EEVblog 1437 - Zappi 7kW Electric Car Charger TEARDOWN + EXPERIMENT

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 457

  • @EEVblog
    @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +5

    Installation & Testing video is on EEVblog2 here: czcams.com/video/EYx46kRv2Bw/video.html

  • @randomelectronicsanddispla1765

    First step of installing a new charger: void the warranty

    • @Leon-pm6lr
      @Leon-pm6lr Před 2 lety +7

      its not a charger.

    • @randomelectronicsanddispla1765
      @randomelectronicsanddispla1765 Před 2 lety +16

      @@Leon-pm6lr true, neither is your phone charger.
      The world is full of misnomers.

    • @joblessalex
      @joblessalex Před 2 lety +8

      It's made to open to install it, so honestly, probably not!

    • @dapullia
      @dapullia Před 2 lety +7

      Seen many of these installed on Artisan Electric channel and they do have to take them apart that way to install and wire them.

    • @--Nath--
      @--Nath-- Před 2 lety +3

      It isn't wireless charging or a plug in unit - so you need to hook in the mains power to the terminals inside..

  • @xDownSetx
    @xDownSetx Před 2 lety +56

    23:02 Unexpected Final Fantasy victory fanfare

    • @airlink2142
      @airlink2142 Před 2 lety +3

      *Buster Sword Spin!*

    • @tlhIngan
      @tlhIngan Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, i was just thinking it was some random startup tone then went... wait a minute.... and rewound it about 5 times ot make sure.

    • @AlexKrieger71
      @AlexKrieger71 Před 2 lety +4

      It's a great little easter egg :)

    • @Petertronic
      @Petertronic Před 2 lety +2

      Hope they don't get sued by Square Enix :)

    • @michaelcalvin42
      @michaelcalvin42 Před 2 lety +2

      As soon as I heard it, I paused the video to see if anyone else had pointed it out.

  • @randycarter2001
    @randycarter2001 Před 2 lety +36

    The best description for this device is a smart safety switch.

    • @gabiold
      @gabiold Před 2 lety +3

      Pleeeease, stop calling everything smart!
      It is not smart. It's an automation only, a highly deterministic process. All these "smart home" things, are just remote controlled devices, just happens that the remote control is not an IR remote but a device on an IP network and then it has to be called smart. 🤦🏻‍♂️ 🤦🏻‍♂️🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @randycarter2001
      @randycarter2001 Před 2 lety

      @@gabiold When connecting high power cables safety agencies require the power to be removed. (You're supposed to turn off the breaker before you connect or disconnect your motor home.) This thing is smarter than a circuit breaker in that automatically turn off the power. It detects electrical faults, informs the load how much power is available. It is there for safety. I'd admit 'smart' is overused to describe WiFi connected devices.

  • @OneBiOzZ
    @OneBiOzZ Před 2 lety +70

    I really like how that 30A connector has a clear back, you can quickly check that its wired right and that if something goes wrong you can check the wiring easily

    • @UberAlphaSirus
      @UberAlphaSirus Před 2 lety +2

      And 95% of the world just think, oooo pretty colours.

    • @andrewcourt5156
      @andrewcourt5156 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes that style of connector is basically the standard here in New Zealand and Australia, for industrial / high current / single or 3 phase use...they are generally called “56 series” because they are IP 56... They have a threaded collar / ring that mates with the socket and holds the connector & plug firmly connected...

    • @LB-fx1kn
      @LB-fx1kn Před 2 lety +1

      @@andrewcourt5156 The plug Dave has is IP66 rated though. The series number is just that I believe. There's many other series available, e.g. 600 series 10A outlets.

    • @Kwaq84
      @Kwaq84 Před 2 lety +8

      Nah, it's clear so you can see whether it's full of water or have some killer spider beneath.

    • @rivkahlevi6117
      @rivkahlevi6117 Před 2 lety

      Makes me wonder why they don't make all plugs transparent.

  • @jeremysaise
    @jeremysaise Před 2 lety +7

    Cool to see one of my customers products being torn down…. Immediately sent a link to the production engineer I work with :)

  • @ForgottenLore
    @ForgottenLore Před 2 lety +89

    Videos like this helps me to pretend we still have a manufacturing industry in the UK. :)

    • @jaycee1980
      @jaycee1980 Před 2 lety +1

      designed in the UK perhaps..

    • @jeremysaise
      @jeremysaise Před 2 lety +14

      these are very much built in the UK they are expanding rapidly the have moved to a larger temporary facility and are building a custom new facility near Grimsby. You would be surprised how much electronics manufacturing in the UK there is I sell electronics manufacturing equipment here and there are loads of them.

    • @cjmillsnun
      @cjmillsnun Před 2 lety +2

      @@jaycee1980 Most definitely assembled in the UK.

    • @JGS123WRPTP
      @JGS123WRPTP Před 2 lety +4

      To be fair, If something MUST be high quality it may well be made here. Just another reason why going green is a good thing for the UK economy. Genuinely, this will be good for the uk.

