1. Attachments are working again! Check out this thread for more details and to report any other bugs.

Turn '08 Prius into a PHSEV

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Accessories & Modifications' started by anti-gas, Mar 12, 2008.

  1. anti-gas

    anti-gas Reduce, Reuse and Conserve

    Joined:
    Feb 28, 2008
    56
    7
    0
    Location:
    South Florida
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    I want to convert my car so that I can drive longer distances on Electric only, have the ability to plug in and charge it at home (via my solar electric system at home) and also have a solar panel on the roof that charges my batteries whenever the sun shines.

    I want to hear from anyone who has done any modifications to their car to achieve travel w/o using expensive fuel. I do a lot of around town driving where my car sometimes doesn't even get to exceed 40mph. I figure this would be perfect for all my city commuting.

    I have contacted a company who claims to have done this, however It seems that for the past year they are still not selling this and I have requested someone return my call on this as I am interested in purchasing and still nothing. They are: Solar Electrical Vehicles

    I have seen still other companies making systems to show, yet still no one willing to talk to me, or sell. So here I am asking everyone out here, Who has done something like this and is willing to share their info.

    My car is only 2 weeks old and I am ready for the transformation from HEV to a PHSEV! I want to take full advantage of all the technology that is available out there that Toyota has neglected to incorporate into their car thus far. I know its out there as I have seen many on the web.

    Thanks all!
     
  2. NoMoShocks

    NoMoShocks Electrical Engineer

    Joined:
    Jan 21, 2007
    1,292
    82
    11
    Location:
    Camas, WA
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    IV
  3. ken1784

    ken1784 SuperMID designer

    Joined:
    Dec 18, 2003
    2,943
    1,378
    67
    Location:
    Yokohama, JAPAN
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
  4. Flying White Dutchman

    Flying White Dutchman Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 29, 2007
    4,374
    313
    0
    Vehicle:
    Other Non-Hybrid
    Model:
    N/A
    hymotion 9,995 dollar
    i got the price today from them!
    still way to high
    5000 and lower wil be OK
     
  5. anti-gas

    anti-gas Reduce, Reuse and Conserve

    Joined:
    Feb 28, 2008
    56
    7
    0
    Location:
    South Florida
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    I have seen the "Hymotion" system currently not available. I saw the Zap but way too expensive. The system that I liked was from "Solar Electric Vehicles" , their system was $4000 just on the border of being cost effective which is what I like on that one, however you can't get any real information from them and apparently they are collecting payment in full and when the get 50 orders, they will start production. They won't even tell you how many more they need to sell to get there. Not a viable option.

    I'm convinced that there are lots of people out there who have built their own system and I am searching for people who have produced their own package so I can put one in.

    Thank you all for your suggestions and lets keep them coming. Once I complete this project, I plan on making a full documentation manual with lots of photos free for all.
     
  6. blazer_5154

    blazer_5154 Heh, you said "member"

    Joined:
    Dec 9, 2007
    106
    0
    0
    Location:
    Maryland
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    Try Googling Cal-cars plug-in hybrid conversion. I have seen one of these installed using cheaper, commodity lead-acid batteries for about $5000 - $6000. If you need more information, I can put you in contact w/ the reseller that I know in my area, but I don't know if there is anyone near you that can / will install for you. Also, it is worth noting that even with an ev-mode kit, the prius will only travel at up to 34 MPH on electric-only. At these lower speeds, I have been told that the all electric range is still limited to only about 11 miles. IOW, the plug-in kit is meant to improve your gas-electric fuel economy and is not really intended to provide electric-only travel beyond the capabilities of a typical NEV or LSV.
     
  7. anti-gas

    anti-gas Reduce, Reuse and Conserve

    Joined:
    Feb 28, 2008
    56
    7
    0
    Location:
    South Florida
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    Try Googling Cal-cars plug-in hybrid conversion. I have seen one of these installed using cheaper, commodity lead-acid batteries for about $5000 - $6000. If you need more information, I can put you in contact w/ the reseller that I know in my area, but I don't know if there is anyone near you that can / will install for you. Also, it is worth noting that even with an ev-mode kit, the prius will only travel at up to 34 MPH on electric-only. At these lower speeds, I have been told that the all electric range is still limited to only about 11 miles. IOW, the plug-in kit is meant to improve your gas-electric fuel economy and is not really intended to provide electric-only travel beyond the capabilities of a typical NEV or LSV.

    I have done as you said and was unable to find anything other than a news article on someone who did something with standard lead acid batteries and a few photos of some modified cars.

