Thursday, November 18, 2010

Broken Belt and Proper Tension

Back in April 2010 I was driving home from work and as I came to an intersection to make a right turn I noticed what looked like a self taping sheet metal screw in the middle of the lane. As any three wheeled car driver has learned it is important to remember there is a wheel in the center of your track. I remember thinking, "I hope I missed that. If I hit it just right it give me a flat tire." As I turned the corner and accelerated up over the bridge I heard a thunk, thunk, thunk sound that seemed to be in sync with the tire rotation. I thought that maybe the screw had stuck in the tire and had caused it to bulge out or something. I thought that maybe I could just make it the 2.5 miles and 450 feet increase in elevation to get home and see what was the issue. As I continued along I found that the sound was louder under load than when lightly loaded. Even then it continued to get louder the closer I got to home. I thought maybe the tire was losing air. When I got home I couldn't see any thing wrong so I jacked up the rear and turned the rear tire. Below is what I found.

A tear in the belt all the way to the middle. It looked like the center string was not severed but the rest were.
As you can see the belt lifted quite away off the pulley. I think that I was saved by the fact that the belt was on the drive pulley a short time so didn't have a chance to slide off and that the rear wheel pulley was large enough that the belt didn't slide off.

When I took the belt into the local Applied.com store to pickup a replacement W-1280 belt the man who helped me said that it was very likely that the screw I saw got caught in the belt and tore it. Click the link to go right to the catalog page with the belt the Gizmo uses. I'm fortunate enough to have one of their stores right in town. The belts are not cheap but spending $95 for a belt rather than the retail of $130 I was happy. Maybe that is why there is retail pricing. It is so you feel great getting a deal when you pay less. In addition to the belt I asked about a tension measuring tool. The one they listed was a frequency measuring device and I didn't want to spend several hundred dollars for one so I asked about one which uses belt deflection. The guy who helped me called their supply place in Portland, OR and found out they had one for about $20 so I ordered it too. The next day I picked them up and was ready to replace the belt.

For those of you who have had the rear wheel off your Gizmo it takes quite a bit to get there. The tail piece is removed, next the rear wheel, then the e-brake, next the e-brake disk off the motor, then the belt shroud. Finally the bolts holding the motor on both the brush end and drive end have to be loosened, then the tensioning screw can be backed off allowing the belt to be removed. When installing the process is reversed. The problem is that if the belt isn't tight enough it will slip and most of this long process has to be repeated. When you think you have it things go great until it rains and you find out the belt slips again. Having the tensioner eliminates all of this. If the belt is too tight it will break sooner and wear out the bearings in the motor and wheel early so it is important to have the optimum tension.

I didn't relish doing the all the geometry calculations or hoping my measurements were right so I went looking for software that would tell me the proper tension for my setup. I found that GoodYear had MaximizerPro available on their website to do just what I wanted. I discovered that I could enter the two pulley sizes I had and have it force them to the proper spacing. I believe I had to enter what the power load was so I entered 15Hp which may be low given the potential on full acceleration and the fact that electric motors can put out a much higher horse power value than they are rated at but this value seems to work. The software then showed a Drive Layout with lots of information. A screen capture of the results is below.

Even though the picture above shows all relevant information it is nice to see drawn out exactly how the tension is figured and measured. I used a piece of 1/4" by 3/4" aluminum bar as my straight edge and pressed the tension meter in the center until it read 15Lbf at a deflection of 6.2mm. Yes you read that right. I think it is strange to mix systems of measurement but that is how it is done. I don't know why they don't just use Newtons and mm but this works.

I decided to go out and get a picture of the tension tester with my iPhone 4. I've found the HDR setting on the camera to be very useful for photos like this because it brings out the shadows much better and I don't have to do much editing later.

Here is the Industrial V-Belt Tension Tester I use on my Eagle belts. The end with the rubber cap is what you grab with your hand. The other end has a small short stub which pokes slightly into the belt surface so it doesn't slip. It works just fine for my application.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Motor Cooling Blower

It has been way too long since I posted something so I thought it is time to try to catch up. Since I installed the LiFePO4 battery pack I knew it would be quite easy to exceed the 1-hour rating of the motor and over heat it. I decided to figure out how to get a cooling blower mounted and then just do it!

