrated devices go, I currently don’t know of any real wallboxes that can do that.Alfen Eve Single Pro-Line, for example – it can do that, but it was too expensive for me, and as I said, compliance with meter calibration regulations is not necessary.M
Martial.white21 Mar 2022 14:41Benutzer200 schrieb:
Why? And what does the tax office have to do with it if the employer reimburses your expenses (through a leasing company or directly)? The tax office is not concerned at all. Yes, I know about this because I also use—or have to use—an uncertified measuring device for this purpose. Because without some kind of certified meter, you cannot provide proper invoicing, and the employer might reimburse you more than you actually spend without either of you paying taxes or fees on the excess.
In my opinion, the meter must be certified, at least according to MID (Measuring Instruments Directive).
B
Benutzer20021 Mar 2022 14:53Martial.white schrieb:
Because without a calibrated meter, you can’t do accurate billing, and the client might reimburse you more than your actual expenses, resulting in untaxed additional income for both parties. I don’t do any billing at all. So taxes and things like that don’t interest me anyway. You just hold the RFID chip to the box to start charging. Unplug or hold the RFID chip again to end the charging process. The electricity consumed is reported online, and once a month I receive an invoice from the service provider.
It also doesn’t differentiate between photovoltaic power and grid electricity.
Martial.white schrieb:
In my opinion, the meter must be calibrated, at least according to MID. MID yes, otherwise you’re mistaken. You don’t need a calibrated meter.
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