    I have turned off the Gas engine on my Prius via the EV mode mod, however I have found that the car can drive 42 mph on electric only on flat level ground w/o a problem. I have gone about a mile on almost a full charged battery down to around 54% of the battery gauge then manually re-engaged the Hybrid mode.

    Most of my local commutes are done at either 25 or 35mph as those are the speed limits on the roads that cover 80% of all my local commutes. On a rare occasion I can actually go 40mph on 2 roads, as they have a 45mph speed limit, but due to traffic, 35 seems to be the rock solid max. I do a lot of traffic light sitting so the hybrid has really helped out in that area. I am getting 54.369 avg. MPG over 2 tank fill-ups thus far. I have only had the car for about 2 weeks, so I don't know if I will continue to get that, worse or better, but I'm hoping for better. With all electric, I should be able to get by on less than a tank a gas per month, that is taking into consideration that I am only using gas for my over 35 driving and highway miles which is very little.

     
  8. ken1784

    ken1784 SuperMID designer

    Joined:
    Dec 18, 2003
    2,943
    1,378
    67
    Location:
    Yokohama, JAPAN
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    If your budget is limited to around $5000 range, your choice is limited to use lead acid batteries.
    However, the life of
    lead acid batteries is very short, and you'll see $0.3/mile or so of the battery life cost. I think it is not practical too.

    My recommendation is wait for releasing of affordable plug-in/EV vehicles from Toyota, GM or other big car manufacturers in a few years.

    Ken@Japan

     
  9. spm2

    spm2 New Member

    Joined:
    Mar 7, 2008
    6
    0
    0
    Location:
    Toronto
    Vehicle:
    2006 Prius
    There's also an open source place where they document how the DIY can do it. Seems like many people have done it.

    Prius PHEV - EAA-PHEV
     
  10. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2007
    2,076
    523
    5
    Location:
    Phoenix, AZ
    Vehicle:
    2005 Prius
    On the website spm2 linked there is a whole lot of good info about converting your prius to plugin. The open source project is the cal-cars PriusPlus. At the current time the recipe is getting pretty mature, and you should be able to get 10-15 miles EV range for ~$3-4k. Down side is PbA battery pack will probably only last a year or two before needing replacement at ~$1k. Probably not financialy compeling, but thats not why most of these early conversions are being done. If you have a little more budget avail, they are also working on a Nilar NimH version of this conversion.

    On board solar is generally going to be far less significant than charging at home. You are lucky to be able to get enough solar on board to accumulate a few miles worth of EV in an entire day. The amount of current produced while driving is pretty much negligable. For the area available you'd be doing well to work in 200W (nominal). The capacity of your secondary pack will probably be around 3.6-4.8kWh. A typical midspeed cruise might be ~250Wh/mi, at the 240V of the secondary pack this ~1Ah/mi. Your 200W solar will put out less than 1A @ 240V, or less than 1 mi of cruising per hour of sunlight. That said I'd really like to have these too, but the bang for the buck is definitely charging at home. I guess if your commute exceeds your pack range and you can't charge at work you could make an argument for this, assuming you can park in full sun and keep it from impacting your aerodynamics. In this case it might actually be easier/cheaper to simply deploy a small (~2-3 m^2) solar charging station rather than trying to build it onto the car.

    Ideally you'd match the DC voltages of your solar and secondary pack, but with a small number of panels/cells it will be hard to get enough voltage. You'd probably have to go to a dc:dc converter based conversion like the PiPrius but that adds significantly to cost and can actually decrease efficiency/range somewhat. You might be better off with a high efficiency AC inverter run off your portable solar array and just running your home charger off that.

    Rob
     
    1 person likes this.
  11. anti-gas

    anti-gas Reduce, Reuse and Conserve

    Joined:
    Feb 28, 2008
    56
    7
    0
    Location:
    South Florida
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    On the website spm2 linked there is a whole lot of good info about converting your prius to plugin. The open source project is the cal-cars PriusPlus. At the current time the recipe is getting pretty mature, and you should be able to get 10-15 miles EV range for ~$3-4k. Down side is PbA battery pack will probably only last a year or two before needing replacement at ~$1k. Probably not financialy compeling, but thats not why most of these early conversions are being done. If you have a little more budget avail, they are also working on a Nilar NimH version of this conversion.

