smueller99au
Member
Righto. I have finally solved the issue, and found what the original problem was (high confidence level).
First off a big THANKS to those that helped out, especially KIEV. It really helps when someone can respond with some useful information that isn't apparent at first.
Recap: The first problem with the car was that the 12V battery was not being charged. After some measurements it showed the charger was working, but stopping shortly after it began charging. This showed the fuse, circuitry, etc was in place and functional, but the charger could not determine the battery voltage and ended up being cut off on over-voltage.
I removed the charger and replaced with another one. This new charger worked for a while, then after 2 weeks it also failed, throwing earth leakage fault codes amongst other things. I checked ALL connectors and links that I could and tested the wiring harness to the OBC, EV-ECU, replaced all relays, removed and replaced all fuses (why?!?). I ended up removing the new charger again. This is when I found this:
I was not impressed. Someone had removed a single bolt from the water cooler which cause a partial flooding of the lower compartment giving the earth leakage fault and 12V DC/DC charger fault. It also explains why I could not clear the OBC fault codes!
I removed the bottom board of the "new" OBC and cleaned it up carefully, blow dried, heated slightly, blow dried, etc. Then I put it in the old OBC and placed it in the car.
So, back to the old OBC with the known working DC/DC charger. Switched on the car -> READY but with battery light. But, the battery was charging at 14.4V (fuse must be ok). Feedback was not being received by the EV-ECU (pin 127). I tried the AC/DC charger and that simply did not work when before I removed the OBC it was working fine.
Again I went through the connectors and eventually opened the top compartment of the OBC and took a look. After reading the 58 page forum post on the OBC charger I saw that the top control board receives it's 12V supply from the car battery not the 230VAC. So this must be common with the 12V DC/DC board. I could see the RED and BLACK wires from the E-03 connector are split in the wiring loom too.
Measuring the terminal on the internal OBC connector there was no 12V supply! But the E-03 connector at the wiring loom had 12V. Thus - wire breakage was located:
This was the wiring problem I was searching for in the very first post. Unfortunately I didn't find it until after all the rest of the work.
I put the harness from the flooded OBC into the original OBC and set the car to READY. All working fine. Charging correctly.
I put the car on 230VAC charge and it was also working fine, together with 14.4V charge level to the battery.
Perfect. I just took a very long road to get there.
Thanks again to everyone, and hopefully this post will help someone out in the future.
I have full photos of both sides of the DC/DC charger if anyone needs them.
Cheers. Stephen.
First off a big THANKS to those that helped out, especially KIEV. It really helps when someone can respond with some useful information that isn't apparent at first.
Recap: The first problem with the car was that the 12V battery was not being charged. After some measurements it showed the charger was working, but stopping shortly after it began charging. This showed the fuse, circuitry, etc was in place and functional, but the charger could not determine the battery voltage and ended up being cut off on over-voltage.
I removed the charger and replaced with another one. This new charger worked for a while, then after 2 weeks it also failed, throwing earth leakage fault codes amongst other things. I checked ALL connectors and links that I could and tested the wiring harness to the OBC, EV-ECU, replaced all relays, removed and replaced all fuses (why?!?). I ended up removing the new charger again. This is when I found this:
I was not impressed. Someone had removed a single bolt from the water cooler which cause a partial flooding of the lower compartment giving the earth leakage fault and 12V DC/DC charger fault. It also explains why I could not clear the OBC fault codes!
I removed the bottom board of the "new" OBC and cleaned it up carefully, blow dried, heated slightly, blow dried, etc. Then I put it in the old OBC and placed it in the car.
So, back to the old OBC with the known working DC/DC charger. Switched on the car -> READY but with battery light. But, the battery was charging at 14.4V (fuse must be ok). Feedback was not being received by the EV-ECU (pin 127). I tried the AC/DC charger and that simply did not work when before I removed the OBC it was working fine.
Again I went through the connectors and eventually opened the top compartment of the OBC and took a look. After reading the 58 page forum post on the OBC charger I saw that the top control board receives it's 12V supply from the car battery not the 230VAC. So this must be common with the 12V DC/DC board. I could see the RED and BLACK wires from the E-03 connector are split in the wiring loom too.
Measuring the terminal on the internal OBC connector there was no 12V supply! But the E-03 connector at the wiring loom had 12V. Thus - wire breakage was located:
This was the wiring problem I was searching for in the very first post. Unfortunately I didn't find it until after all the rest of the work.
I put the harness from the flooded OBC into the original OBC and set the car to READY. All working fine. Charging correctly.
I put the car on 230VAC charge and it was also working fine, together with 14.4V charge level to the battery.
Perfect. I just took a very long road to get there.
Thanks again to everyone, and hopefully this post will help someone out in the future.
I have full photos of both sides of the DC/DC charger if anyone needs them.
Cheers. Stephen.