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HV Battery Fan doesn't turn on

Discussion in 'Generation 1 Prius Discussion' started by BugBear, Sep 13, 2012.

  1. BugBear

    BugBear Junior Member

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    I've been a lurker here for many many years and finally decided to join.

    So I bought a '02 Prius that had a completely bad traction battery, I rebuilt it and it seemed to work ok, I let it sit turned on for at least 6 hours for two days and no error codes or anything popped up. Then I got the exclamation with a triangle but when I read the code there was nothing there so I cleared the codes and let it sit turned on for a day and I didn't get any codes. I then took it for a 10 minute spin on the freeway everything seemed perfect. I later checked the trunk because the car smelt like something was burnt and behold there was burnt stuff on the sides of the battery. I opened it up and two cells on the right were partially melted and then 6 on the left.

    I rebuilt it again and put it in and noticed that the battery fan doesn't turn on. I've tried changing the battery ecu, the fan relay. I've checked the fan by hooking it up directly to the 12v battery and it worked, I later swapped the fan out from my other prius just in case and still nothing.

    Not sure where to go from here as there are no error codes. Next thing is to swap out the HV battery completely from my other car and see if that works but it'll put me out of a car for a bit.

    Any suggestions on what to do are greatly appreciated.



    Side note I've rebuilt 3 batteries already so it wasn't my first time.
     

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    Bob-W8RH likes this.
  2. chaps

    chaps Junior Member

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    Those pics look scary...Have you checked for any loose connection in the power cable to the fan?May be the power cable got snapped when doing the first rebuild.
     
  3. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    I think you dodged a bullet. The two photos show evidence of a traction battery short to the case on the ECU end, trunk-side. The smoke deposits suggests the gasses escaped out the connector interface on the ECU side. Your description also suggests another short on the other side.
    • Is it possible the traction battery case was loose?
    • Could you speculate on how the internal surface of the traction battery case might have contacted the buss bar?
    • Do you have photos of the interior of the cover that might show arc spots?
    • Do you have photos of the right edge?
    • Did you have a book or manual guide on how to rebuild the pack?
    I see significant damage to the modules on the left and the buss bar. Could you describe what parts were replaced?
    Given the hot gasses that exited the connector interface, I am speculating that the wire(s) feeding the battery fan may be broken or a connector damaged. With a fan relay involved, both the energizer wiring as well as the relay operated circuit needs to be traced. However, I find the fan only comes on when the thermistors indicate the battery is too warm. Can you read out all four thermistor values?

    I might rig up a pot connected to one or more thermistors and lower the resistance, spoofing higher temperatures, to see if the ECU activates the relay.
    I know the temptation but this is very risky and could lead to two failed vehicles. I would recommend continue trying to find out if the relay energizer circuit is 'open' or the 'fan' circuit is open. I know how heavy the battery assembly is but I would recommend putting it on the bench and carefully testing.
    A pilot, I read aviation accident reports and some of those involve pilots with thousands of hours. It is very easy, especially when working alone, to miss something that another pair of eyes might see.

    I have seen only one other traction battery fire in Australia. The car had been sitting in the driveway and then caught fire. The photos clearly showed the ECU end but on the cabin side was involved. So now I'm wondering if case clearance might be involved in both yours and the Australian case.

    At the time, I speculated that some critter might have gotten in via the vent and initiated the arc to the case. But now I'm beginning to wonder if the case itself might have somehow deformed and led to the initial short.

    I'm going to send a not to David Taylor at ReInVolt and ask if he might have any ideas. David rebuilds traction battery packs using new modules and may have some ideas. It would also help if the folks at Lucious Garage might take a peek.

    Thank you for sharing! It is never fun to bring something 'not good' for public viewing but it is also how we learn what works and doesn't work.

    Bob Wilson
     
  4. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Bob,

    I see definite evidence of very local high temperature, but I'm wondering what specific features in the photos indicate 'short' to you. I'm not necessarily disagreeing, it's just if there are particular visible features that are characteristic of short I'd like to learn how to spot them.