    On board solar is generally going to be far less significant than charging at home. You are lucky to be able to get enough solar on board to accumulate a few miles worth of EV in an entire day. The amount of current produced while driving is pretty much negligable. For the area available you'd be doing well to work in 200W (nominal). The capacity of your secondary pack will probably be around 3.6-4.8kWh. A typical midspeed cruise might be ~250Wh/mi, at the 240V of the secondary pack this ~1Ah/mi. Your 200W solar will put out less than 1A @ 240V, or less than 1 mi of cruising per hour of sunlight. That said I'd really like to have these too, but the bang for the buck is definitely charging at home. I guess if your commute exceeds your pack range and you can't charge at work you could make an argument for this, assuming you can park in full sun and keep it from impacting your aerodynamics. In this case it might actually be easier/cheaper to simply deploy a small (~2-3 m^2) solar charging station rather than trying to build it onto the car.

    Ideally you'd match the DC voltages of your solar and secondary pack, but with a small number of panels/cells it will be hard to get enough voltage. You'd probably have to go to a dc:dc converter based conversion like the PiPrius but that adds significantly to cost and can actually decrease efficiency/range somewhat. You might be better off with a high efficiency AC inverter run off your portable solar array and just running your home charger off that.

    MISCRMS,

    Yes, I fully agree with a lot of what your saying, however any benefit I can get out of a solar panel on the roof of the car, I will benefit from. I typically work out of my house, so the car sits in the driveway all day soaking up the suns rays and most of my daily driving is less than 20 miles broken up into 2 or 3 trips. I am planning on plugging my car into my homes electric for charging while I'm here, but my homes electric is self produced from PV's that I installed on the roof many years ago (VERY Cost effective I might add), I have recently installed Solar Hot Water up there as well which I wish I would have done years ago, but I made the mistake of listening to people who didn't know Jack about the REAL world, they only knew about what other ignorant people said. I consume less than 20KWH of electric at my house on a daily basis and have in the winter an extra 8K kwh of electric just going to waste, so I figure I can put it into my car. I was using some of it to put into a Golf Cart that I got for free 2 years ago, (just had to put $300 into it for batteries) and I was doing all my very local commutes with that, however the local Police Dept. has been harassing me because they say I can't ride it on the side walk, and if I ride it in the street (all residential 20mph streets here) they give me tickets. They are just #$%#$#'s about it. Frankly I think they are Jealous because they all know me as the one who is the Energy Rebel! My neighbors fought me on my Solar Panels, had big litigation over that, my super high eff. Air Conditioner (which is rather large as they say) and just about everything else I do, even though you can't see it from the road due to the very low pitched roof. Anyway, in the end I won, but had to do some non-conventional tactics to win. Now they leave me a alone, but because I don't pay for electric, very little for Gas and am the only one in the city who was not hurt by our past few hurricanes, the world is Jealous.

    Anyway, enough of that, as I'm sure no one wants to hear my rant. Back to the car. I have been researching a fairly new battery called a Lithium Ion Phosphate battery which stores 50-90% more AH's than a standard Lithion Ion Cell, is lighter and safer, however $2600 per battery and I will need about 8 of them. I'm told if I have a large enough order, they can produce them in quantity for less than 1/2 that, however that is still very steep.

    I saw a few people who used small 9AH lead acid cells which I already have about 90 of these batteries laying around, so I was toying with the idea of building a pack out of those. I figure If I can add 6 to 15 miles of electric only at less than 25mph, I could do 1/3 to 1/2 of my extremely local commutes that way, then when I exceed that, I can go hybrid mode, but there is that problem of how to hook it up, and where to get the logic circuits for that, as I am not a circuit designer. I can hook up anything, etc, but I'm not a serious Electrical Engineer, just a tinker'er if you know what I mean. I do mostly computer hardware/networking/troubleshooting for a living.

    I am confident that I will have a working viable solution before the Summer months when my local commutes will get greater. A solar panel on the roof of the car will assist in charging my battery pack while I'm in an office 1/2 to most of the day, and if it adds even 2-3 miles to my capacity, I would be happy as heck. If I can get by only putting in a gallon or two of fuel a month, I will be satisfied at least for a couple of years, but I'm dreaming of a day (REAL SOON) where I don't need anyones energy, just what I produce myself and I'm more than 1/2 way there now. :)


     
  12. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2007
    2,076
    523
    5
    Location:
    Phoenix, AZ
    Vehicle:
    2005 Prius
    As long as your expectations are realistic, I say go for it! You can use your 9ah Pba, but you will need twice as many of them. A standard pack uses 20x20aH. The trick is you need to get the voltage up over 240V so the HV controller will go into its recalibration mode and accept the extra charge coming in (SOC Drift). You also need a pretty sophisticated controller to watch everything and decide when to connect and disconnect the battery, as with 240V+ volts you will quickly overcharge the battery. There is a pretty narrow range of SOCs that will result in signifigant improvements in mileage, as the car will use more electricity to try and bring the SOC down.

