My friend, you are a legend. I popped the cover off and it was set to 230 v so i've upped it to 240 +/- 15% voltage window and the relay seems to be holding so farThat DUA55 unit is monitoring the mains supply voltage and switching on if it is within a set tolerance of whatever the installers configured it for.
The plate at the bottom should unclip and allow you to see the setting switches.
Data sheet here:
DUA55 Datasheet by Carlo Gavazzi Inc. | Digi-Key Electronics
View DUA55 Datasheet by Carlo Gavazzi Inc. and other related components here.www.digikey.be
I'm guessing it's set to 230V +/- 10% as that is what the Newmotion charge point data says it requires.
The formal permitted range in the UK is 230V +10% / -6%, to include the traditional UK 240V system.
If the voltage relay is correctly set for 230V 10% then you need to contact your electricity supplier and complain that the voltage is going out of specification.
(Or you have something causing heavy interference / voltage spikes?)
Presumably you're in the UK? - the mains here is 240V, so it should be set to that, not to 230V.My friend, you are a legend. I popped the cover off and it was set to 230 v so i've upped it to 240 +/- 15% voltage window and the relay seems to be holding so far
Yep Nigel, i am UK based. I'm surprised that the installers haven't seen this before mind you but I was happy to give it a go myself and it seems to have worked!.Presumably you're in the UK? - the mains here is 240V, so it should be set to that, not to 230V.
The 230V is really just an equipment specification, so that any products intended for use in the EU will work on either 220V or 240V, although I believe some countries have actually changed to 230V.
Historically, European equipment tended to fail a lot in the UK, due to the slightly higher mains voltage - and mains transformer failure was common.
OK, but that means your mains supply is going out of the range the electricity companies are permitted to supply.it was set to 230 v so i've upped it to 240 +/- 15% voltage window and the relay seems to be holding so far
It is incredibly rare for the mains voltage in the UK to go very high, and hardly any appliances have over-voltage protection because it is not needed. Your last sentence makes it sound as though excursions to far too high a voltage are common.OK, but that means your mains supply is going out of the range the electricity companies are permitted to supply.
If it's excessive, it may damage the charger, vehicle or other equipment; 230 +10% permits up to 253V and if it's shutting off at that, the voltage could be far higher...
The new setting will permit up to 276V !
It is incredibly rare for the mains voltage in the UK to go very high, and hardly any appliances have over-voltage protection because it is not needed. Your last sentence makes it sound as though excursions to far too high a voltage are common.
230 V +10% should be the upper limit to the supply voltage, but it seems silly to set a cut-out at exactly that limit,
As UK mains is 240V it seems silly setting the centre voltage to 230V?. If you want a lower top voltage, then reduce the tolerance.I've seen several places with extreme voltage variations; typically near large industrial sites, that have high consumption and variable loads.
230 +/- 15% would be a rather safer setting; 240 +/- 15% seems extreme, and if it's getting anywhere near that, you have grounds to complain to the distribution company.
In the legislation rjenkinsgb quotes, the supply is 230 V +10% -6%. However, that is "Unless otherwise agreed" and for new installation only, and as the terms and conditions for electricity supply will be many pages, it could well be that many supplies are allowed to go well over 253 V and still be within the whatever is agreed.As UK mains is 240V it seems silly setting the centre voltage to 230V?. If you want a lower top voltage, then reduce the tolerance.
In the legislation rjenkinsgb quotes, the supply is 230 V +10% -6%. However, that is "Unless otherwise agreed" and for new installation only, and as the terms and conditions for electricity supply will be many pages, it could well be that many supplies are allowed to go well over 253 V and still be within the whatever is agreed.
I've spent about 10 minutes looking for what the agreed voltage is on my energy supplier, and I can't find it. I also couldn't find what voltage range my EV is rated at, but energy suppliers and car manufacturers are both good at having pretty websites with no information.
I think that damaging an electric car through overvoltage when plugged into a standard UK domestic supply is a danger so unlikely that it doesn't need worrying about.
I think that there is a terminology problem here. By "electric car" I was including the AC charger that is inside the car somewhere. I guess that the AC charger inside the car would be the first part to be damaged by an overvoltage if that happened during AC charging.Why would you imagine it might damage an electric car? - surely the VERY, VERY expensive charger would take account of that anyway - it's not just sticking raw mains straight across the batteries.
I think that there is a terminology problem here. By "electric car" I was including the AC charger that is inside the car somewhere. I guess that the AC charger inside the car would be the first part to be damaged by an overvoltage if that happened during AC charging.
The DC high power chargers at motorway service areas are different.
Yeah it's being supplied and fitted by the DNO so you'd hope it's decent..It's good that you've found a probable cause. You don't know how accurate the voltage monitor is, and the tripping out voltage will not be exactly 264.5. I would guess it would be within about 5 V of that. Also the monitor may be sensitive to fast voltage spikes.
The EVSE and the charger within the car are unlikely to be damaged at voltages like that. Other electronics is more likely to be damaged, but I still think that it's not a real problem.
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