    • @sail4life
      @sail4life Před 2 lety +1

      Brexit be damned but I bought one from the Netherlands. Love my Zappi, its awesome to be able to tweak and check everything.

  • @thokk10289
    @thokk10289 Před 2 lety +17

    My best guess about the series relay is those output pins are accessable via a finger and that needs to be safe during any single fault. A relay fusing or something like that is not an unreasonable single fault

    • @cfisupply
      @cfisupply Před 2 lety

      I seem to remember reading somewhere about the different stages of the connection & handshake. One option is one relay activates at one particular stage passing and the other relay connects at the final stage. They could do this instead of using an "and" gate.

  • @stevenmetcalf4571
    @stevenmetcalf4571 Před 2 lety +10

    The J1772/Type 1 connector predates the Type 2 connector by about 2 years or so. Its creation can basically be attributed to the California Air Resources Board (aka CARB). Some late 90s/early 2000s EVs like the Ford Ranger EV where already using the the original J1772 standard which was paired with the older "Avcon" connector. CARB wanted something that could handle higher current, as Avcon was limited to around 28A. The Yazaki Corp. of Japan stepped up with their design, the Type 1 connector we know today. CARB mandated that this new upcoming connector be the standard connector for plugin vehicles sold in California. Given that California basically made the EV market in the US, automakers complied and the SAE shortly adopted it as the J1772-2009 standard. Thus Type 1 became the defacto standard in the US, and more broadly North America. Around about the same time that the SAE adopted Type 1, German company Mennekes was proposing their "Type 2" connector to German automakers. They adopted the Type 2 connector and eventually the EU legally mandated it.
    Some early EVs sold in EU countries where actually equipped with Type 1.
    "Fun" fact: Since the signaling today is basically still the same, old EVs such as the aforementioned Ford Ranger EV equipped with the Avcon connector can be charged on modern EVSEs with a simple physical adapter. As long as the EVSE doesn't present a pilot signal greater than 28A, it will work fine.
    Long post... But even cooler is the non-conductive induction paddle charging system used by the GM EV1 in the mid 90s. It was more advanced than the J1772 system we ended up with. It actually had 2-way communication between the car and the charger. The car could communicate back to the charger battery chemistry type, state of charge, etc..

    • @markg735
      @markg735 Před 2 lety

      Why J1772 didn't just have a CAN bus on it is beyond me.

    • @stevenmetcalf4571
      @stevenmetcalf4571 Před 2 lety

      @@markg735 a paper I read some time ago made mention that a design goal of the original J1772 signaling was that it could be implemented cheaply.. i.e. without a microcontroller.

  • @-yeme-
    @-yeme- Před 2 lety +6

    whoever stuck that Aussie flag on upside down was surely having a joke. also as you probably know, all UK electrical equipment is marked 230V 50Hz despite the supply having always been 240V. the EU standardised on 230V and everyone with 220V or 240V supplies just widened their tolerances rather than change any equipment

  • @ThePoxun
    @ThePoxun Před 2 lety +7

    It plays the Final Fantasy victory fanfare... it has my vote!

  • @Ave117
    @Ave117 Před 2 lety +3

    The Startup Sound of the EVSE is the Final Fantasy Victory Jingle... :D

  • @ArtturiSalmela
    @ArtturiSalmela Před 2 lety +10

    The reason why the sticker was like that was an effort to compensate Australia being upside down. Obviously they got something wrong ;)

  • @MCasterAnd
    @MCasterAnd Před 2 lety +18

    Thats an absolutely massive box for such a small amount of circuitry.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah, but it doubles as a cord hanger when unused.

    • @benmodel5745
      @benmodel5745 Před 2 lety +3

      Might be a bit bigger for the 3 phase version

    • @Gayestskijumpever
      @Gayestskijumpever Před 2 lety

      true but good for cooling/ air circulation.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +10

      Yeah but you need cable termination space and also the hanger on the front + cord wrap around.

    • @sciencetestsubject
      @sciencetestsubject Před 2 lety +1

      The exact same rear housing is used in the 3 phase models, those boards are completely stuffed.
      Even the relays are external to the board.

  • @eemsg
    @eemsg Před 2 lety +2

    You can tell someone at Myenergi is a JRPG fan. The boot-up sound on the Zappi is the Final Fantasy victory fanfare.

