Hi I have a job at work, an ev charger keeps stopping functioning, the company that looks after it has been out and said its not there problem, the supply voltage is 205v ac, (I still need to check this) but is there a step up transformer out there that that can increase the voltage to 240v still keeping the current level? Any advice or tips appreciated.
Thanks
 
Hi I have a job at work, an ev charger keeps stopping functioning, the company that looks after it has been out and said its not there problem, the supply voltage is 205v ac, (I still need to check this) but is there a step up transformer out there that that can increase the voltage to 240v still keeping the current level? Any advice or tips appreciated.
Thanks

I think you need to find the problem that is causing the low supply voltage, rather than just try and bump it up. Is it an extremely long run? Did it ever work OK?
 
I think you need to find the problem that is causing the low supply voltage, rather than just try and bump it up. Is it an extremely long run? Did it ever work OK?
It is in a university, the supply is from a main intake which then goes through a filter with a pfc and smoothing circuit, resulting voltage output is 380v (seems pretty constant with the filter and pfc) I would presume from there it will goto a section board. The cable run seems to be about 300m and terminates in a small db which then goes to the ev charger around 50m further. it terminates in another db with 100a main switch and 2 32a mcbs and TT earthing arrangement. Dont know if it ever worked ok as this is the first complaint.

ps. the university substation is only 30m from main intake so ze should be very low, the whole side of this part of the buliding has lower than expected voltages, around 215 - 220v ac
 
I think you need to get some load on the circuits and check the voltage from phase to N at each stage leading back to the main intake.

but 380v only gives you 219v to start with so if you are getting 205v at the load end it suggests a 14v drop or 6%

so thinking again, it may be that the step down transformer supplying the site needs to be checked out in case it is overloaded or it might need the tapping's changing
 
I think you need to get some load on the circuits and check the voltage from phase to N at each stage leading back to the main intake.

but 380v only gives you 219v to start with so if you are getting 205v at the load end it suggests a 14v drop or 6%

so thinking again, it may be that the step down transformer supplying the site needs to be checked out in case it is overloaded or it might need the tapping's changing
Thats great I will do that tomorrow thanks for your advice
 

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Green 2 Go Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses Heating 2 Go
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

Advert

Daily, weekly or monthly email

Thread starter

Joined
Location
sunderland uk

Thread Information

Title
205v ac supply to EV charger
Prefix
N/A
Forum
UK Electrical Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
8
Unsolved
--

Advert

Thread statistics

Created
spamwize2,
Last reply from
freddo,
Replies
8
Views
1,473

Advert

Back
Top