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Friday, May 3, 2013

The Road to EV Mode


After a lot of hard work, we have commissioned our A123 battery pack! There were a lot of steps to get to this point, and the electrical subteam has been busy all year preparing for this moment.

“Commissioning the battery pack essentially means that our pack has been deemed safe by A123,” said electrical subteam leader Brian Kelly. “We are now able to distribute power to the rest of the vehicle.”

To get to this point we had to complete certain steps. The first was to become familiar with the batteries. “We needed to know how they work and how they communicate with each other,” Brian said. The electrical subteam first completed the bench testing checklist where the batteries were literally placed on a bench so the team knew how to safely work with high and low voltage systems. The low voltage harness was connected to the high voltage batteries in a series and we performed different tests.

The next step was to complete the internals checklist. This is when the Energy Storage System (ESS), the actual structure that holds the batteries, was built. “We first built the ESS with wood so we could see what parts of the ESS we could build outside the car and the parts that we had to weld while in the car,” said electrical subteam member Tyler Erickson.

The ESS was built out of 20 gauge steel along with ⅛” tube steel, painted in maroon and orange, and then covered in Kapton tape. The Kapton tape isolates the steel from high voltage so the batteries are completely separated from any passenger in or out of the vehicle.