L2 portable generator charging

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stevon

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 8, 2015
Messages
121
Location
San Diego
Portable charging at L2. After getting stuck and towed 300 yards to my friends house decided I needed a portable emergency charge solution on board the car, sort of a spare tire which is another project. Looking for portable generators at 240 volt the list gets short here in America. Found one, a Pramac S2800 http://www.zoro.com/pramac-portable-generator-rated-watts2400-160cc-s2800/i/G8491594/?utm_source=google_shopping&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=Google_Shopping_Feed&KW3&gclid=CJmWyN-13cUCFQ8waQod5pwAhg&gclsrc=aw.ds
Desc:
Portable Generator, Rated Watts 2400, 160cc
by PRAMAC
Technical Specifications
Zoro #: G8491594 | Mfr #: S2800
Fuel Tank Capacity: 0.45 gal. Fuel Type: Gasoline
Run Time Hour Meter: No Cylinder Material: Cast Iron
Engine Alternator: Mecc alte Outlets: (1) 120V 5-20R
Voltage: 120 Engine Size: 160cc
Standards: EPA Height: 16-5/8"
Warranty: 3 Month Commercial Use Sound Level dB: 74
Run Time @ Full Load: 2 hr./Tank Run Time @ 1/2 Load: 2.6 hr./Tank
Circuit Breaker: Yes Width: 14-3/8"
Engine Brand: Subaru Engine HP: 6
Length: 21-3/4" Full Power Switch: No
Low Oil Shut Down: Yes Surge Watts: 2800
Rated Watts: 2400 Starter Type: Recoil
Amps @ 120/240V: 20/10 amps
Air Cleaner Type: Paper
Item: Portable Generator Zoro Number: G8491594
Mfr Number: S2800
Product Description
Portable Generator, Rated Watts 2400, Surge Watts 2800, Engine Brand Subaru, Voltage 120, 20/10 Amps @ 120/240V, Circuit Breaker Yes, Engine Size 160cc, Engine Alternator Mecc Alte, 2 hr./Tank Run Time @ Full Load, 2.6 hr./Tank Run Time @ 1/2 Load, Sound Level dB 74, Engine HP 6, 0.45 gal. Fuel Tank Capacity, Recoil Starter Type, Air Cleaner Type Paper, Low Oil Shut Down Yes, Length 21-3/4 In., Width 14-3/8 In., Height 16-5/8 In., Full Power Switch No, Gasoline Fuel Type, Outlets (1) 120V 5-20R
Some modifications were needed for my application, Unit arrives set up tor 120 volt only with both coil outputs tied together on a 1 pole 20A circuit breaker.
Spark-EV-013-sm.jpg

BRUSHLESS_DIAGRAM_1-240-volt-2.jpg

Removed the 20 amp circuit breaker and separated the generator coil outputs then rewired for 240 volt output. (see Mecc Alte Brushless diagram above)
Spark-EV-019-sm.jpg

Picked up a double pole circuit breaker: http://www.ebay.com/itm/201185736018?_trksid=p2060353.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT
Then added a right angle cable clamp from the hardware store to the back cover with a L14-20 female plug and some cable.
http://stevon.myevblog.com/wp-admin/upload.php
My calculations of load being 8 amps@ 240 volt + 1920 watts total. purchased a portable EVSE charging station kit
http://store.openevse.com/products/openevse-30a-standard-charge-station-combo
OpenEVSE-Gharge-Station-1-sm.jpg
(clear cover my modification)
It accepts available input voltage from 100 to 250 volts, switches upon detecting voltage and communicates via the SAE J1772-2001 standard protocol through the J1772 cable. EVSE charger sets voltage and available amps on the vehicle's onboard charger. plugged in open EVSE charger, connected generator, set dashboard current to 8 amps for a test, started generator and let her rip!
N.G. Problem, generator voltage dropped to 200 volts and car disconnected EVSE. Gen sped back up, voltage returned to 248, car re-engaged charge, then 1 minute later, same scenario ~ loop! WTF! Looked into non-linear loads and harmonic distortion as the possible problem and solutions for it. Bad power factor? Harmonic Distortion?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_factor and a possible solution https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=worppwXhezI and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPFKcUxbNuQ . In order to solve this problem I needed precise information to make calculations and to arrive at precise values to purchase parts and design a solution. What was needed was a power analyzer like a Fluke 43B meter. At $1600 dollars a little pricey for one project. Decided on a used meter found in Bakersfield CA. for $300, He wanted cash only, face to face, living in San Diego 400 miles + away, that was impractical. Talked him into a postal money order and it arrived last Friday. As a test made a "bread board" for easier measurements See picture
Spark-EV-071-sm.jpg

