Is that a picture of a repair you made? Does it work or has it broken again?
Okay that now makes sense of what i was seeing.... I cleaned up the white ceramic stuff and the outcome is on the picture.
There was no error codes and the car drove normally. Just did not charge.
Should I try to replace just those resistors?
OK, so the old battery was not the issue. How do I modify the old post, cannot find that function on the forum?Hi, what a great place to get information on repair of on-board charger and other related issues. Read about 10 pages and learned a lot but my problem was solved easier than re-soldering new capacitors or fixing a waffle plate. Thought to leave it here anyway in case someone experiences the same issues as I had since I haven't found any similar (or exactly the same) issue described. So here is my story.
Bought a car and was using quick chargers for a 400 km trip, an experience on its own! When got back home put it on 230V charger that came with the car. The charging started fine but stopped in about 1,5h. At reconnecting the charging was starting and then stopped in a minute. I asked the previous owner and he hasn't had that issue before (of course) but he says he only used slow type 2 public charging stations, not the 230 V charger. It turned out that after the car sat for a day it would again charger for about 1,5h and the story starts again. The strange thing was that 3 h was not enough, it had to rest for longer. Since the temperature outside was around 0 C, it was strange since if some component got overheated, 3 h would be more than enough to cool it down. I couldn't check any public charging station at that time because the car was not registered and could not be insured. Looking on the internet found this page but also people reporting having problems with the same/similar charger. The input cable is often tightened too much when it comes into the "box" which leads to one of the leads breaking after some time. Mine was fine on the input side but very suspicious on the output side. After disassembly and striping the wires no braking wires were found, put everything together but the problem persisted.
I had an original 12 V PSA battery and I read at several places that when it goes old the voltage is too low for activating the relay and starting charging. I measured the battery voltage and it had 14.3 V at the terminals when the charging was ongoing and a bit lower when the charging stopped, probably around 13 V. So that didn't seem to be a problem. Also, even though the car is from 2011 I think the battery was changed already at one of the yearly services. There is a sticker saying that it "expires" at the end of 2022. It is hard to believe the producer would trust the battery will be good for 11 years.
When the car was registered I drove it first to a yearly control and then tried to charge at the nearby type 2 station. It didn't want to start charging at all. Left it at home for a day and planned to go to another station the next day. Then I tried again at the same station the next day. The station is just 300 m from where I live. Sure enough, it started charging, but, sure enough, it also stopped in 45 min.
I read about that sometimes relays (two of them I think) cause charging problems. So what I did is to remove all the relays, cleaned the contacts (some minor corrosion on some of them but nothing too bad) and swapped them around so that no single relay ended up at the same place. To remove the relays the 12 V battery needs to be disconnected first to avoid any shorts. The realys are hard/impossible to pull by hand. I ended up bending some thin wire to make something that looks like a keycap puller (google it) and then pulling it up with plies. The 12 V battery terminals looked corroded, one terminal worse than the other but nothing that I would think of as a heavy corrosion. Also, it is a strange selection of batter/leads they used, hard to justify why they select a battery with so thin terminals but cables with a bigger diameter of clamps so that a lead "spacer ring" needs to be used. That is an extra connection point to corrode. Anyway, after everything was cleaned the main battery charged like a charm without any stops. If it wouldn't I would test to connect my other car's battery with jump wires and charge the main battery like that to make sure it is not the 12V that is causing the issues.
Even though I cannot be 100% sure I think the problem was with an aging 12V battery and corroded terminals. When I measured the voltage I did it at the terminals but probably the voltage at the car was lower. I think when the car sat for a while the battery went a bit lower on charge, when the charger was connected the voltage was enough to close the relay and activate the charging. Probably charging of the 12 V battery was activated immediately also so the OBC got stable 14 V during the period the 12 V battery was charged up slowly. When the charging of the 12 V stopped probably the voltage at the OBC dropped and it shut off the charging of the main battery. When it was reconnected again there was almost no need for charging the 12 V battery so it shut off much faster. That would also explain why I couldn't start charging directly after driving - the 12 V battery was charged during driving.
I will of course change the battery now but wanted to leave it here and contribute to someone experiencing the same issue
It's hard to say. That capacitor is across the mains input, so it seems unlikely to me that it would cause stops. The stops sound like an overheating issue to me. It seemed seemed to charge longer at lower power.1. Would the blown capacitor result in the issues I experienced (intermittent charging that stops after some time)?
I don't believe so. Those capacitors seem to have a hard life.2. Is it likely that the capacitor failure was caused by another issue which also needs to be solved?
Others have done just that, so yes it is possible. Desoldering the Waffle Plate™ is best done with a desoldering station, and it's a lot of work even then. So it's worth avoiding if you can.3. Does the Waffle plate need to be desoldered for soldering a new capacitor? Can the old one be just ripped apart to reveal the contacts and solder to those?
Capacitor insulation seems to respond to RMS voltage more than peak voltage. So 310V will be an AC rating. Sometimes capacitors have a DC rating, and if they have both, the DC rating is always much higher than the AC rating. This needs to be a safety capacitor, at least X2 rating; X1 is a higher rating. Make sure that the replacement will fit and has the right lead spacing. A higher voltage rating is OK, but much higher is unlikely to fit. A slightly higher capacitance is also OK, but again, the replacement is less likely to fit.4. Which capacitor to buy? The marking says 310 V, which is kind of strange, with 230 VAC...
That plastic thing probably has ir had some sort of filter in it. Siliconing it would seal it, I don't know the consequences of that. But moisture coming through is probably worse.Also, I spotted some corrosion probably due to moisture coming through a plastic plug. Some residue ended up on the lower board. Is it common? I plan to clean it and silicone the plug in place
Thanks for the fast reply! I read some more in this thread and found another conversation about two of the input capacitors blown up and an instruction how to open the external box with the input filter. And the capacitor there was also blown up! I found identical capacitors to be sold online, will order 5 of them (min order) and resolder. Any clues to what could potentially be also blown up/damaged? Is it worth to resolder those and give it a try or anything else should be changed/checked while I am on it?It's hard to say. That capacitor is across the mains input, so it seems unlikely to me that it would cause stops. The stops sound like an overheating issue to me. It seemed seemed to charge longer at lower power.
I don't believe so. Those capacitors seem to have a hard life.
That plastic thing probably has ir had some sort of filter in it. Siliconing it would seal it, I don't know the consequences of that. But moisture coming through is probably
Definitely check the resistors. The ½Ω measurement is if you turn on the relay with a 4.5 V battery or 5 V power supply.anything else should be changed/checked while I am on it?
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