mkhuffman
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Mike
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2020
- Threads
- 29
- Messages
- 6,875
- Reaction score
- 9,507
- Location
- Virginia
- Vehicles
- 2025 Rivian R1T Tri-Max, Jeep GC-L, VW Jetta
@SpaceEVDriver - I know we have a lot of responses to the survey already, but it would be good to know if anyone has had LVB errors or 12V low voltage warnings. I only got them when I had my ODBII reader connected with the car not charging and off. Those errors were caused by me, but what about LVB errors not caused by the owner? Could there be a correlation?great survey.... going to get some good data there I think.
In the meantime, I have a new theory on root cause of contactor (HVBJB) failure.... I'm thinking is could start with low 12v system voltage causing contactor relays to 'flutter' and not close solidly, arc, and weld shut.
I'm thinking that if the 12v battery happens to be run down, lets say close to 12.0 v, you hop in the car, start, turn on 12v loads like heat/air conditioning, then drive off right away... flipping on the 12v loads pulls the 12v system voltage down before the dc-dc has time time to 'charge the 12v', and the contactor relay can't hold good contact while you are accellerating getting rolling, and weld themselves together; which the car notices probably at your next stop when the contactors fail to open. This might also happen at a DCFC station I suppose if the 12v system is low, you plug in the DCFC and have big current flowing and the 12v system voltage sags a bit and can't hold the contactors....
This may explain why the vehicles don't have, or solve 12v charging issues, avoid the HVBJB problem.
It is scary to think that by testing and stressing my LVB, I may have increased the risk of getting a HVBJB failure. Maybe.
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