Likely reality forced a change after that number was in print.... and remains open for at least 150ms, contrary to the service manual.
Good work, I nominate you for the Nobel peace prize of this thread. Where did you ground your probes, main battery negative or body?Ess hot start. Ignore the spikes they are from the inverter. The pcr and starter signals are moved down. Last image I moved green up.
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I agree with you 100%. This whole argument has been dumb. We've known what we needed to know for a year.Likely reality forced a change after that number was in print.
The point is, however, that it is closed during the ESS stop, opens for the starter sequence, and closes.
So now we're going to poo-poo the whole thing over the time it appears open?
I wrote that almost a year ago. It would be a slam dunk to anyone with a basic understanding of circuits.The >2V difference between N1 and N2, persisting over 100ms, is pretty convincing evidence that the relay joining them is not closed during the ESS restart.
It's a heavy winding, the solenoid on the starter itself taking a fair amount of power, and when power is cut, the collapsing magnetic field across the solenoid coils is going to generate some kickback current.The test point measures less than 1 ohm to GND. It is the coil of the starter solenoid.
I wrote that almost a year ago. It would be a slam dunk to anyone with a basic understanding of circuits.
One does not simply declare 2V across a conductor. It takes a great deal of current to make that happen.
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I never thought to wonder. I might guess that a single ground connection makes it easy to break the circuit connecting the batteries and vehicle. Do you know something about it?Has anyone ever wondered - why take the aux battery ground up to the top of the IBS on the main battery, THEN both over to the chassis ground instead of home-running the aux battery ground to the chassis?
Probably only people like me think about those things?![]()
"maybe"does the ESS not ready message mean the aux battery is bad.
No, if the PCM detects the aux battery is bad it sets the PF00D, disables ESS and lights the error light. I brought this up here in post 159., https://www.jeepgladiatorforum.com/...-isolated-during-ess-stops.87524/post-1624343I’ll also ask the question we see over and over on Jeep forums; does the ESS not ready message mean the aux battery is bad.
I feel really dumb, now. i should have nailed this right away but got caught up in the "bickering" over what a single example trace showed vs. what the documents state! Geesh, and this is so simple, it's stupid.... and remains open for at least 150ms, contrary to the service manual.
Edit: The trace in #224 shows it to be open for around 550ms.
That's where that error light kicks in -" bad" "aux" battery......................... (or simply too low due to multiple possible causes.)No, if the PCM detects the aux battery is bad it sets the PF00D, disables ESS and lights the error light. I brought this up here in post 159., https://www.jeepgladiatorforum.com/...-isolated-during-ess-stops.87524/post-1624343
I guess we're going to keep at it. The issue of the common starter crank signal between the aux battery and the main battery indicating a connection between them had to be resolved, once I resolved that as the common ground wire, I agreed that the batteries were disconnected and there was never a need for any math.I wrote that almost a year ago. It would be a slam dunk to anyone with a basic understanding of circuits.
One does not simply declare 2V across a conductor. It takes a great deal of current to make that happen.
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