  • @jeffkubascik7830
    @jeffkubascik7830 Před 2 lety +19

    Out of curiosity, have you tried removing the diode from your bench-top pilot circuit? I'm really curious if the EVSE's are checking for that today.
    Back around 2012, I worked as an engineer responsible for the micro-controller code for a residential/commercial EVSE product line. We ran into an issue where someone on CZcams showed our device not working with their Nissan Leaf but other competitor EVSE's worked fine. After some investigating, we found out that the pilot diode in the Leaf would fail after some period of time - our theory was due to insufficient transient/surge protection. We discovered that many EVSE's on the market did not check for the diode and therefore worked fine when the Leaf's diode failed. I recall having discussions with the project lead engineer whether we should be doing the pilot diode check (SAE and UL standards did not require it at the time), and decided that it should be there exactly for the same safety reason you described - in case the plug was dropped in a puddle and the resistance on the CP pin happened to be in the range to enable charging.
    You essentially covered the reasons why EVSE is needed but I wanted to highlight one unique safety issue with EVs, and that is the fact that your vehicle's bodywork is effectively isolated from earth ground by rubber tires. One job of EVSE is to ensure that the body work is never ever ever at any potential other than earth ground.
    Thank you for the video, really enjoyed it!

  • @ElectricGears
    @ElectricGears Před 2 lety +41

    These fancy EVSE boxes are nice but I really think every electric car should have a self-retracting, pull out 15A cord you can just plug into any standard outlet. It's 'technology' perfected by the humble domestic vacuum cleaner decades ago so there is no excuse.

    • @--Nath--
      @--Nath-- Před 2 lety +10

      But then how can they charge $1000 for a glorified relay (or 3 like this one) and special plug?

    • @benbaselet2026
      @benbaselet2026 Před 2 lety +1

      Kind of yes... but then again not. With an external unit you can just replace it with a more suitable one or whatever. Having it integrated means you will be lugging around little bit of weight around even if you don't want to. And having an integrated thing repaired at a shop can often cost more than buying a new external one anyways. I like the modularity aspect more than the convenience of integrated. And the integrated one would have to fit all kinds of different country standards and adapted when cars get shipped from country to country etc. If the whole world ran on the same standard for plugs and amps etc. then it would make a bit more sense.

    • @Tore_Lund
      @Tore_Lund Před 2 lety +9

      @@benbaselet2026 That is not a valid argument: EVs have unnecessary complicated charging protocols. EVs should only need a 3 phase 32A or bigger male red CEE connector under the filler lid and be compatible with absolutely everything carrying a voltage. The car should naturally be able to work on single phase as well as 3 phase, and charging current is set on the dash before plugging in. The simpler, the more future proof. People have handled AC connectors for a century. This is just a blatant money grab on par with ink cartridges and vacuum cleaner bags! AC is a common good, and monopolizing a shared public funded resource is a crime.

    • @LB-fx1kn
      @LB-fx1kn Před 2 lety +19

      @@Tore_Lund All well and good until someone plugs in their car with a 0.75mm2 extension cord and then says it's good for 32A.

    • @CampGareth
      @CampGareth Před 2 lety +3

      Cars are often charged in the rain so waterproofing is important, domestic sockets can be waterproofed with boxes but are those boxes foolproof?

  • @rayceeya8659
    @rayceeya8659 Před 2 lety +6

    I like the idea of charging a car off of solar, but since you're going from DC to AC back to DC bothers the efficiency geek in me. If only there was a way to bypass the inverter.

  • @jessicav2031
    @jessicav2031 Před 2 lety +18

    I think the little relay and opto is a zero crossing detector? So they can switch the big relays at the zero crossing.

    • @Smidge204
      @Smidge204 Před 2 lety

      If this is for zero crossing detect, why include the 5V relay? I don't see a reason why you would need or want to switch the line side AC input feeding an opto if all you want is zero-cross detect.

    • @jessicav2031
      @jessicav2031 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Smidge204 I have no idea. You can see though that the opto is on the switched side, not the control side, and it seems to be connected to the mains line. What else would it do?

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety

      I'm sure it's doing that somewhere, but that doesn't explain the relay.

  • @ottersdangerden
    @ottersdangerden Před 2 lety +2

    that beep soungs like the battle victory music from final fantasy

  • @straifus3742
    @straifus3742 Před 2 lety +1

    I get to watch you do the things I would want to do with these gadgets while you teach me the things I want to learn. Thank you!
    Cheers from the Ouachita mountains.

  • @TradieTrev
    @TradieTrev Před 2 lety +8

    Absolute crack up about the sticker Dave, I totally support you removing it!

  • @OftenAsked
    @OftenAsked Před 2 lety +4

    Worth noting that EVs also have a Minimum charge current of 6A. So if your solar is exporting less than 6A, you either need to export that "for a pittance" or make up the rest by importing from the grid.

  • @rodrigovda
    @rodrigovda Před 2 lety +10

    17:38 was that the Final Fantasy victory fanfare?

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +4

      No idea, but everyone is saying that.

    • @amandalang1283
      @amandalang1283 Před 2 lety +1

      @@EEVblog yes, it's "Victory Theme" Final Fantasy Series by Nobou Uematsu.

  • @mikescott58
    @mikescott58 Před 2 lety +2

    Nice video Dave, as always. I've been watching EVSE installs on Jordan's (Artisan Electrics) channel.
    One feature that I wish we had in the US was the ability to monitor total energy draw and scale the charge rate down to avoid tripping the main breaker. Another thing that you guys got right was to standardize on connector. Here, Tesla uses theirs, Nissan has theirs, and everyone uses J1772.

