I'm afraid that the EV-ECU replacement was a dead-end. After we had replaced the known failed OBC/dc-dc with an unknown quality replacement resulting in inability to ac charge (dc-dc works fine) and lots of DTCs, she took it to the Mitsu dealer who cleared all the codes and they told her the only remaining DTC (dunno what number) says to replace the EV-ECU that they swore was the only remaining issue. They quoted her $1000 + 2-1/2 month wait for shipment from Japan. jray3 was kind enough to expedite getting one down to us right away. Mitsu reprogrammed it for the new VIN and.... continued failure. They worked on it for half a day with inputs from Mitsubishi and declared inability to identify cause of failure. She took the car away from them and it's now sitting in my backyard. Next step is to install a known good OBC/dc-dc from one of my cars to positively rule that out.jray3 said:... JoeS is helping a little old lady who received a diagnosis of "Failed ECU"...
I thought that the DC-DC was on the CAN bus; the PHEV reports data on CAN id 0x377. But maybe you can't adjust the voltage that it aims for. Certainly other cars will charge the auxiliary battery at either float-like voltages (e.g. 13.0-13.8 V) or at bulk voltage (14.0-14.4 V), depending on various factors. The Leaf will even charge at a higher voltage for a minute or two when you operate the windscreen wipers.kiev said:The DCDC section is not on the CAN Buss and doesn't need CAN to function, so it is working okay.
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