I had to make a shroud for the brush end of the motor. I picked up a piece of SS sheet metal from a local sheet metal shop. They cut off a strip the width I needed. It was enough to make 2 or three shrouds. I use a piece of aluminum flashing to cut out a pattern since it is easy to cut. I used this to make the SS version. I had to do this twice because I had to move the hose attachment from the top to the back of the motor. There wasn't enough clearance otherwise. The person I had make the hose attachment made it a little bigger than I was expecting but then what do you expect from a non-sheet metal worker? A one-off is much harder than something that will be made by the 1000s.

I picked up a sheet of 1/4" 6061 aluminum and cut out a piece to fit the end of the motor. I included a little extension to the bottom to accommodate mounting the blower. I had to shim the plate out from the motor to clear the shaft and housing so I used a hole saw and cut out some washers from the 1/4" sheet. I then used a piece of 1/16" aluminum to shim the bottom and left bolts to compensate for the motor support under the top and right bolts. You can see the plate below with 4 holes drilled and tapped to mount the blower motor.


The shims are visible in the picture below. The black tape around the inlet is actually rubber insulation tape which sticks to itself when it is clean. I used this to make the pipe a little larger and provide a little sealing ability. It ends up that it holds extremely well. I've tried to remove the pipe and can't get it off. Maybe the rubber melted a little, I don't know.


I picked up some aluminum flex pipe from the local wood and pellet stove shop. I wanted something which would handle the heat and be able to hold its own weight in a rough environment. I cut a PVC coupling in half and, with a short piece of pipe in it, slipped it inside the outlet. This gave me the right diameter for the aluminum hose. I put some silicon around the joint and a small sheet metal screw into the PVC coupling to make sure they didn't come apart.

My next problem was to get the splash guard to clear the new addition. The splash guard material is actually some thick #2 plastic like milk jugs are made of. I figured I could heat and stretch it into the shape I needed. I stuffed some cardboard in between the plastic and aluminum hose and used a propane torch to heat and mold the plastic. When I starts to turn clear you know it is very pliable.


Here is the result.

Just enough clearance.

The next issue is how to make sure only clean dry air gets to the blower. I wanted to pull air from outside the cabin but there just wasn't enough room to do so. It ends up that while driving I can't hear the blower over the road noise so it isn't too much of an issue. I decided to get a K&N rectangular filter and install in the back wall of the tub. The filter is designed to clamp on to a pipe but I needed to attach a flexible hose. I went to a muffler shop and had them make me an adapter out of tail pipe.

A perfect fit.

The next issue was how to mount the filter. I didn't really want anything visible and I wanted to put as few holes in the tub as I could get away with. As you can see in the pictures there isn't really anything to mount the filter to.

I decided to see how well the hose clamp screw would work in keeping the filter in place. The clamp had to go around the rubber of the filter and hold it to the tail pipe adapter piece. It ends up that the fiberglass is just thin enough to make this work. After more than 3000 miles I haven't had any issues with the filter moving out of place even though it wiggles some.
I used some bilge blower hose from a boat shop to connect the filter to the blower. This provides enough flexing for the motor to move up and down with the rear suspension and I only get clean dry air through the motor.

You can see in the picture above that the hose almost touches the top of the motor mount. I later added some strap material (like duct tape without the sticky) to hold the hose up off this sharp point. Below is a bottom view.

I initially started with a toggle switch on the dash to turn on the blower. I didn't want it to run all the time unless the motor needed it. The problem with this was that it was easy to forget. I decided that I would install a thermal snap switch to turn on the blower. The problem is that it is difficult to measure the hottest place on the motor since it is inside. I decided that I would install a switch on the case and use one which turned on at a cool temperature as far as motors go. I chose one which turns on at 105 degrees F. I figure this is early enough for the type of driving that I do so the inside isn't likely at a melt-down temperature yet.

The problem with snap switches is that most cannot be sealed. The one I have can be sealed but I didn't have the right material. The problem is two fold. Apparently air pressure changes cause issues with the turn on temperature and possibly case fatigue. The second issue is that most sealants give off a corrosive gas while curing causing the contacts to corrode. The snap switch needed to be placed inside a sealed or nearly sealed box of some sort. It is difficult to find a small aluminum container of the right size. I finally cut the end off of an empty small butane cylinder. I used a socket to flatten the bottom of the bottle and presto, I have a can!

