Charging problem with chevy Bolt.
Posted: Fri Jun 25, 2021 7:04 pm
Hello.
I’m having a issue charging my chevy bolt EV
It seems to be related to the cleanliness of my sine wave.
I have less trouble with the car erroring out if there are more loads already present on the inverter. I recently went from two inverters to three and now the problem is impossible to overcome, whereas with two it sometimes worked for a while if I turned on the oven for a few min
It’s not related to surge, the car doesn’t make a surge
They are trace sw5548 inverters
I have it configured where the outer ones make split phase and the middle one makes 120v
All my 120v loads are on the middle
All my 240v loads are on the outters
I’ve tried capacitors, resistors, isolation transformer, even a 400$ noise filter on the line, but nothing aside from turning on all the other 240v loads seems to help.
My conclusion is that there is a anomaly in the sine that diminishes with more load
My open evse gives an error for a gfci and open ground
But I disabled that error in the configuration screen
I have also verified that there isn’t actually a real problem with the ground, it’s a false detection. Neutral and ground are bonded and a ground rod is present all connections are tight.
Because there are many loads on the 120v I have been able to charge on the 120v inverter but it takes 3-4 days and is a major pain.
I’m assuming the car is having the same error with a ground but I am not recieving any detailed error information. Or it just doesn’t like the sine wave.
I used to have this problem running my 500e on one of these inverters (separately, outside of the house) and I could fix it by tying case to neutral and putting a 8uf capacitor across neutral and line.
Those tricks have no effect anymore on the bolt
My friend came over the other day and plugged his tesla in
It would charge fine on the 240 so long as it didn’t try to draw more than about 20-24a and I had the gfci and ground detection disabled on the open evse
These inverters work fine for everything else in the house, I do not want to replace them
I want to disable the problem at the vehicle, the house is set up correctly, the car just doesn’t like it how do I fix the car it’s self or filter out the problem that the car doesn’t like?
I’m having a issue charging my chevy bolt EV
It seems to be related to the cleanliness of my sine wave.
I have less trouble with the car erroring out if there are more loads already present on the inverter. I recently went from two inverters to three and now the problem is impossible to overcome, whereas with two it sometimes worked for a while if I turned on the oven for a few min
It’s not related to surge, the car doesn’t make a surge
They are trace sw5548 inverters
I have it configured where the outer ones make split phase and the middle one makes 120v
All my 120v loads are on the middle
All my 240v loads are on the outters
I’ve tried capacitors, resistors, isolation transformer, even a 400$ noise filter on the line, but nothing aside from turning on all the other 240v loads seems to help.
My conclusion is that there is a anomaly in the sine that diminishes with more load
My open evse gives an error for a gfci and open ground
But I disabled that error in the configuration screen
I have also verified that there isn’t actually a real problem with the ground, it’s a false detection. Neutral and ground are bonded and a ground rod is present all connections are tight.
Because there are many loads on the 120v I have been able to charge on the 120v inverter but it takes 3-4 days and is a major pain.
I’m assuming the car is having the same error with a ground but I am not recieving any detailed error information. Or it just doesn’t like the sine wave.
I used to have this problem running my 500e on one of these inverters (separately, outside of the house) and I could fix it by tying case to neutral and putting a 8uf capacitor across neutral and line.
Those tricks have no effect anymore on the bolt
My friend came over the other day and plugged his tesla in
It would charge fine on the 240 so long as it didn’t try to draw more than about 20-24a and I had the gfci and ground detection disabled on the open evse
These inverters work fine for everything else in the house, I do not want to replace them
I want to disable the problem at the vehicle, the house is set up correctly, the car just doesn’t like it how do I fix the car it’s self or filter out the problem that the car doesn’t like?