  • @andyfraser5876
    @andyfraser5876 Před 2 lety +6

    I fitted a 3 position switch to the connector on my dumb EVSE's cable to present 3 different resistances to the PP pin in the car. This fools the car into thinking the cable has different current capacity (13A, 20A, 32A) to make best use of our solar. It can even be switched during use.

  • @--Nath--
    @--Nath-- Před 2 lety +7

    The flag is upside down clearly because it was stuck on in the northern hemisphere.

  • @rud
    @rud Před 2 lety +2

    Can’t wait to see more on eevblog2

  • @tanishqbhaiji103
    @tanishqbhaiji103 Před 2 lety +2

    This very exiting, I really wanted to see a tear down of this.
    Edit : my disappointment is immeasurable.

  • @chris-tal
    @chris-tal Před 2 lety +2

    That chiptune sounds like the victory fanfare from Final Fantasy games.

  • @Digital-Dan
    @Digital-Dan Před 2 lety

    Best description I've seen of what these do is to negotiate the parameters of the charging session, based on the joint capabilities of the vehicle and the power supply. We are indeed weird, bruh!

  • @repatch43
    @repatch43 Před 2 lety +1

    I personally use the term 'charge point' for those things.

  • @bbatbileg
    @bbatbileg Před 2 lety +2

    Funny that I got a quote from my electrician yesterday for this unit. Let's see if it's worth the money. Thanks.

    • @--Nath--
      @--Nath-- Před 2 lety +1

      How many zeros on that quote?

    • @marria01
      @marria01 Před 2 lety

      @@--Nath-- I paid £700 for mine, and that was with the grant money included, so around a £1k without, I think.

  • @lolsypussy
    @lolsypussy Před 2 lety +4

    "Those Yanks are weird"
    - Dave 2021

  • @electronicbob6237
    @electronicbob6237 Před 2 lety +4

    The Signal Swing is + - 12 V the Earth is 0 .....the Diode is to drop the Signal only on the Positive Side of the Signal..

  • @iosonogerva1989
    @iosonogerva1989 Před 2 lety +1

    The double relay in series is quite common in industrial safety circuits (the one triggered by the big red mushroom switch). If i recall correctly is even mandatory in the EU Machine regulation.
    It's done because, if one contactor weld shut, the other trips and open the circuit. I also think that the safety module can also detect in one is faulty and refuse to energize the other one.

  • @TornTech1
    @TornTech1 Před 2 lety +2

    Least you got a zappie and not a HyperVolt… something still very unsettling about having a raspberry pi which I don’t control sitting on my home wifi, in an always powered on box accessible to anyone on the outside of my house.
    Apparently it’s not a problem though! Many layers of encryption 🤦‍♂️ yet they won’t send me a trial unit a free PenTest! 🙄

  • @mausball
    @mausball Před 2 lety +3

    I can say with authority that some PIC24s are not immune to the current chipocalpse. Not as bad at STM32s, but not much better either.

    • @RWoody1995
      @RWoody1995 Před 2 lety +1

      AFAIK zappi have already changed MCU due to the shortages, don't know if they've started making the new version yet but they've just gone for an overpowered MCU as they're less prone to disappearing all at once

  • @piotrts
    @piotrts Před 2 lety +1

    No worries about the overvoltage in AUS network. UK is using 240 V, actually.They did that while Europe was still using 220 V. This 230 V on the box is to comply with new UE regulations. The tolerance in the EU standard is 10%, so they could run the network up to 253 V theoretically.

    • @Tekwyzard
      @Tekwyzard Před 2 lety

      They often do run the mains voltage to over 250 in the UK, at least in my area anyway, I regularly see 252volts on my supply but it's more usually around 248 to 250.

    • @piotrts
      @piotrts Před 2 lety

      @@Tekwyzard Your kettle must boil water in no time ;). The supply company might run the line higher, to account for the voltage drops along the supply line.

    • @Tekwyzard
      @Tekwyzard Před 2 lety +2

      @@piotrts It does boil rather quickly, yes:-) But it makes building mains powered electronic projects a bit more interesting. I live really close to a substation, but suspect the system is set up to cope with repercussions of everyone on my estate watching 'Coronation St' or some such BS.

  • @nathantron
    @nathantron Před 2 lety +3

    I'd love to see a heat map of this thing while it's running.

  • @Gayestskijumpever
    @Gayestskijumpever Před 2 lety +11

    100% the flag was put on upside down as a joke. Poor scissor skills though!

  • @moestrei
    @moestrei Před 2 lety +1

    Charging your EV on excess solar is the icing on the cake. Followed by driving with your solar electric vehicle past a service station checking out the latest pricing for dinosaur juice.

  • @jameshancock
    @jameshancock Před 2 lety +4

    It would be awesome to use the dc pins of the full ccs type 2 and see if you could emulate dc fast charging from LiFePO4 and solar direct with some boost converter or something.

