bcurious said:
I believe that the departure time setting in the vehicle is intended solely for climate control purposes.
I think that there it makes sense to situate the control the timing of charging, if intended for time of use utility rates, within the piece of the system that is more permanently installed - the EVSE - not the vehicle. Take the vehicle on an overnight trip and it then charges by default when you plug it in, not solely according to your normal routine at home.
Also, if you were Mercedes, and you expected to get the phone call with the complaint that the vehicle didn't charge despite being plugged in, would you rather tell the customer that they neglected to navigate the menus and make the right selections with the steering wheel, or that their EVSE timer may not have been set?
I'm not sure I agree with this. You think the whole purpose of the Departure Time is so that it can warm up your seat? If so, I see a few problems with this. How many people leave for work at the same time every day? What about weekends? How long does it take to warm up your seat anyway? Not long. I don't think the slight benefit of warmth is the reason for this.
Now, charging your car for hours at $.49 per kWh versus $.16 kWh is a BIG difference. I agree that a timer should be build into the charger, but how many of them have this feature? Almost none of them.
To me, Departure Time is meant to be set to the last hour of Off Peak energy, so that you charge your car to its fullest and cheapest every day.