I was going to mount this to the brush end of the motor but a quick call the Jim Husted of Hi-torque Electric convinced me I needed to mount it to the side of the motor case. You can see the hole I had prepared in the 1/4" aluminum plate. Now a new issue arose. How to mount a flat bottomed can to a curved surface. I decided I could make a mount out of a scrap piece of 1/4" aluminum sheet and bolt it to the motor case. Since my motor is a 6.7" diameter motor I mounted a 7.25" saw blade on my radial arm saw. I clamped the sheet of aluminum to the deck of the saw and locked the blade at a 90 degree angle. I slowly moved the saw blade sideways on the aluminum plate, lowering it slightly with each pass until I had a deep enough curve in the plate. A little smoothing out with a dremel tool and I had my mount. It didn't fit exactly but it fit close enough for what I was using it for. I drilled and tapped two 4-40 holes in the case and put two hex cap screws through the snap switch ears, aluminum can, and mount into the motor case. I put a small rubber grommet in the side of the can and ran my wires inside to the snap switch. Aluminum tape sealed the top of the can. The only water entry point would be through the grommet but I rarely get any there. The switch should work fine for a long time. At least I can change it easily if needed.



The yellow wires run to a 12V relay which turns on the blower fan. I actually installed an on-of-on toggle switch in the dash. The up position turns on the fan bypassing the thermal switch. The middle forces the fan off. The lower position is for auto, where the thermal switch controls the blower. The problem is that I can still forget to turn the switch to auto if I have turned it off for some reason. I tried a small 12V incandescent bulb across the "auto" position but the problem is that there is enough current through the bulb to pull in the relay. I found a small LED at Radio Shack with a resistor attached for 12V use. This works. If the fan switch is in the off position the LED will light when the snap switch closes. Turning the switch to the ON or AUTO position will turn off the LED because it will no longer have a 12V difference across its leads. Now I just have to mount the LED in the dash.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Efficiency differences

When I bought this Gizmo in August 2006 it came with 6 Trojan T-875 8v batteries which were 1-2 years old. One of the things I did from the beginning was to use a Kil-a-Watt meter to record the energy I pulled out of the wall. I wanted to know how much it was costing me to charger my car and to see what the efficiency was. My regular commute is 4.4 miles with an elevation change of about 450 feet, most of that is in the span of about a mile. Sometimes my Wife drives the Gizmo to work and her commute is 9 miles. I mention this because with lead acid batteries and the Zivan NG1 charger I have, every charge cycle includes an equalization phase were the batteries are gently over charged to help all of the cells reach the same state of charge. This means that with shorter drives the wasted energy is not spread out over as many miles. Furthermore, the hill climb at the end of my commute where I would routinely see 250 battery amps, a less efficient current to pull since so much energy is lost to heat, would also not be spread out over as many miles as a longer commute would give.

From August 2006 through August 26, 2009 I used the Trojan T-875 batteries. On July 29, 2009 I didn't realize the range of the pack had diminished so far and ended up reversing a cell in one of the batteries. I never was able to revive it. At that point I took the Interstate Batteries U2200UTL pack out of Gizmo #26 I purchased last summer from Galactic Pizza in Minneapolis, MN and installed it in Gizmo #31 and used them until January 18, 2010 when I installed the TS-LFP100AHA pack. (Gizmo #26 needs extensive restoration.) BTW, if you are in Minneapolis go to Galactic Pizza and get some pizza. It is excellent! Tell them that the guy from Washington who bought one of the Gizmos sent you. Besides, you will be supporting a business which uses EVs to deliver pizzas as long as weather permits.

Note that the energy values below are all as measured from the wall so include charging inefficiencies.