hooked up meter, connected the car to house current then started a charge session with dashboard current set to 8 amps. Load seemed quite linear at 240 volts, 0.99 Power Factor with 12 percent THD. A puzzle, why did the generator overload? Second test, connected car, generator and openESVE charger, set dashboard current to 8 amps for the test, started generator and it loaded down again! meter read 14 amps @ 240v or 3360 watts! No wonder 2800 max watt generator bogged down. the open EVSE charge station allows you to program amps so I reset station from default 16a to 10a @ 240v and the car charged OK (no stalling) on the generator @ L2 2.4 kwatts. PF is 0.98 @ 12percent THD! SUCCESS :mrgreen: Next concern was that if involved in an accident Gen would cruise through the cabin if it was not secured. Chose vinyl coated 1/4 inch aircraft cable and a lock to secure generator to the car with an antitheft side benefit as well. Generator stock cradle had to be modified with some steel and welding.
Spark-EV-005sm.jpg

Total cost in parts was less than $900.00 US
Spark-EV-021-sm.jpg

Spark-EV-053-sm.jpg

Spark-Gen-sm.jpg
 
I too have been considering a Plan B, other than AAA. (What do you tell AAA? "My car is broke and I need to tow it home." Period. Does AAA have a 'D.S.' policy for BEV drivers?)

I have only scanned your post but: Why go for a 240 V generator if it is not rated at 3500 watts continuous, L2. ? (probably too big and heavy to fit the hatch area and then be lifted out to run.)
Those tiny inverter controlled 120V / 1000 or 2000 watt generators will charge 120V @ 8 A or 12 A watts, L1. (Light weight and quiet but time consuming)

Another option is a bigass 12V UPS battery (+80 lbs, 112 Ah) with a sine wave inverter to make a clean 120V AC. (Silent, but then charge it immediately when you get home)

Do any Spark EV owners have a Plan B?
 
AAA is plan B.

I have several generators, none of which I plan to carry with my just in case. They are smelly dirty gas guzzling devices that do not belong in my beautiful EV. But if I were to carry one, it would be the little 2000w inverter genny that is light and quiet. It would take a long time, but it would get the job done. My 240v generator is big, loud and obnoxious.
 
A 70 lbs generator pushing 2.4Kw at 240 volts is more than enough for emergencies, car only takes 3.3Kw max anyways. I got stuck 300 yards from my friend's house, but it was up hill. Car just shut down, no warning or beeping or "limp" mode. Had to roll down hill backwards just to move to the side of the road!!!! Power brakes and steering still operated with power. Called OnStar and they sent a tow truck. Asked the tow truck driver for a jump but he said "sorry, we don't carry 400 volts DC". Chevy dealer picked up the tab, no charge for me, at least for one year then all bets are off. Gen would have taken 10 min total to add the juice needed. The Pramac S2800 fits neatly in the hatch area and is cabled down with 4 cables up to the added welded tab and locked to car with one padlock. the steel bottom plate added has a hole with a bolt to the spare tire hold down screw, a little over kill I know, but need it safe and secure with no squeaks or rattles. The gas tank on the gen is full, plan to add gas stabilizer. There is no gas can in the car, just pull up to station to top it off. very little fumes after a refill, leave the back windows open a crack. Been driving to work like this for a week, no problems so far but piece of mind is worth more than the $700 in parts I spent.

