The grid charger mock-up modified, to accommodate the cable to the front panel, and to add a circuit board for mounting the controller.
Monday, May 28, 2018
Sunday, May 27, 2018
Saturday, May 26, 2018
Yet another Honda Insight grid charger build
These are my own build notes for a grid charger design by Mike Dabrowski. If you are looking to build one for yourself, check out his site at 99mpg.com, or visit insightcentral.net. I am building mine according to this block diagram: http://99mpg.com/Data/resources/downloads/gridchargerstuff/basicgridchargerv1.pdf These are my build notes.
I am building mine into an old cable TV set top box. Here's the main board from the box:
I decided to mount the power supplies on the box's main circuit board so that I can wire things easily and then drop the whole thing into the chassis. That meant unsoldering some components and melting off the rest with a heat gun:
I am building mine into an old cable TV set top box. Here's the main board from the box:
I decided to mount the power supplies on the box's main circuit board so that I can wire things easily and then drop the whole thing into the chassis. That meant unsoldering some components and melting off the rest with a heat gun:
I had to unsolder these through-hole components. They will go into my go-kit. |
These parts came off with the heat gun. I eventually discovered that some of the through-hole parts could be removed this way. There are many itty bitty surface mount parts mixed in there. |
I decided to see if I could reuse the power supply in the set top box. It has many outputs, but I'm only interested in +5V. Sadly, it had no +12V output to drive the Insight's cooling fans, and I was not inclined to change the voltage of one of the other outputs.
This circuit was actually pretty easy to follow. |
It needed a load across the 3.4V output and a 150 ohm and 100 ohm power resistor in parallel did the trick. There is no reason for them being different values except that they were the first two resistors I found in the junk box.
Don't mount resistors like this. They will break off, short out and cause fires. |
A mock-up of the power supplies as they will be mounted. It remains to be seen if a cooling fan will be needed.
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