    My first reaction was to wonder if there was somehow excessive resistance at the battery terminal to busbar connections in that area (corroded busbars, mistorqued nuts, something of that nature). Had there been total connection resistance adding up to even a quarter ohm in that area, during a 60-amp acceleration or regen nearly a kilowatt of heating would happen there, easily melting the bus covers as seen in short order and probably making some sooty vapor too. Whether short or IIR heating, it was probably quick enough and local enough to have had little effect measured at the thermistors in the central module wells ... and there's no way that whether the fan ran or not would have made a difference with the amount of local heating seen.

    -Chap
     
  5. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    The soot was the first clue but the metal 'beads' in the area of the second module are the 'tell' of an arc event. Welders throw them off.

    I wouldn't rule that out either. But I also noticed what appears to be pine needles on the far side of the battery assembly. They get into everything and a little moisture and I could see one 'cooking' to become an arc source.
    I've put the fan as a separate problem and possibly due to the current pack being at room temperature. If an OBD scanner shows them as being hot, the ECU should command fan operation. But I suspect they are just 'too cold' to command fan operation.

    Bob Wilson
     
  6. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    wow this is advanced expert stuff...would it help if he used SCANgauge? Obviously there must be a thermocouple somewhere that relays battery temp to the fan to get it going when needed.
     
  7. jdcollins5

    jdcollins5 Senior Member

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    The Gen III HV battery fan is controlled by the battery temps. The fan does not run until the temp gets about 95F and then goes through 6 different speed steps based on elevated temps.

    My guess would be that the Gen I's would be somewhat similar.
     
  8. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    There are four thermistors: three in module wells and one on the air duct. Yes, the NHW11 battery fan is temperature operated.

    Bob Wilson
     
  9. BugBear

    BugBear Junior Member

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    I screwed in the cover completely and had the seats up as it felt like it was working so it couldn't have been a loose case.

    No clue how it could have made contact.

    I've attached photos of the interior side of cover and the right edge.

    Um "rebuilt" might be light. I took another battery case and another ecu and put in the good battery cells from the burnt battery I have some good battery cells around so I replaced the bad ones from burnt case with those.





    I've checked the wire from the relay to the connector on the ecu and it was good as well as the ground wire to body.

    The energizer wiring is good I've taken out the relay and put a voltmeter to them and have gotten 11.9V.


    This is where I see the problem at the moment:

    The relay circut however was around 11V on the good prius but only 2.9V on the burnt one (taking out relay and putting voltmeter at connectors).
    Also on the good prius the relay triggers right when you put the car into the 'ON' position where the burnt prius relay never gets triggered (most likely due to the lack of voltage triggering the relay).



    Haven't tried spoofing higher temperatures yet but It seems like the relay is triggered the moment you put the car in the ON position so even if the temperature is high in the battery the relay isn't triggered and it won't spin the fan? Either that or I'm missing something. I think I'll try the spoofing thing next.. I'm thinking I can just spoof the air duct one?

    Not quite sure how to read out the thermistor values.



    Thanks so much! I only mentioned the that I've done 3 batteries to show that I'm not completely new to this.



    I cleaned all the busbar things before installing it and used a cordless drill (set to the correct torque) to put on the nuts.

    My first guess was heat also.




    The pine needles in the initial picture are actually some stick/branch thing that's actually a couple feet away from the battery in the picture. =D sorry for the confusion.
    The pine needles in the new picture is from the case sitting out in the back yard.
     

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  10. BugBear

    BugBear Junior Member

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    Hey so I took a blow dryer fan and took out one temperature sensor and blew hot air on it and then the relay clicked and the fan started going.
    So i'm not sure what caused the initial issue.

    Is it possible to monitor the temperature sensors values as I'm driving? would like to test drive it and see if it heats up too much.
     
  11. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Well I don't see cover involvement either. Now the buss bar has copper tabs in an orange plastic, flexible assembly. I've seen some photos showing a 'fancy' metal strip on some. I wonder if that metal strip might have been the arc path?

    You've really got me scratching my head.

    Bob Wilson
     
  12. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    ...there is something called SCANgauge that the folks here use to get that type of data data, but I do not have one and not sure if it works for Gen-1
     
  13. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    It works great with the Gen-1. You have to add XGAUGE definitions but thanks to "vincent1449p" we have a fairly complete set of codes (see the last post in the sticky.)

    Bob Wilson