Stephen
 
I'm not sure if this 2.4 kW generator will play nice with your L2 EVSE,,, UNLESS the L2 can be adjusted to tell the car to only take 2.4 kW @ 240V. Normally the EVSE sends a pilot signal to the onboard charger to take 3.3 kW @240V.

I had a EMW juice box built with a cable capable of only the 3.3 kW spec. I had a demo BMW i3 for a few days and the first time I plugged it into my L2 I had to be ready with a clamp on ammeter and a small screw driver to turn down the pilot signal to 3.3 kW. It started out way higher than that!

So, if your L2 has an adjustable pilot signal you could pull this off with the generator. But then for home use you'd want to turn the L2 back up to 3.3 kW.
Wouldn't a small 120V generator and the stock EVSE do just as good for saving your bacon?

Also, that gas tank cap is vented. I'm sure it does not have an evaporative emission capture system.
This means you WILL get gasoline fumes in your car. No way around it. Just wait for the next hot day when the car has been sitting outside.

My Bigass battery/inverter method is smelling better all the time.
 
NORTON said:
I'm not sure if this 2.4 kW generator will play nice with your L2 EVSE,,, UNLESS the L2 can be adjusted to tell the car to only take 2.4 kW @ 240V. Normally the EVSE sends a pilot signal to the onboard charger to take 3.3 kW @240V.

I had a EMW juice box built with a cable capable of only the 3.3 kW spec. I had a demo BMW i3 for a few days and the first time I plugged it into my L2 I had to be ready with a clamp on ammeter and a small screw driver to turn down the pilot signal to 3.3 kW. It started out way higher than that!

So, if your L2 has an adjustable pilot signal you could pull this off with the generator. But then for home use you'd want to turn the L2 back up to 3.3 kW.
Wouldn't a small 120V generator and the stock EVSE do just as good for saving your bacon?

Also, that gas tank cap is vented. I'm sure it does not have an evaporative emission capture system.
This means you WILL get gasoline fumes in your car. No way around it. Just wait for the next hot day when the car has been sitting outside.

My Bigass battery/inverter method is smelling better all the time.
Norton,
Thanks for your input! Set OpenEVSE combo charger to 10 amps when using generator. Yeah a hot day will add fumes but there's always a little wind and almost no rain in San Diego so leaving both back windows open a crack has done the trick so far. Smaller gen set would have worked but wouldn't be any cheaper. Inverter grade was not necessary. UPS is a cleaner solution, just never occurred to me. 1440 miles so far charging @L2 90 percent at work 10 percent home has cost me about $30 extra so far in my electric bill, haven't seen this months home bill yet. :roll: What is good is that at work they are using a CEP power distribution box outside.
41Bcd19bmZL._SY355_.jpg


http://cepnow.com/temp-power-boxes/6506gu
Description:
"G" Series GFCI Protected Boxes
Rating:
50A 125/250V
Looked up the required plug for 240v
imagesLK5JP6Q8.jpg
and made an adapter whala! Set openEVSE combo charger to 240 volt @16 amps. CEP box sits right in front of a legitimate parking spot. Very fortunate for Me indeed!
Also keep in the car charge opportunity outlet adapters
Spark-Cord-Adapt-1-sm.jpg
 
NORTON said:
Another option is a bigass 12V UPS battery (+80 lbs, 112 Ah) with a sine wave inverter
12V at 112Ah = 1.344 kWh. Assuming bit under 80% efficiency, that's 1 kWh. At SparkEV at 4mi/kWh at wall socket, that'll get 4 miles. I don't know if carrying around 80+ lbs for 4 miles is a good idea.

NORTON said:
Do any Spark EV owners have a Plan B?
One idea I had was to have a trailer with big generator, but SparkEV cannot tow and it would be more than 100lbs.

Another idea was to always have gorgeous blonde babe who weighs under 100lbs to flag down F350 driver (it seems only guys drive F350) to give a tow while SparkEV is in L mode to charge the batteries while moving. I see about 36 kW of regenerative braking, which is similar to eVgo DCFC, so 20 minutes of tow should get 80%. But finding such babe to ride with me all the time, let alone tell me the time, is impossible. At least for me. But it may be possible for some of you out there. Hook me up! It's too bad I wasn't born as gorgeous 80lb blonde bombshell...

