chl
Well-known member
- First Name
- CHRIS
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2022
- Threads
- 7
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- 2,406
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- 1,486
- Location
- alexandria virginia
- Vehicles
- 2023 F-150 LIGHTNING, 2012 Nissan Leaf, 2015 Toyota Prius, 2000 HD 883 Sportster
- Occupation
- Patent Atty / Electrical Engineer
Trying to understand the detail more clearly...FACT, when the HVB contactor closes to energize the 400V bus, offering power to the PTC, it's also offering power to the DC/DC charging converter, that helps keep the 12v system sustained while the higher current devices are running.
1) the HV battery contactors isolate the HV battery electrically from the rest of the system.
2) when the truck is ON, the HVB contactors are closed providing power to the truck including the PTC and the DC-DC converter which charges the 12V battery.
3) when the truck is connected to an EVSE and is OFF but charging the HV battery, the HVB contactors are closed and the DC-DC converter is charging the 12V battery using some of the HV battery charging power.
That I think we all agree and are clear on.
Now, the case that I am not sure I at least am clear on...
When the truck is connected to an EVSE and OFF but NOT charging, I know the PTC may get AC grid power from the EVSE that has been converted to 400VDC when needed.
But are the HVB contactors closed when doing that? I didn't think so.
I could see a case where if extra power was needed the truck could cause the HVB contactors to close to get the extra power, and in that case, the DC-DC converter would be powered and the 12V battery charged.
And I wonder is the DC-DC converter always getting grid power whenever the EVSE is plugged in and the PTC is using grid power, whether or not the HV battery is being charged? Again I didn't think so.
Are the HVB contactors always closed when the PTC is being powered by grid power? I didn't think so.
The HV battery does not always need to be connected when the PTC is using grid power does it?
And why would the DC-DC converter need to be powered when the PTC is using grid power and the HV battery is disconnected?
Does the PTC require the 12V system for something?
Has anyone directly measured 12V battery charging current/voltage under these circumstances?
From the OP data/graphs, it seems apparent that the 12V battery was not kept at 100% while the truck was OFF and using grid power for battery warming.
If the DC-DC converter was on all that time, unless there was some kind of significant load on the 12V system, you would think that the 12V battery would have stayed at or near 100% the whole time. But it didn't.
It would be nice to have some Ford documentation with more detail about this.
There was a recent post where a bad PTC caused the 12V battery to drain, so somehow they are interconencted even though the PTC resistive element(s) run off high voltage DC, not 12VDC.
Inquiring minds want to know.
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