2006
Total Miles: 967
Total kWh: 272.81
Average miles/kWh: 3.54
Average Wh/mi: 282.1

2007
Total Miles: 2364
Total kWh: 682.15
Average miles/kWh: 3.47
Average Wh/mi: 288.6

2008
Total Miles: 497
Total kWh: 138.53
Average miles/kWh: 3.59
Average Wh/mi: 278.7
(On March 28 I sent the NORM Circuit, which reads the hall effect throttle sensor and sends the appropriate signal to the controller, to Black Sheep Technology to get a replacement built. I didn't realize at the time that I could have kept using the old one with my manual override switch until the new one arrived so I was without a Gizmo until April 2009. The new interface was worth the wait!)

2009 (8V T-875 pack)
Total Miles: 1180
Total kWh: 315.47
Average miles/kWh: 3.74
Average Wh/mi: 267.4

2009-2010 (6V U2200UTL pack)
Total Miles: 1180 (This number isn't a typo. I had to double check it, too.)
Total kWh: 294.24
Average miles/kWh: 4.01
Average Wh/mi: 249.4

2010 (TS-LFP100AHA buddy paired pack)
Total Miles: 823
Total kWh: 135.37
Average miles/kWh: 6.08
Average Wh/mi: 164.5
(January 18, 2010 through March 29, 2010)

There some interesting things I notice about the data. First 2007 showed slightly more energy use per mile than the previous year. The Gizmo came with a 30 tooth drive pulley and in August of 2007 I had to have the motor rebuilt by Jim Hustead of Hi-torque Electric in Redmond, OR. This is the Jim of White Zombie fame and the builder of the Jim-Pulse line of Warp motors. With a 30T pulley the motor was turning too slow to keep it cool. I went to the smallest pulley I could find which was a 22T pulley. This changed the gear ratio from 3:1 to 4.09:1. The motor has been much happier. I think that the build-up of carbon dust and wearing & cracking of brushes may have had something to do with the lower efficiency.

I think it is interesting that even though the T-875 pack was aging that the efficiency showed an improvement over the previous years (except for 2007). When I look at the energy used to charge after my 4.4 mile commute, however, the energy consumption was up slightly from earlier years and similar weather conditions.

When the 6V battery pack was installed I saw right away a drop in energy consumption. At first I was expecting to see the energy consumption increase because I added over 120lbs to the weight of the Gizmo. After some thought, I think the reason that the energy consumption decreased is that the significant increase in plate area meant that the 250A draws actually reduced the current per unit of plate surface area so not as much energy was lost due to resistance. This is definitely a variable one might consider when choosing a battery pack. Lighter is not necessarily going to be more efficient. Of course I only have one data point to support this hypothesis.

The biggest shock :) came when I looked at the energy use with the TS batteries. To go from a best case of 250Wh/mi with the 6V lead acid pack to a tiny 165Wh/mi is incredible! I am including all the energy I've put into the TS pack so that if I don't completely charge the pack on one charge it will be made up for when the pack gets fully charged later. I keep thinking something is wrong. I'm using the same Kil-a-Watt meter I have been using all along. Maybe I should hook a second one in series with the first to see if they both give the same results. I'm going to periodically update the data as I get more use on the pack. The only things I've come up with as to why the efficiency is so much higher is that there is very little wasted energy when charging a Lithium Ion pack. I don't equalize each time. I plan on doing that this summer to see how far out of balance the pack has gotten. I'll probably only equalize once or twice each year since the BMS will alert me to an out of balance cell. One other possibility is that with the higher voltage I went to, the controller and motor are more efficient. I really don't know how much more efficient they are but I assume a little more. On the other hand, I don't drive full throttle as much either so the switching losses would be higher, I'm guessing. Time will tell.

(edit: updated energy consumption & distance values March 31, 2010)

Performance is WAY UP!

I haven't finished installing everything in the Gizmo yet. I still have a little wiring to do on the BMS warning system, I don't have an emeter type device yet, I don't have a latching relay to kill the AC to the charger if something goes wrong, and I don't have the charger installed yet since I'm still fiddling with the finish voltage trim pot. It is finishing at about 71V right now so it isn't going too high for the BMS modules on a balanced pack. [(7-25-2010) see comments below about this ending voltage.] I have 18 "cells" and the BMS modules have a HVT (High Voltage Trip) of 4.00V. When I get things finished, or nearly so, I'll go weigh it at the Airport. A friend of mine is an A&P mechanic. He has some scales he uses to calculate the weight & balance on airplanes. I will post the data along with my CG calculations for the 6V pack and the new pack. Suffice it to say, the Gizmo is much lighter than it was with the lead acid pack.