  • @jovangrbic97
    @jovangrbic97 Před 2 lety +1

    Why do two of the current clamps on the ground and P/N have 4 wires coming out them? For current sensing 2 wires are enough. What is it doing?

  • @robywankenobi32
    @robywankenobi32 Před 2 lety +4

    NIce, so this is the same as a Phone "charger" haha, the charger is in the phone but the USB power supply lets the phone know how much current it can pull ( I think in the 2.0 USB spec at least) via the data pins.

    • @GregHassler
      @GregHassler Před 2 lety

      Right, this is really called an EVSE, not a charger.

  • @Electronics-Rocks
    @Electronics-Rocks Před 2 lety +1

    In the UK the DNO(distribution network operator) in our area (Western Power) is installing three phase to new builds now. This blew me away learning this. This is for super fast charging for cars and heat pumps/ air conditioning. In UK most outlets I have measured a good 240v so same as Australia just we needed to move to 230v to conform to EU guess what we left the EU.

    • @SimonCoates
      @SimonCoates Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately the National Grid is already at capacity.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Před 2 lety +1

      @@SimonCoates At peak time. And it's running at about 20% capacity at its lowest. Which means that there is no problem, as cars need about 1 hour (single-phase, or 20 minutes 3-phase) worth of charging per day on average. Plenty of hours each night when the grid is idle.

    • @Electronics-Rocks
      @Electronics-Rocks Před 2 lety

      The biggest problem with the grid is imbalance in the system. Having three phase and smart tariffs will ballance the network and because of renewable energy the gas turbine network is being upgraded to bring balance back

  • @jaycee1980
    @jaycee1980 Před 2 lety +2

    The Aussie connector looks rather similar to what is often known as a "Commando" plug here in the UK. EV chargers are typically permanently installed here, with a 32A feed taken from the consumer unit (fuse board!)

    • @dglcomputers1498
      @dglcomputers1498 Před 2 lety +1

      And, of course, whilst all sensible countries have standardized on "commando" connectors there are a few places that have decided for no apparent reason to go their own way or to stay with a previous standard when having just the one universal worldwide standard is the most sensible thing to do.

    • @cambridgemart2075
      @cambridgemart2075 Před 2 lety

      @@dglcomputers1498 Do you mean the USA, Aus and Japan? As you say, most countries have standardised on 16 /32/ 63A 'Commando' connectors

  • @keithfisk5641
    @keithfisk5641 Před 2 lety +2

    Solar aware - what use is that? EV charging at home is usually overnight. What you really need with a 7 kW or greater home EVSE is to have smart load control built in so that it backs off the charge rate when you turn on everything else in you home otherwise you risk blowing your main supply fuse.

    • @Thats_Mr_Random_Person_to_you
      @Thats_Mr_Random_Person_to_you Před 2 lety +1

      Lots of equipment (inc this device) does exactly that... they have a current clamp to measure incoming load and back off when load increases. The solar aware bit is for people who do, and can charge in the day, and when linked with the battery storage systems also tries to minimise use of the grid as best it can (how it does that can be programmed).
      It also has a load of safety things like type B rcd, PEN fault detection and usual other stuff.
      Seen lots of installers rave about it compared to other systems.

    • @EEVblog
      @EEVblog  Před 2 lety +3

      Depends on your usage scenario. The car is often at home charging durign the day, I ride my bike to work a lot.

    • @Monkeh616
      @Monkeh616 Před 2 lety

      It depends on your situation. And it comes as a trivial freebie when implementing load control, which yes, these do, because yes, the engineers were actually thinking when they designed it.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Před 2 lety

      Why would you charge your car with expensive energy overnight when you could let it fill up for free on the weekends and only add an hour or so during the week if it runs too low?

  • @FrankGennari
    @FrankGennari Před 2 lety +2

    That's interesting. A few years ago I found an EV charger by the side of the road and couldn't figure out what it was at first because it was just a black box with the wires cut off. Mine was completely different inside. It had several different transformers, inductors, fuses, circuit breakers, and some sort of power diodes or switching devices on heat sinks. Maybe it was a DC charger? It was a lot more complex than yours.

  • @grantrennie
    @grantrennie Před 2 lety +1

    Good to see a bit of UK made equipment going for export 🙂

  • @dexterdixon2000
    @dexterdixon2000 Před 2 lety +5

    Is the second relay (in series) for the fault protection? The CT label is a hint...

  • @markm0000
    @markm0000 Před 2 lety +2

    “Those Yanks are weird.” We like our power system and we’re proud of it.

  • @SimonEllwood
    @SimonEllwood Před 2 lety +1

    It is best to have two clamps, one for in incoming and one for solar production for the best monitoring. (I have a Zappi 2 myself).

  • @gudenau
    @gudenau Před 2 lety +3

    Was that a Final Fantasy tune?