Even so, maybe there's opportunity for some clever towing companies to provide charge-while-towing service without involving a babe.
 
A big ass 240 volt UPS would be the same weight as generator with no smell of gas! http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005SQI67U/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=
Has built in inverter and charger too!
31Vas083CNL._SX355_.jpg

Max Configurable Power 2700 Watts / 3000 VA Buy used for around $800 bucks with shipping
SparkevBlogspot said:
NORTON said:
Another option is a bigass 12V UPS battery (+80 lbs, 112 Ah) with a sine wave inverter
12V at 112Ah = 1.344 kWh. Assuming bit under 80% efficiency, that's 1 kWh. At SparkEV at 4mi/kWh at wall socket, that'll get 4 miles. I don't know if carrying around 80+ lbs for 4 miles is a good idea.

NORTON said:
Do any Spark EV owners have a Plan B?
One idea I had was to have a trailer with big generator, but SparkEV cannot tow and it would be more than 100lbs.

Another idea was to always have gorgeous blonde babe who weighs under 100lbs to flag down F350 driver (it seems only guys drive F350) to give a tow while SparkEV is in L mode to charge the batteries while moving. I see about 36 kW of regenerative braking, which is similar to eVgo DCFC, so 20 minutes of tow should get 80%. But finding such babe to ride with me all the time, let alone tell me the time, is impossible. At least for me. But it may be possible for some of you out there. Hook me up! It's too bad I wasn't born as gorgeous 80lb blonde bombshell...

Even so, maybe there's opportunity for some clever towing companies to provide charge-while-towing service without involving a babe.
 
stevon said:
A big ass 240 volt UPS would be the same weight as generator with no smell of gas! http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005SQI67U/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=
That's 3000VA. Assuming that's close to 3kW, that may be enough to charge SparkEV with some EVSE tweaking. But how many miles will you get out of it? Judging by the weight (guessing ~60lb lead battery), I guesstimate less than 2 miles, maybe even less than 1 mile. I don't think that's worth almost $1000 + 100lb additional weight all the time.

Here's a better idea. It only weighs 40lbs.

http://www.amazon.com/Schwinn-20-Inch-Loop-Folding-Black/dp/B00IASZ7QG/ref=sr_1_1?s=outdoor-recreation&ie=UTF8&qid=1432750083&sr=1-1&keywords=schwinn+folding+bike

Ride into town and get a gorgeous blonde babe to come back to SparkEV with you and do the flagging down F350. Or you can simply rent a U-haul to tow, although you still need a blonde bombshell to drive the other car. How you get the babe to come with you, I'm still trying to figure out. Buying dinner apparently doesn't work. :D
 
There is another option and way less expensive than a cute blonde also easier than picking her up in a goofy sub compact car.
tumblr_lgv3gqadPN1qhqb1vo1_500.gif

stock-photo-asian-woman-pointing-and-laughing-at-you-closeup-portrait-230327461.jpg


A car dolly!
GSI-TowingDolly-3500lbs-2.jpg

I own a 4 Door Tacoma truck long bed rated at 3500lb towing capacity
images


SparkevBlogspot said:
stevon said:
A big ass 240 volt UPS would be the same weight as generator with no smell of gas! http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005SQI67U/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=
That's 3000VA. Assuming that's close to 3kW, that may be enough to charge SparkEV with some EVSE tweaking. But how many miles will you get out of it? Judging by the weight (guessing ~60lb lead battery), I guesstimate less than 2 miles, maybe even less than 1 mile. I don't think that's worth almost $1000 + 100lb additional weight all the time.

