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Is a Prius inverter good for an EV?
I have converted several vehicles to electric DC systems. I recently bought this power inverter from a salvaged Prius. I have some wiring info on it but not much. Do any of you Prius experts know if this would be good for an EV controller? If anyone has any wiring info of any other input, I would love to hear it.
Brian http://www.nwaev.com/prius1.jpg http://www.nwaev.com/prius2.jpg |
Several of us have spare inverters but the electrical interfaces to the inverter are not well documented. Good Prius friend Hobbit has looked closely at an NHW20 inverter. I've been a little slow but it is on my 'to do' list.
I've always figured I'd have to 'scope out' the likely signals but that remains on my "to do" list. The Prius MG1 and MG2 are AC motors in a "Y" electrical configuration, three-phase. I don't know what typical EVs use for motors. Encoder signals from the motors flows to the hybrid vehicle ECU that drives the circuits. It uses a high frequency, 90 degree offset, stimulus/sensor coils around an excentric disk. But again, the exact signals are poorly understood. Bob Wilson |
The Prius inverter is a fairly undocumented part with some impressive power electronics and internal control circuits. But Toyota has not been very 'open' about the exact specifications. The maintenance manual and SAE papers give some clues but it was really designed to work with the associated MG1 and MG2 in the transaxle.
What you have is an NHW11 inverter, 2001-03. Some of coarse specifications are available via Wiki:
My interest is in something a little more modest ... house co-generation. It should easily handle generating up to 14 kW of pure sine wave from a running, parked Prius. This would be a very, very nice thing to have. Bob Wilson |
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As a backup for when the power is down, a PriUPS would be very handy. As a method of displacing grid electricity, it's very wasteful and expensive.
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Relax folks, my co-generation plan is a little more involved than just the inverter. I already have Prius emergency power. Our family uses it for about 8-24 hours about 1-2 times per year. We've used it twice, already this year.
Bob Wilson |
Hi,
A fellow out in western Mass powered his house (or part of it) with his Prius for 3 days after an ice storm knocked out the grid -- and he burned just 5 gallons of gas. That was a nasty ice storm and the power company was sleeping on the job -- some other folks were without power for about 2 weeks... |
Just having it for a DC to AC 3 phase converter alone is worth what I paid, but I am interested in finding the wiring diagram for the harnesses. I know which is the DC input and the 2 AC motor outs, but I was looking for a way to find the throttle and sensor inputs. I may have to buy a complete harness and computer to get that info and when I do I will post the results. Thanks for the replys.
Brian |
If used with wind and solar power to charge the batteries, I think it would be a great way to displace grid power. Just a thought and thanks for the quick reply!
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Bob Wilson |
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