  • @ilyashu.3247
    @ilyashu.3247 Před 2 lety

    The small relay and opto-coupler is probably a PE detection circuit. What it actually does is leaking a bit of current from Line to PE while measuring it. Current above predefined threshold means proper connection of PE. In some countries this may also allow 20mA instead of 6mA RCD.

  • @jeffsadowski
    @jeffsadowski Před 2 lety

    Lol, "Anyways those yanks are weird." :-)

  • @freman
    @freman Před 2 lety +2

    seems someone at myenergy is a final fantasy fan

  • @mysock351C
    @mysock351C Před 2 lety +1

    Be nice if they could just integrate it into the OBD-2 network in the vehicle itself (Edit: Assuming they still use CAN bus for everything in the EVs). That would mean sending data out on the connector so it would need some interface that guarantees a little more immunity to, say, 240V coming into the data network, but then everything like range, max charge, etc. could just be sent from the vehicle, and also updated in real time based on the parameters such as the current state of the battery, climate, etc. Rather than just typing it in, it would tell you the true range you have based on your charge at a glance, and be able to do other things as well.

  • @matthewmiller6068
    @matthewmiller6068 Před 2 lety +2

    Standard? Not here in the USA there isn't...Tesla proprietary seems most common by far but non-Teslas use various other plugs. One of the big problems with EVs here being you have to find the "right" charger that you can plug it into where you are going.

    • @mathman0101
      @mathman0101 Před 2 lety

      Ahhh lots of connectors to carry out lovely…

    • @otm646
      @otm646 Před 2 lety

      You can find chargers for anything in the US, the problem is that all the charging networks outside of Tesla are horrendously unreliable. They are down all the time some almost permanently.

  • @ebenwaterman5858
    @ebenwaterman5858 Před 2 lety

    You're good at exposing Scams. Here's a big one. Spinlaunch.

  • @universeisundernoobligatio3283

    Only takes me 10 seconds to charge my EV. 5 seconds to plug it in when I get home, 5 seconds to unplug it when I leave.
    Gas stations are just places to have a pee and buy snacks.

    • @treelineresearch3387
      @treelineresearch3387 Před 2 lety +1

      ...as long as you're not going more than 300 miles (or less, depending on temp and battery wear).

    • @universeisundernoobligatio3283
      @universeisundernoobligatio3283 Před 2 lety +3

      @@treelineresearch3387
      Long distance travel is easy drive for 2 to 3 hours charge foe 15 to 20 minutes, repeat as necessary. The bladder limit is my range governor.

    • @treelineresearch3387
      @treelineresearch3387 Před 2 lety +6

      @@universeisundernoobligatio3283 I think we can just admit batteries are still quite sub-optimal for road trips, at least in the States where everything is much farther than say Europe. Fine for commuting tho. The main reason I don't have any interest in electric yet is they're still going for a "disposable car" model. Maybe that will change as there are more of them around, but the industry itself really loves the disposable unfixable aspect.

    • @universeisundernoobligatio3283
      @universeisundernoobligatio3283 Před 2 lety +3

      @@treelineresearch3387
      Friends drove in February in a Model 3 ( winter in Canada) from Vancouver to Halifax 6,300km in 72hours 32 minutes, long distance travel in the cold was not a problem.

    • @universeisundernoobligatio3283
      @universeisundernoobligatio3283 Před 2 lety +3

      @@treelineresearch3387
      Both brother's are mechanics and they complain endlessly about the ICE cars having 100k life and companies making the difficult to repair "disposable car" .

  • @Sonic_Shroom
    @Sonic_Shroom Před 2 lety

    Neat. Good implementation of KISS.

  • @cargoudel
    @cargoudel Před 2 lety

    We open sourced a version of SAE J3068 at the University of Delaware. It’s the new North American standard for three-phase AC charging (using mennekes but higher voltage and current) and new digital control pilot called LIN-CP. It’s targeted for a medium and heavy duty use.

  • @anthonydyer3939
    @anthonydyer3939 Před 2 lety

    I think the two relays in series are for independent control and safety. So I guess one relay will be your PEN / earth fault isolator. The other relay will be for regular control functions.
    I work on programmable safety systems in the process industry. We often have two valves in series on a particular pipe. One will be for process control, and the other is a safety shutdown valve which intervenes if pressure / level etc is outside allowed limits. Safety systems are always independently controlled in case of a failure on your process control system.

  • @kgsalvage6306
    @kgsalvage6306 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Dave! USA

  • @SupremeRuleroftheWorld

    i love to see how well it can control (and how fast!) the charge current based on the solar.

  • @Razor2048
    @Razor2048 Před 2 lety +2

    I wonder can't they design a system to determine the limits of the line, e.g., base it on voltage drop or any other measurement to determine what the wiring can handle just in case someone does something like put a 30 amp charger on a 20 amp circuit but leaves the device set to 30 amps?