Each pack of 10 cells with connecting straps & bolts weighs 80lbs I have a total of 36 cells. With the mounting hardware I used I figure this pack weighs about 300lbs. The Interstate Batteries U2200UTL are 62lbs each so 8 of them were 496lbs and this is without the connecting cables. It looks like I was able to reduce the weight buy about 200lbs. This is lighter than with the original Trojan T-875 batteries. They are 63 lbs each so a total of 378lbs.

The 18 "cells" I went to raised the voltage I see to about 61V nominal. After a short run to drain off the top 1% of charge or so the pack sits about 61V. After a several mile run it sits at about 60V. I find that while cruising along at about 125A or so the voltage sags to about 56-57V. A 200A load (this is 1C since I'm using buddy pairs) lowers this to about 55V. This is with the batteries at 45-50°F. Maybe when things warm up they won't sag as much. Even with this, it is much better than with the lead acid batteries.

My top speed on level roads with no wind is about 42 mph. Just after I installed the pack it appeared to be about 45-48mph so maybe the batteries were still warm from being in my shop. With the higher voltage I'm seeing current readings a little lower than before. This is to be expected. When climbing my hill I now only slow to 33mph where before I slowed to 24mph on a fully charged pack. I attribute the climbing performance to a higher voltage and being 200lbs lighter.

After installing the pack I didn't get a chance to back off on the spring tension on my coil-over shocks. I definitely sat higher and it seemed that I could feel every pebble on the road. I think I only had a 1/4" travel before the rear shock was at its maximum extension. I have since reduced the tension a couple of notches but I still ride a little higher and it is still a little stiff. I'm going to reroute the wires going to the motor so that I have more travel before the motor bottoms out against the tub of the Gizmo and the lower the tension in the spring to see how that feels.

Acceleration is much better than before. I have to watch my speed-o-meter to make sure I don't get a speeding ticket now. I can easily out accelerate the other cars on the road now. I'm not drag racing them but just comparing to what the typical driver does when a light turns green. When accelerating with the lead acid pack I almost never saw 400A from the batteries. Now I can pull 400A on every acceleration if I want. I tried bumping up the maximum amperage to the armature to 500A and noticed significant increase in acceleration. I didn't leave it there, however, since I want to stay below 2C on these batteries. I need them to last several years longer than the lead acid batteries did to recoup my investment.

In short. I love having a Lithium Ion battery pack!

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

New Batteries are finally in!

I finally have my TS-LFP100AHA batteries in my Gizmo! I still have some wiring and electronic installation to do but I'm at least driving it. I'll do another post on the performance improvements.

I had my battery box sandblasted and then I painted it with etching primer and coated it with some reasonably durable spray paint. All this time I've been trying to figure out how to mount the batteries without bolting through the bottom of the battery box. There isn't much clearance under the box and seeing the deep scratches on the bottom I felt that if I high-centered on something I could do some damage to the box and possibly the batteries as I sheared off a bolt head or something. After talking to several people I finally settled on the idea of mounting the batteries to a 3/4" sheet of exterior plywood. I made sure to get at least 7 ply so that it would be reasonably stiff. The aluminum box bottom was bowed down about a 1/2" or more and I didn't want a flexible bottom for the batteries to sit on. I put 3/4" of rigid insulation board under the plywood.

Next I needed to figure out some way to bolt the batteries to the board. I didn't want anything conductive at the top of the batteries. Someone suggested wide nylon straps over the center of each string of batteries but I couldn't come up with a way to attach the straps and then a way of tightening them. I tried building a frame around each set with holes to bolt through to the plywood but then I didn't have enough room to fit all the batteries in. I finally ended up with a 3/4" strip of aluminum between each row of batteries and a 3/4" angle aluminum on the ends. the holes you see in the plywood are for some 1/4" x 20 cap head bolts. I installed some Tee nuts in the plywood for the bolts to go into. You can also see the 3/4" angle aluminum I used on each side of the board to hold it down. I put three bolts through each side of the box and through the angle aluminum to hold things in place.