Here's a better idea. It only weighs 40lbs.

http://www.amazon.com/Schwinn-20-Inch-Loop-Folding-Black/dp/B00IASZ7QG/ref=sr_1_1?s=outdoor-recreation&ie=UTF8&qid=1432750083&sr=1-1&keywords=schwinn+folding+bike

Ride into town and get a gorgeous blonde babe to come back to SparkEV with you and do the flagging down F350. Or you can simply rent a U-haul to tow, although you still need a blonde bombshell to drive the other car. How you get the babe to come with you, I'm still trying to figure out. Buying dinner apparently doesn't work. :D
 
stevon said:
A car dolly!
I own a 4 Door Tacoma truck long bed rated at 3500lb towing capacity
You can't carry the dolly and truck with you wherever you go on SparkEV whereas you can take the folding bike everywhere. I have F350 with over 12,000lb towing capacity and tow-dolly, but not very useful as SparkEV plan B. Cute girls are abundant in most of CA. I mean, beach boys can't be wrong, can they?

Would anyone do the experiment, maybe for youtube? Ask random pretty girls that your SparkEV ran out of juice and if they would come with you to where the car is stranded to flag down a passing F350 for tow-charge. Inquiring minds want to know how well this would work, especially for mid aged almost shaved head short Asian guy with thick glasses and sort of dusty clothes and dog hair. Also want to know if this would be grounds for arrest.
 
I like it !
All you need is one of those stretchy tow ropes and make sure the tow eye-bolt fits up front.
This can be tested before you need it as a Plan B.
Tow Rope Fast Charge.

edit:
Yeah, Lead Acid batteries are not the way to go. What about a few Bigass Li-ion cells? They sell direct replacement 12V car Li-ion batteries, but your really don't need that. Just a few big cells.
I heard A123 has these,, ;) . Then an inverter and a charging period under a shade tree while the Li-ion cells power the inverter to power the EVSE. But you'd also need a dedicated charger/maintainer for the Li-ion cells... All very expensive just to save your bacon. AAA is cheaper.

Or....

I have a buddy with a pickup who is game to test the TRFC method. What could possibly go wrong? I'll report my findings.
 
I know, I know. First thing dealer made me sign stated that car cannot be returned under any circumstance unless a judge ruled it was a "Lemon". Just made the best of my situation only living 8 miles from work.

Stephen

ExtensionCord said:
:shock: :roll:

You should have bought a Volt, lol.
 
How about as a plan A, if you're expecting to travel near the limits of the Spark EV's range or beyond, you use an ICE Push Trailer to push your car down the highway: Check this idea out on a Mitsubishi iMiEV: http://insideevs.com/explained-mitsubishi-miev-range-extender-story/
 
ExtensionCord said:
You should have bought a Volt, lol.
Prius would be cheaper, but both suffer the same problem of Hybrid. You still need to take it in for gas engine service, especially if you drive more than battery range. In our topic, you will drive on gas engine, which pretty much makes the volt a hybrid. Not to mention unable to DCFC with Volt (or hybrid of any kind), you'll be running lot of gas when used like SparkEV.

Using gas isn't bad. But you're paying / waiting for maintenance of gas engine, such as oil change every 5K miles (depends, I guess). Then you also pay for battery replacement of EV when it wears out. You get the worst of both worlds. Gas car will be much better. Avoiding Volt (Hybrid!) / gas car maintenance time/hassle alone makes SparkEV much better. And SparkEV is cheaper and quicker to boot.

http://sparkev.blogspot.com/2015/05/vs-hybrids.html

Besides, you can't ask a gorgeous blonde to help you out with hybrid. Not that I've found a way to get her to agree, but at least it's a conversation starter. Or is that a reason for restraining order? ;-)

stevon said:
I know, I know. First thing dealer made me sign stated that car cannot be returned under any circumstance unless a judge ruled it was a "Lemon".
Don't let others shame you for having a superior car. You could almost buy 1.5 SparkEV with 1 Volt price. Performance of SparkEV is much better. Challenge a Volt (or Leaf or Prius or Corolla or Jetta or whatever) to 0 to 60 mph. Or try 0 to 30 mph with some "sports cars". SparkEV kicks ass.