    • @andrewt9204
      @andrewt9204 Před 2 lety +1

      I think there would be too many variables for voltage drop, unless you set it really high I suppose, but that could easily be above the current rating limit. For example, dropping 5 volts on 100' of 30a wire is probably fine as that's a lot of length to absorb the heat, but if you had 5 volts of drop on 10' of wire, that could be a sign of an issue.
      I get about 2-4 volts of drop when charging my car, and I only charge at 23 amps out the of circuit's max of 60 peak, 48 continuous (6 AWG copper). And I don't have far runs. The 200 amp service entry only runs 8 feet from the meter to panel, and only another 13' from the panel to EVSE. Cranking up charging to the max 40 amps of the EVSE, I usually get near 6 volts of drop. Which is a lot so I never charge that high. Everything gets warm and the car's cooling circuit kicks on a lot, which is all wasted energy. Also the voltage to my house can fluctuate ~10 volts throughout the day, so it would have to measure the voltage at the panel somehow to know what the drop between panel and EVSE is.
      If the EVSE has NEMA plug, the max current should already be set from the factory, and the wiring in the house should already be up to code for that receptacle. If it's a hard wired EVSE, then more likely it's going to be installed by a licensed electrician or by a knowledgeable owner who knows what they're doing and gets it inspected by an official.
      It's an interesting thought though. Perhaps another way to have a safety like that is to have temp sensors on the line side terminal block and ambient air of the EVSE. If you've undersized the wiring, the temp difference between the block and ambient would reach a certain threshold and start to limit the current.
      I know the Tesla portable EVSE has a temp sensor in the plug head to throttle current if it gets too warm from a loose fitting or overloaded receptacle. At least the US versions do.

  • @groovejet33
    @groovejet33 Před 2 lety +3

    Hi Dave?
    So this year my brother bought a VW Transporter electric van. He loves it, but "It/They!" have a fault where maximun mileage is only 50miles. It should be around 80-90. Also our area doesnt have a VW Auto electrician. VW said they might load his van on a truck and take it elsewhere in UK to look at.
    He even has to remove terminals from lead 12v battery , to reset stuff, or charger sometimes doesnt work when at home.
    Also maximun charge per hour is only 3-4 miles per hour. What rubbish

  • @vahagnmelikyan2906
    @vahagnmelikyan2906 Před 7 měsíci

    Can this be connected to solar panel with inverter? Or it will draw too much amps and drop the voltage ?

  • @666Tomato666
    @666Tomato666 Před 2 lety +5

    The Oz has the same BS as the NA with single phase even to detached homes?! Man, EU really lucked out on the electric infrastructure with even large apartments getting 3 phase power.

    • @--Nath--
      @--Nath-- Před 2 lety +1

      You can get it (3 phase), but it costs more and unless you're wanting to weld - not many would bother spending the extra.

    • @666Tomato666
      @666Tomato666 Před 2 lety +2

      @@--Nath-- Yeah, I know you _can_ get it, my point that it's standard to get 3 phase power, even in apartments in EU.
      And no, it's not just welding: EVs benefit from it. Water heaters, electric cookers, cloths driers...

    • @otm646
      @otm646 Před 2 lety

      Three phase in a North American home is completely overkill, I work in industry I deal with three phase all the time. Up until this point (EV charging) there have been no loads in your home that required 3 phase. In the early 70's some monster air conditioners or three phase, that's about it. Now everything is split into multiple zones and is more efficient because of it.

    • @djscrizzle
      @djscrizzle Před 2 lety

      @@otm646 As an example, many homes in Phoenix have 240v hi-leg delta feeding them, just for the large A/Cs that are present.

  • @jtveg
    @jtveg Před 2 lety

    Thanks for sharing Dave. :)

  • @ncot_tech
    @ncot_tech Před 2 lety

    All I got with my car was a type 2 cable. Had to buy my own 13A charger while waiting for the 7kw charger to be installed. I have a Podpoint brand one with tethered cable, it has a current clamp to monitor total load on the incoming supply so it doesn’t overload the supply wiring to the house.

  • @Plermpel
    @Plermpel Před rokem

    I can't find anywhere, what is on the communication pins of a DC charger do you maybe know that?

  • @randycarter2001
    @randycarter2001 Před 2 lety +1

    That is the same PIC processor I'm using my projects.

  • @WatIsLove
    @WatIsLove Před rokem

    I watched another video with a rolec charger and that one does not have a printed circuit board like this.. what is the difference between the hardware from both units i wonder?

  • @cargoudel
    @cargoudel Před 2 lety

    Passenger EVs love 240 split-phase, just the same as 230 single-phase.
    The IEC EV standards allow for a hot “neutral” terminal on the connector. Not just because of the USA and Japan, Belgium and Norway for example also have older installations with Delta 230 connected transformers (no neutral) and on those EVSE use two hots.

  • @corentinoger
    @corentinoger Před rokem

    I'm surprised how big it is, it's mostly full of air! I have a Wallbox Pulsar (32A-7kW), it would basically fit inside the Zappi's empty space!
    The WB inside is much denser and it has no screen or buttons, you have to use the phone app for everything.

