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Block heater analysis

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Technical Discussion' started by bwilson4web, Dec 20, 2007.

  1. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    We had a strong cold front come through the other day and overnight, the temperatures dropped to 25F (-4C). So at midnight, I plugged in my block and pan heaters. Eight hours later, the ICE started at 34C, MG1 at 31C and MG2 at 28C. That morning I got 53.4 MPG @32F (0C) after 8 hours of engine block and transaxle pan heating. This is my typical summer time MPG.

    The following day with only 30C (-1C), I was able monitor the block heater warm-up performance and the complete warm-up and morning commute:

    time ICE MG1 MG2 W
    6:48 3 3 3 384
    6:55 10 3 3 377
    7:14 19 5 3 376
    7:47 26 8 3 370
    8:10 29 10 4 375
    8:31 31 11 5 375
    8:34 51 16 8 ICE
    8:36 65 19 9 ICE
    9:04 84 39 29 ICE

    50.1 MPG w/o transaxle oil pan heater

    I was able to refine a heat transfer formula to calculate the coolant temperature as a function of time:

    %_temp = 1 - e**(-r(t**k)))

    %_temp - percentage of temperature change, in my case 35C
    e - natural log
    r - constant derived from materials
    k - constant derived from shape
    t - time in days (aka., excel time format)

    For those used to using excel, the formula looks like:

    =(1-(EXP(-1*Q$1*POWER(L3,Q$2))))

    Q$1 - r, 11.000 for my NHW11
    L3 - t, in excel format, 1.0000 = 1 day
    Q$2 - k, 0.725 for my NHW11

    Using this formula derived from experimental data, we get the following warm-up table:

    hh:mm - % - dTemp
    0:30 - 49% - 17C
    1:00 - 67% - 23C
    2:00 - 84% - 29C
    3:00 - 91% - 32C
    . . .
    8:00 - 99% - 35C

    So what use is this table?

    It lets us determine how long my NHW11 block heater should run before reaching the point where further heating has a diminishing effect. Off hand, one hour looks like a pretty good return on electric energy used. Even two hours is OK. But anything beyond two hours is going to use a lot of electricity for little rise in temperature.

    Now if one had a chart that showed the effect of cold temperature on engine warm-up, one could then determine how much heat is really needed to achieve warmer temperature milage. Say a chart that shows how many miles it takes to achieve 70C coolant temperature as a function of outside temperature:
    [​IMG]

    Near as I can tell, 40F (5C), is a threshold temperature. From 40F and above, my warm-up protocol of 25 miles per hour with maximum use of "N" seems fairly effective. Once the temperature goes below 40F, the amount of block heater time needed to bring it up to 40F can be easily calculated.

    What this means is if the morning temperature is 40F (5C) or above, I can just use my normal warm-up protocol. Since I'm usually up for at least an hour before leaving for work, if it is 40F or below, it makes sense to slip on something and plug in my Prius.

    One wild card is the effect of the transaxle heater. Unfortunately the untimely pan heater failure (my poor installation) will defer that until I can get it replaced. The replacement should be here the end of December with enough time to quantify the transaxle pan heater effect before the cold weather is gone.

    Bob Wilson
     
  2. gazz

    gazz Member

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    Bob what do mean by your normal warm up procedure, or can you point me in the right direction.

    I've got a block heater, but it is the one strapped to the back of the block.

    Thanks
    Gary
     
  3. Ichabod

    Ichabod Artist In Residence

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    Very interesting. Care to venture any guesses on correlation to NHW20? Plenty of people with NHW20's suggest a 3 hour pre-heat, but I'm not sure if the blocks are significantly different in size/shape/materials.
     
  4. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Hi Gary,
    I have a North American, NHW11, and it is hobbled by a kludged, hydrocarbon capture system. This requires the ICE coolant in our units to reach 70C before full hybrid operation can begin. The Asian and European NHW11s and the NHW20s have a lower limit. Ken@Japan and I had collaborated on these studies but I don't have hard data on the transition temperature.

    Because of our hobbled North American, NHW11s, I do the following until the coolant reaches 70C:
    • speeds <= 25 mph - by cutting through my neighborhood, I can drive at slower speeds without other drivers stacking up behind me. In fact my speeds are in the range of 18-27 mph.
    • "N" coast - it turns out that the engine fuel consumption at idle in "D" is about twice the consumption in "N". By shifting into "N" at every opportunity, I can get the MPG during the warm-up to 25-35 MPG when the coolant reaches 70C. This usually occurs in less than 2 miles.
    • NOTE: the transfer of heat from the exhaust is a function of geometry, not the amount of fuel burned. The 600C exhaust temperature does not instantly permeate the block but is limited by the thermal conductivity of aluminum and coolant.
    I would suggest getting some measurements of your configuration. In particular, if you can read out the engine block thermistor value and the heater power drain (the real drain including any extension cord.) Do a controlled test measuring the values at say minutes: 5, 10, 20, 30, 1 hr, 1.5 hr, 2 hr, 3 hr and 8 hr. With these values (see my earlier list,) we can then put the points in a spreadsheet and find the respective "r" and "k" values that will 'fit the curve.'

    Bob Wilson
     
  5. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    We have identical engines and heaters but I may have a longer, higher resistance extension cord. What this means is my numbers should be on the 'long side' or conservative on how long the block heater is needed. The power consumed really needs to be measured (if we're going to get accurate cost model for using a block heater.)

    Understand that we may be talking only a couple of cents. My electricity rates are $.07/ kw-hr and my configuration is using ~375W. We're looking at about $.02/hr to run my heater. Also, I have a well defined, minimum fuel burn warm-up cycle, which is especially important when away from a power outlet.

    To accurately answer these questions, we need to see some detailed warm-up studies of the North American NHW20 Prius to find out when they really can enter S4, the final warm-up stage. Then we need to see studies about driving strategies that minimize the fuel burn during this warm-up phase. The thermos tank in the North American Prius means Ken@Japan's data, excellent that it is, may not apply directly.

    Bob Wilson
     
  6. gazz

    gazz Member

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    Thanks,

    The transition to get stage 4 is 70C (the point it will shut off below 35mph). My trip has very few stops so I have got a slight down hill slope that I can pull over to force stage 4. It makes the rest of the trip easier. I am very interested in cold weather driving. I am down 15mpg on my summer mpg (75 to 60) I use a block heater but am struggling to understand the cause. Drove to work this morning 16 miles had a perfect drive (traffic ok, glided in all the right places, bit of EV) and still only got 62mpg in the summer that would be 78mpg possibly. Temp was 0C, am very careful of heater use.

    Block heater this morning got WT to 20C, about 2hrs of heat.

    Do need to recheck tire pressure, I run at 42/44, does the cold allow you to go a bit higher as there must be a less of an increase due to heat.

    All info will help.

    Thanks Gary.
     
  7. OldYogi

    OldYogi New Member

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    Bob,
    If I follow your numbers, at roughly 30F outside, your EBH produced startup coolant temperature of about 92F. Is that correct? That is roughly what my ScanGauge shows, but I was beginning to wonder if the EBH was really working, since I seem to have had a very similar reading from the ScanGauge when I started up this evening, but the EBH hadn't been plugged in.

    In general, with the EBH how much warmer than ambient temperture at startup is the coolant?