More fun updates -
Yesterday, ran 64 miles, all hwy, and used 19kWh. So pretty good efficiency again.
However, it was raining in the morning. When we got back home, the car was soaking (outside). I plugged in the charger and turned it on, and went to close the trunk, and got a nasty shock! So, I turned off the charger, and unplugged the main breaker (Anderson connector) so the pack is totally isolated. Turned the charger back on, and POP! Something blew inside it. Current continued to flow out - very odd. So I turned off the charger to see what was wrong.
I disconnected the charger and opened it up - one of the 3 main capacitors blew like a cherry bomb! I called Manzanita and spoke with Rich Rudman. He mentioned that the capacitor quality wasn't that great with the older models (this charger is almost 8 years old). So, I shipped it UPS today back to him, and he will replace the capacitors and send it back for a modest fee. The good news is the capacitor replacements will be upgrades.
Rich is doing well - they just moved into a bigger shop/office, and he has a staff of 6 including a secretary. They can crank chargers out within 2-3 weeks from the order.
I fortunately have a backup Zivan charger that was adjusted to 174V (top voltage), and this voltage which works well for my LiFePos. I charged the pack up. It takes more time (only 16 amps out of the Zivan vs. 20 amps from the Manzanita), but works ok. It will be my backup until the Manzanita is back. The BMS 'warning' system still seems to work ok.
The original isolation problem has to do with the DC-DC converter. It seems to have capacitors in there. Anyway, not sure what can be done, but it does create some voltage leakage from the main pack because it is 'always on'. I'll have to see if anything can be done about this.
That's all for today -