Yeah, looks like that's what I'll have to do. No BMW dealer within 90km so I'll do the replacement myself and then get it registered. Biggest problem may be getting the correct replacement battery. I appreciate you sharing your knowledge.
Don't bother registering the replacement battery. According to a couple of BMW i-certified mechanics in a different group, battery registration does nothing in an i3 but record the replacement date, battery type, and battery capacity which don't affect the 12 V battery charging protocol as occurs in BMW's ICE vehicles.MarkH said:Yeah, looks like that's what I'll have to do. No BMW dealer within 90km so I'll do the replacement myself and then get it registered. Biggest problem may be getting the correct replacement battery. I appreciate you sharing your knowledge.
I believe that AGM batteries are sealed with a pressure relief valve on each cell. A properly-functioning AGM battery cell shouldn't produce so much internal pressure that its pressure relief valve opens. However, when a problem that produces gas pressure occurs, the pressure relief valve should open to prevent the battery case from cracking, maybe somewhat explosively. That's when it would be best to vent flammable hydrogen gas away from inside the frunk which the standard vent tube does. However, the frunk isn't sealed, and there are fewer ignition sources in the frunk than in an Internal combustion engine compartment, so I think the fire or explosion risk would be minimal. I've read reports of i3 owners installing this type of battery with no reported problems.MarkH said:I have found some AGM batteries of 20aH and similar dimensions, but none have the breather tube.
How important is that?
True, but it would be under pressure when vented, so that would force the hydrogen to flow downward.MarkH said:Hydrogen is lighter than air, but the venting tube heads downwards :?
I'm surprised that a U.S. manufacturer would be the source 12 V batteries for i3's sold in New Zealand. I'm pretty certain that the 12 V batteries in European i3's aren't supplied by East Penn Manufacturing.MarkH said:It's the East Penn Manufacturing Co.
The HV battery's charge level shouldn't drop more than 1%/month while your i3 is parked. 12 V is required to close the HV battery's main contactor, so without 12 V, the HV battery is isolated and would only self-discharge.MarkH said:The voltage on the old battery was <1V and I'm now concerned at the time that the HV might be sitting at a very low charge while I wait for a replacement.
The car was imported into NZ from the UK. I got the battery manufacturer off the old battery that is now out of the vehicle.MarkH wrote: ↑
Mon Apr 05, 2021 11:17 am
It's the East Penn Manufacturing Co.
MarkH wrote: ↑I'm surprised that a U.S. manufacturer would be the source 12 V batteries for i3's sold in New Zealand. I'm pretty certain that the 12 V batteries in European i3's aren't supplied by East Penn Manufacturing.
alohart said:The HV battery's charge level shouldn't drop more than 1%/month while your i3 is parked. 12 V is required to close the HV battery's main contactor, so without 12 V, the HV battery is isolated and would only self-discharge.MarkH said:The voltage on the old battery was <1V and I'm now concerned at the time that the HV might be sitting at a very low charge while I wait for a replacement.
Of course, if its charge was < 10% when your 12 V battery failed, it would be good to install a replacement 12 V battery ASAP.
There is little evidence that the HV battery pack charges the 12 V battery when an i3 is parked unless the HV battery is being actively charged or preconditioning is occurring, so I think your HV battery pack will be OK.MarkH said:No, the HV was sitting at 43% when I parked it but everything was dead in the morning, so I don't know how much trying to charge the 12V would have drained it before it finally fell over.
Some other i3 owners have reported similar problems. The previous battery's low voltage could have resulted in several DTC's being set. Until these are cleared, an i3 might not function normally. Some have reported that the DTC's cleared while their i3's slept overnight. Others reported needing to clear the DTC's with an OBD reader. BimmerCode doesn't have this capability but BimmerLink does. BimmerLink can use your VPeake ODB device.MarkH said:When I try to select Forward, Neutral or Reverse - nothing happens.
Help please. Clearly the car is not driveable to the nearest agent.
Is there any "reset" protocol I have missed?
I do have a VPeake ODB device and BimmerCode loaded on my phone.
Can I use that to check what might be wrong?
Good that you're back on the road! The HV disconnect can be tricky. I once thought that I had closed it but apparently hadn't quite. The resulting symptoms were similar to yours. Pushing the HV plug more firmly into its receptacle fixed the problem.MarkH said:Crossed your post. Seems DTC 's not the problem.
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