this is UDCminphillipschip wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 9:03 pm prevent the driver from being able to take off with too low batteries
Param info here: https://openinverter.org/wiki/Parameters
this is UDCminphillipschip wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 9:03 pm prevent the driver from being able to take off with too low batteries
That may be a side effect but the primary aim is to prevent the main contactor from closing at a voltage that indicates that precharge hasn't happened. With inverse polarity you'd measure 0V at the DC bus. So if udcsw were, say, 300V then after 5s the precharge contactor would open (giving the precharge resistor some chance to survive) and the main contactor would never close and would have prevented your fireball.phillipschip wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 9:03 pm Thought the higher setting was just to prevent the driver from being able to take off with too low batteries.
Well you did connect it to a different battery. That is a change. Do you just assume it was correct polarity or know for sure? I.e. before giving the start signal did you measure > 300V AT the inverter terminals?phillipschip wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 8:38 pm I didn’t change anything from when it worked perfect on 36v Confirmed precharge working with on switch, then main switching on/pchge off was confirmed
catphish wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 8:29 pm
Another possibility is that you accidentally crimped the shield of the high voltage cables. The shield of both cables in the SDU is connected to the chassis ground, so if you crimp them into the HV, things will explode, but I guess you'd have noticed this during the low voltage test.
Ok, pretty sure this was a problem. I didn't realize this was the case at the inverter connections as part of the OEM wiring harness. I guess I just thought the shielding was a physical barrier to protect the cable at whatever polarity the cable was. I'm pretty sure I crimped the shielding :0 Learning new things along the line at every step. I didn't notice in the low voltage test because I was using the factory connections and hadn't done any crimping myself to that harness.
Do a detailed teardown of your build something has failed somewhere. Take loads of photos when you do, others may notice issues you have not yet seen.
The capacitors the appear as a dead short when fully discharged. Other way around you read something else.
johu wrote: ↑Wed Nov 20, 2024 9:25 pm one way to prevent such mishaps is to measure on the battery side of the contactors which one is + and which one is -. Then measure in diode mode on the inverter side. You should see slowly rising voltage, then OL. If you see steady 0.6V you know polarity is reversed.