• Friday, November 20, 2009 Latest Update: 4:41PM
Ucilia Wang | November 5, 2009 at 12:41 AM 5 Comments

Coulomb In Your Garage

SAN FRANCISCO -- Coulomb Technologies plans to launch a residential electric car charging device next year that is likely to cost between $500 and $1,000, said Praveen Mandal, president of Coulomb, at Greentech Media's The Networked Grid conference in San Francisco Wednesday.

The Campbell, Calif.-based company currently sells charging equipment to businesses and utilities in North American and Europe and runs a subscription service for users to access these charging spots.

Getting into the home charging market is a logical next step, particularly given that major automakers such General Motors, Toyota and Nissan plan to start selling plug-in hybrid or all-electric cars in 2010.

Consumers could end up buying the chargers from car dealerships or even utilities, he added. The company hasn't finalized all the sales channels for the product launch, Mandal said.

Back in September, Coulomb said it had snagged a deal to sell its charging equipment at the smart USA dealers, which will be selling Daimler's smart fortwo electric cars.

Coulomb plans to sell the device somewhere between $500 and $1,000, depending on the options consumers choose, Mandal said. The device the company sells in the commercial market is around $2,500. 

Some of the options would allow users to decide how they want to schedule charging and check on electricity rates. A more sophisticated service would allow cars (with the proper equipment/software) to communicate with the charging device, for example. 

Consumers would be able to schedule charging over the Internet and get a text message if charging didn't start as planned, Mandal said. The device also could be connected to Coulomb's service center, which would be able to detect equipment failure and send a technician to fix it. 

You will need an electrician to install the device at home.

Comments [5]

  • stevepluvia 11/5/09 10:14 AM

    $500-1000?  Wonder why?  Adding a 220 outllet to your garage shouldn’t cost that much, even if you include a $25 dollar timer…. Sumpthun smells fishy…

    Reply
      • Ucilia Wang 11/5/09 12:43 PM

        Coulomb’s device for the commercial market is around $2500. The device for e home would of course be less because there would be no need for authentication (for credit card purchases) and other features. There will be scheduling and notification features in the home device—it’d be the software that takes up the costs.

  • Jay Turner 11/5/09 12:18 PM

    Steve: adding a 120V line to charge my car cost me $660.  It makes sense that running a new dedicated line from a distribution panel to a garage and installing a high speed charging connector might cost more than $500 to have it professionally done.  Of course, a homeowner who is a qualified electrician might be able to do it very cheaply, but most people aren’t in that category.

    Reply
  • Ucilia Wang 11/5/09 12:50 PM

    I updated the story with some other features and services that Coulomb plans to provide.

    Reply
  • stevepluvia 11/5/09 12:54 PM

    Jay, yes most aren’t qualified.  As far as costs, its really location dependent.  If you have a panel in your garage, the run would be pretty straight forward.  Even a very expensive sparky should do it for under $200, unless you live on the island with the World Champion Yankees.  I’m not sure what “hi-speed” charging is. 220 is 220.  A timer is a timer.  A plug is a plug.  Three wires, three screws.

    Reply

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