There are other benefits, such as white carpool sticker, no smog check, ...

http://sparkev.blogspot.com/2015/05/vs-gas-car.html
 
SparkMoore said:
How about as a plan A, if you're expecting to travel near the limits of the Spark EV's range or beyond, you use an ICE Push Trailer to push your car down the highway: Check this idea out on a Mitsubishi iMiEV: http://insideevs.com/explained-mitsubishi-miev-range-extender-story/
I covered this already. First, trailer will void your warranty. Second, towing around 200+ lbs of weight along with aerodynamic loss will seriously degrade range, not to mention stress the brakes (unless trailer has active braking) and chassis and who knows what else.

I don't know if the guy who did this was serious or just as a joke. And I bet you a Corona that it's a guy.

By the way, why are all SparkEV and BMW i3 driver guys? I haven't seen any woman driving them. As Antonio Villaraigosa would say "hey guys, where are the women at?"
 
NORTON said:
All you need is one of those stretchy tow ropes and make sure the tow eye-bolt fits up front.
You can use Harborfreight tie down straps. They are rated to 400lb. If tension becomes greater you'd want to have the cable snap rather than damage the car. Double up for 800lb may be ok, too.

NORTON said:
This can be tested before you need it as a Plan B.
What is your plan to get the gorgeous blonde babe to go along with it? Method should be at least 2 sigma effective (95%), preferably 3 sigma.[/quote]

NORTON said:
Just a few big cells. I heard A123 has these,, ;)
Electric car conversion companies sell monster LiIon (google). I once thought about converting my F350 to battery, and it would've cost about $100K in batteries for like 40 mile range. I might still do it with used batteries and 2 mile range as giant ATV for my ranch.

NORTON said:
I have a buddy with a pickup who is game to test the TRFC method. What could possibly go wrong? I'll report my findings.
How pretty is your buddy? May I ask her, too? ;)
 
Yeah, it is a blast to drive and easier to park than the Tacoma truck or even my NSX! Next years' 10K tax deduction will be a pleasant event for sure! The gift that keeps on giving. Finally became part of the economic system. This is the first car that I did not build from a wreck! My only brand new car ever!
SparkevBlogspot said:
ExtensionCord said:
You should have bought a Volt, lol.
Prius would be cheaper, but both suffer the same problem of Hybrid. You still need to take it in for gas engine service, especially if you drive more than battery range. In our topic, you will drive on gas engine, which pretty much makes the volt a hybrid. Not to mention unable to DCFC with Volt (or hybrid of any kind), you'll be running lot of gas when used like SparkEV.

Using gas isn't bad. But you're paying / waiting for maintenance of gas engine, such as oil change every 5K miles (depends, I guess). Then you also pay for battery replacement of EV when it wears out. You get the worst of both worlds. Gas car will be much better. Avoiding Volt (Hybrid!) / gas car maintenance time/hassle alone makes SparkEV much better. And SparkEV is cheaper and quicker to boot.

http://sparkev.blogspot.com/2015/05/vs-hybrids.html

Besides, you can't ask a gorgeous blonde to help you out with hybrid. Not that I've found a way to get her to agree, but at least it's a conversation starter. Or is that a reason for restraining order? ;-)

stevon said:
I know, I know. First thing dealer made me sign stated that car cannot be returned under any circumstance unless a judge ruled it was a "Lemon".
Don't let others shame you for having a superior car. You could almost buy 1.5 SparkEV with 1 Volt price. Performance of SparkEV is much better. Challenge a Volt (or Leaf or Prius or Corolla or Jetta or whatever) to 0 to 60 mph. Or try 0 to 30 mph with some "sports cars". SparkEV kicks ass.

There are other benefits, such as white carpool sticker, no smog check, ...

http://sparkev.blogspot.com/2015/05/vs-gas-car.html
 
stevon said:
My only brand new car ever!
It's also my first new car ever. After swearing never to get GM after bailouts, I end up with a Chevy? If this right-wing-nut-job scrooge gets a new car, and it's a Chevy and an EV to boot, I have to wonder if hell is freezing over. It has been chilly around So Cal lately, and I thought I saw a big bird that looks like pig...
 
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