  • @BaZe-dk9kh
    @BaZe-dk9kh Před 2 lety

    This is very interesting. Thanks 👍

  • @WesselLemmer
    @WesselLemmer Před 2 lety

    We use the mi energy controllers for water heating with excess solar. They work really well for that.

  • @wizpin
    @wizpin Před 2 lety +1

    arent these just very expensive for what they are?

  • @niceride
    @niceride Před 2 lety +1

    Dave, want to do failure analysis on a Tesla Model 3 PCS (Power Conversion System)? Car shipped with a bad PCS and was replaced under warranty. The replacement PCS starting to fail at ~100k miles so out of warranty and had that replaced this week. $1100usd part and half that again in labor. Will ship the removed PCS at my cost to anyone who can explore why these are failing for Tesla Model 3 owners.

  • @DoNotEatPoo
    @DoNotEatPoo Před 2 lety

    One standard test you should include is how it reacts to the penny/paperclip challenge.

  • @michael.a.covington
    @michael.a.covington Před 2 lety +6

    8:14 Does flying the flag upside down mean the same thing Down Under that it does here? :)

    • @Gayestskijumpever
      @Gayestskijumpever Před 2 lety +2

      I'm guessing it was done as a joke, the whole everything must be upside down in Australia thing.

    • @robbieaussievic
      @robbieaussievic Před 2 lety

      @@Gayestskijumpever .... Indeed, the curvature of 'SpaceTime' is inverted here. In fact, school curriculums still include Newtonian physics.

    • @user-yr1uq1qe6y
      @user-yr1uq1qe6y Před 2 lety

      It only looks upside down to us northern hemisphere creatures.

  • @dorhocyn3
    @dorhocyn3 Před 2 lety +1

    This solar detector is brilliant….
    Are they doing circuit pre-charging to reduce internal relay arcing.

  • @inompsum5007
    @inompsum5007 Před 2 lety

    cool product with nice set of features...

  • @aleksandrekalandadze1643

    little relay is commutating input ground cable to ground checking circuit. if check fails, microcontroller turns off the relay to remove 'ground' cable from the plug output ground

  • @johnrogers1423
    @johnrogers1423 Před rokem

    The wireless antenna is most likely to allow communicate with Myenergi's Hub. The kW from your solar panels will be limited by your inverter. I did a tutorial on how to fit a Tesla charging button to the Zappi charging plug. Theoretically speaking, if the resistor in the plug was changed from 220 ohms to 210 ohms would it be possible to draw 34 amps from the Zappi or would there be some other limitation? I note that the relays are limited to 35 amps.

  • @V3racious3
    @V3racious3 Před 2 lety

    Everytime Dave says "Old Dirt" it sounds like I'm watching a space based sci-fi film.

    • @PowerOn-
      @PowerOn- Před 2 lety

      That would be "old dart"

  • @catalinalb1722
    @catalinalb1722 Před rokem

    Great video!

  • @fabiobosco7545
    @fabiobosco7545 Před 2 lety

    The RCD module could be produced by third part company that remark for them. The reason may be that RCDs have high safety standards and require extensive safety testing. In support of this is the fact that the finish of the two PCBs is different.

  • @EdEditz
    @EdEditz Před 2 lety

    What is Pilot PWM?? I know PWM from my synthesizer, there it means Pulse Width Modulation. What it doing in a charger?

  • @slonbeskonechen8310
    @slonbeskonechen8310 Před 2 lety

    Could you, please tell me what sensor was used for the residual-current device (RCD)?

  • @dubbleUmaster
    @dubbleUmaster Před 2 lety

    Thanks, great video. I would like to see Open EVSE videos!

  • @PlanetCypher_
    @PlanetCypher_ Před 2 lety +1

    Due to chip shortages I know they had to pivot to a different micro processor, not sure if the one Dave has is the current version or previous version.

  • @Flygio
    @Flygio Před 2 lety

    Interesting!

  • @Merlinkatamari
    @Merlinkatamari Před 2 lety +1

    Final Fantasy Victory Fanfare :D

  • @suisse0a0
    @suisse0a0 Před 2 lety

    Wow in North America we pay 800$CAD just for a basic EVSE (read: no connectivity to anything except your car) and yours has so much features :O

  • @WernerBeroux
    @WernerBeroux Před 2 lety +1

    Holy crap $700‒1000 for 3 relay an ESP32 and a 555, okay and some EM clip for safety. Time to open source the design.

    • @PowerOn-
      @PowerOn- Před 2 lety

      Open evse. They are not that cheap either.

  • @Sonic_Shroom
    @Sonic_Shroom Před 2 lety

    How much did thy charge for that? I'm thinking of getting the Kia ev6.

  • @circuitdotlt
    @circuitdotlt Před 2 lety

    Now I understand why so many companies started producing their own charging points. Margins must be great, as it is not worth what they ask for it. Sadly, still very few good options out there. I chose zappi as well.