- Joined
- Sep 8, 2024
- Messages
- 288
You're not wrong about that.Your understanding of how these cars operate would be greatly improved by reading the technical information section of the service manual.
I'll make some time to do so. I've been trying to utilize all spare hours to get physical work done during daylight now that the weather is good for getting work done and the days are growing shorter.
Sadly I've been exhausted with all the work needing to be done. Spent the last three day weekend, 12 hours each day cleaning and reorganizing the garage and it's still only 70% done. But I'll get there. Sadly my mind checks out by the time I sit down at 10pm with no concentration for reading manuals.
You guys have enabled me to get a lot further down the track though thanks to your quick and detailed guidance.
OBC. I got a free one when I ordered the third MCU. Came together in a package deal for like $80 bucks for both delivered.Where did you get the OBC from or do you mean type 1 EVSE?
Which makes me realize that these mievs must be VERY reliable overall. I was reading the wiki page yesterday for a bit trying to find info on key fobs and it said that 10,000 were manufactured just in Japan alone. And it stated, "by the end of February 2018 a total of 46,827 i-MiEV family passenger cars had been sold worldwide since 2009.[191]"
And further,
"As of July 2014, Japan ranked as the leading market with over 10,000 i-MiEVs sold, followed by Norway with more than 4,900 units, France with over 4,700 units, Germany with more than 2,400 units, all three European countries accounting for the three variants of the i-MiEV family sold in Europe; and the United States with over 1,800 i-MiEVs sold through August 2014. As of early March 2015, and accounting for all variants of the i-MiEV, including the two minicab MiEV versions sold in Japan, global sales totaled over 50,000 units since 2009.[6]"
Based on the small number of people here asking for help, it seems they must not really break down all that much. And/or they're just being destroyed when regular repair shops have no clue how to work on them, like the shop I visited to buy mine.
Truly sad as they are very reliable and very, very efficient cars that could last three lifetimes if kept up. They're actually really simple EVs I think compared to the newer ones. Which I think is enough reason to rescue a few for myself before they become really rare someday. I like the fact they aren't all under control remotely via telemetry bs as well.
It's basically a street legal go cart with typical car amenities. I'd like to see someone create an aftermarket open source system to replace all the different ECUs in EVs. With adjustability for each car's particular needs in the way of battery packs, etc. That way we aren't dependent on all these proprietary parts permanently. Like these MCU controller boards.
I wished there was a standardized controller board and CAN protocol that I could swap out for and easily maintain and adjust on my own.
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