I did several test fits of the batteries to make sure everything was going to fit. Below you can see one of the middle bars. This one is 1/8" thick because I couldn't get 1/4" x 3/4" aluminum bar stock. I finally ordered some from McMaster-Carr because I didn't like how flimsy the 1/8" bar was.
When I test fit the batteries I still had about a 1/4" at each end of the box. I needed a way to make sure that the 3/4" angle aluminum end pieces didn't slip off the narrow ledge of the batteries so I made some 1" x 2" x 3/4" shims and attached them to the angle aluminum at each bolt location. As it turned out I had to use 1/8" on the other side of the box. In the picture below you can also see one piece of the 3/4" insulation installed under the hold down strip.
After thinking about the fact that aluminum conducts heat quite well I decided to look for something else for the shims. I found that McMaster-Carr had some 1/4" ABS plastic so I ordered a 2' piece and replaced the shims as shown below.


Because of voltage limitations I could not fill the whole box with 40 cells. I decided to start with 18 buddy pairs which left a hole. Below is what I did to keep the ends of the hold down straps from slipping off the battery slot edge. I used some aluminum pipe for spacers.

Here is a picture between the batteries. They are tightly packed together and don't seem to move at all when I try to move them out of place. I'll be checking them regularly to make sure the hold down method is working. If it doesn't work, I can use some threaded rod and get some non-conductive rigid material to hold the batteries from the top edge.
Here are the batteries in the battery box before I installed 3/4" insulation around the edges.


Battery straps installed. Notice the orange 1 gauge cable to the front set of 8 cells. I turned around the front set so that the positive end of the pack wasn't against the front edge of the box. The front set of cells is not easily accessible through the battery access hole in the tub of the Gizmo. Since I had to use a cable any way it was an easy thing to do. If you look closely at some of the bolts you will see a little hole in them. This is a tapped hole which the BMS modules will attach with.

The Black Sheep Technology BMS modules are installed and I'm giving the pack the first charge as a pack. Earlier I charged all the cells up to 4.00V with a bench top power supply and then put a load on them until the first BMS module gave a low voltage trip. I then disconnected the batteries and measured their voltages to 3 decimal places and ranked them based on voltage. I paired the highest voltage with the lowest, then the next highest with the next lowest and so on until I had my 18 buddy pairs. I'll check them again in a year or so. While this isn't the best way to measure capacity it is what I had. I used several 500W shop lights and a bank of ceramic base light bases as my load. 100Ah is a lot of energy to dissipate! It took quite a while.
If you look carefully at the photo below and compare it to the one above you will see that I moved a couple of BMS modules in the second row from the back. This is the second row from the bottom of the picture above and second row from the top of the picture below. The reason is that I wanted to get the whole pack to the same SOC and my Zivan NG1 wasn't working too well for that since it wanted to see a 48V pack of lead acid batteries. I used my bench top power supplies to charge two parts of the pack and I didn't know if there would be an issue with both hooked together in series. They are supposed to be able to be put in series or parallel but I accidentally hooked up my battery pack backwards and burned out the series parallel circuitry in my dual power supply unit :(. It will be going in for repair soon. By moving a couple of BMS modules I can now split my pack at the 8 pair mark without having to remove any BMS modules. Two bolts out, remove the connecting strap and I'm done. In the photo below you can see the BMS interconnecting wires. I still have to hook up the +12V, fuse, and HVT and LVT test buttons at one end of the string and the HVT, OK, LVT circuitry to the other end. The small black wire coming in from the top center of the photo goes to the "outdoor" probe of a digital thermometer to measure pack temperature. The blue-green foam piece in the center of the pack is holding the probe against the second row of batteries. The black and red wires which join and trail off the bottom of the picture are to my volt meter. I've been playing around with the voltage trim pot on my Zivan NG1. So far I have it so that it is charging less than 0.5A when the pack hits 71V. I want to stop sooner, however since this is 3.944vpc. If I turn the voltage down sooner then my pack doesn't get fully charged. I may send in the charger to get it reprogrammed.
BTW, the picture above is of the battery pack installed in the Gizmo. That is why you cannot see the front row of batteries.

Coming up...

  • Performance comparison
  • weight change
  • efficiency differences