30 amp Electric Range

The Copper Home range will
do everything you might want at 15 amps 120V. I understand you can even goose it up to 15 amps 240V for greater recovery.
Copper Home Range.JPG

That would be "Charlie", the first energy storage induction range.
It charges during off peak electric times, and is ready to put out 10kW for dinner.
All day canning not recommended: for that you need to be
1755394898839.png

For everybody else there's:
https://copperhome.com/products/charlie
 
...so.. you want set up your house so that it can only take a smaller wattage range, that basicly no one makes. Which means, in 5-10 years when it needs replaced, and no one makes them anymore that small, you will be married and forced to upgrade your wiring at that time?
Sounds like you should run a gas line instead of electric.
 
The Copper Home range will
do everything you might want at 15 amps 120V. I understand you can even goose it up to 15 amps 240V for greater recovery.
View attachment 2579162

That would be "Charlie", the first energy storage induction range.
It charges during off peak electric times, and is ready to put out 10kW for dinner.
All day canning not recommended: for that you need to be
View attachment 2579163

For everybody else there's:
https://copperhome.com/products/charlie
beat you to it in post #31 😇. The HO of a job im doing just got one. I have no idea why, he already had a 50A circuit installed.
 
These only need 120v
is $6k in your budget??
The founders took the Tesla route.... starting at the high-end luxury end of the market, with a prestige factor.
 
The founders took the Tesla route.... starting at the high-end luxury end of the market, with a prestige factor.

Here is the founder

Cooper-Marcus-headshot-1.jpg

Cooper Marcus​

Chief Quitter, QuitCarbon
Cooper Marcus is the Chief Quitter at QuitCarbon. QuitCarbon helps homeowners gain the confidence and clarity they need to electrify their homes - and helps contractors grow their businesses by being part of the clean energy transition.
Cooper believes that society’s move away from fossil fuel presents an incredible opportunity to respond to the climate crisis while improving the quality of life for homeowners, renters, and the small businesses that help maintain their homes.
Cooper has led high-impact projects and products at high-growth startups and large enterprises. He recently spent 2.5 years at PG&E, guiding the development of an industry-leading wildfire risk machine learning model that is used to prioritize over $1B in annual spending on risk reduction.
Cooper has a BA in Environmental Studies, with a focus on Urban Planning, from UC Santa Cruz, where he received college honors, highest honors in the major, Dean’s Award, and Chancellor’s Award. He has an MBA from Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, where he was awarded Top Student in Technology and E-Commerce.
See more details on Cooper’s LinkedIn profile.
 
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