I was surprised not to find anything in the Owner's Manual about fuses. So when I looked at the schematic, I see an NPN transistor symbol. This makes sense for computer control circuits but it could also with a little 'glue logic' be a current limiter, the wire protecting fuse or circuit breaker protection. I didn't see anything in the manuals giving me the details.alohart said:Eleven chapters of the BMW i training manual can be found at here. Missing are the cover page, 00_ST1403a Cover.pdf, and chapter 2, 02_Handling BMW i Vehicles.pdf, which would probably be interesting. Anyone know where these could be found?
Unfortunately, unlike Honda (our Insight) and Mitsubishi (our former i-MiEV), BMW apparently doesn't make its i3 workshop manuals available for purchase.
There are fuses because some owners have temporarily unplugged a fuse to force the mobile phone transceiver to reboot. The fuses might be described as outlined in this thread.bwilson4web said:I was surprised not to find anything in the Owner's Manual about fuses.
As you are probably learning, the i3 Owner's Manual is a pretty poor translation from German, seems to cover all markets, and is not very comprehensive. The above description probably applies to the EVSE included with i3's in German markets and maybe all markets with 230 v. residential power.bwilson4web said:"can be used up to a current level of 16 A or up to a carging power 3.7 kW." (pp. 94)
3700W/16A = 231.25V
What this suggests is if I change the plug to work with our unused, electric dryer circuit, this unit might easily (and for a low cost) give a reasonably fast charge rate. Has anyone tried the experiment, replacing the 120 VAC feed with a 208/240 VAC?
Hummm, I'm not thrilled about sitting in the car for a long time to read it. I was thinking it might be more of a reference. Regardless, time to try it out.alohart said:Apparently the Owner's Manual in iDrive is tailored to the options delivered with one's car in one's market.
I recall reading an owner's report that the i3's maximum L1 charging current is ~30A if one has an EVSE that can deliver 30A. The L1 EVSE included with 2014 and early 2015 North American (NA) i3's is limited to 12A with later versions limited to 10A, regardless of the capacity of the 120V circuit into which it is plugged. Even if the NA i3's L1 EVSE is actually capable of L2 charging at 208/240V (still to be proven, AFAIK), it is almost certainly limited to either 10A or 12A.bwilson4web said:Properly grounded, mechanically affixed, and I can let the i3 run at maximum, L1 rate, 15A vs 10A.
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