    All the info you need including a parts list, schematics, controller (not currently open source, though a cheaper but less sophisticated open source one with SOC spoofing is in the works) custom interface boards, and instructions are available here:
    PriusPlus - EAA-PHEV
    Like a lot of open source projects the documentation is not always 100%, and changes are always being made, so you'll want to be on the phev mailing list where most of the folks who are working on this hang out:
    Maillist - EAA-PHEV

    If I were you I would start by just following the instructions above and get your phev running, then start adding your own mods including solar. Its always easier to start with something you know works! Thats my basic plan. I'll do a straight cal-cars lead acid conversion, and then have a year or two to work on improvements before my pack needs replacing. There are a lot of new better battery technologies out there for example, but they are all much more complicated and require dedicated battery management computers. At this time these are not really available to the hobbyist (at least not on my budget), but the open source community is working on this too. I'd rather have my plug now while all that gets sorted out even if that means starting with old fashioned lead acid.

    Rob
     
  13. imwoody36

    imwoody36 the prius parts guy

    Joined:
    Sep 29, 2005
    143
    116
    0
    Location:
    southern Indiana
    Vehicle:
    2008 Prius
    Along with Luscious Garage and pluginsupply I would like to make everyone aware that we can now move the Prius at 52 miles per hour with No Data Trouble codes in all electric mode. I call it " High Speed Stealth"
    The cost is about 9500 dollars plus installation.
    The car will go almost 14 miles before reverting to normal hybrid mode.
    Plug In Hybrid Electric Vehicle PHEV
    Naturally a larger expensive battery is installed and an additional imbedded controller. There are other limitations as well.

    I am editing a demo video for release april 1st ( no foolin!)

    This is the same information available on the phev-eaa site.
     
  14. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

    Joined:
    Mar 2, 2006
    18,058
    3,075
    7
    Location:
    Northern Michigan
    Vehicle:
    2006 Prius
    I'm going to jump in with these guys and emphasize that this is not something to do unless you have money to throw away. The current state of battery technology makes adding your own fall into one of two categories: 1) Ineffective, or 2) Too expensive. If you have a lot of surplus cash and you want to make a statement, go ahead and do it. If want to do it because you think it makes economic and technical sense, then step back and take a few deep breaths. This is especially true with putting a solar panel on your Prius. That is a silly idea, and certainly not where you want to invest your solar dollar. Add more panels at home and charge from there. Unless you live on Mercury, you aren't going to get enough power to make it worth carrying the panel.

    Tom
     
  15. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2007
    2,076
    523
    5
    Location:
    Phoenix, AZ
    Vehicle:
    2005 Prius
    I would agree that there is no economic incentive to a PHEV conversion, however that assumes that you place no value on your reduced fuel consumption and emissions beyond the price of the gas you're not using. In a lot of ways you could make the same argument about a Prius. Many will probably never recoup the cost difference between a Prius and a small cheap car based only on gas savings. However for most of us there is inherant value to sending less of our money to foreign terrorist and oil company executives and/or pumping less junk into the air. For some that value is enough that we would consider a $5-$10k additional upgrade to our vehicles to cut that in half again. Particularly if doing so helps others realize such a thing is possible and start demanding such a product from the automakers.

    I think it would be fair to say that there would be no corporate PHEV programs if it weren't for the efforts of the converters and their grass roots lobbying network. They have proven that the automakers were wrong when they said these cars couldn't be built by spending their own money to put them on the streets. I think we owe a similar debt of gratitude to the early adopters of the Prius and Insights, who took a big risk on a new technology and paid a big premium to support it. The rest of us may have never gotten the chance to own a Prius if they hadn't.

    Rob
     
  16. ken1784

    ken1784 SuperMID designer

    Joined:
    Dec 18, 2003
    2,943
    1,378
    67
    Location:
    Yokohama, JAPAN
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    A PHEV does not mean always clean.
    "Potential Impacts of Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicles on Regional Power Generation"
    http://www.ornl.gov/info/ornlreview/v41_1_08/regional_phev_analysis.pdf

    Ken@Japan
     
  17. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

    Joined:
    Mar 2, 2006
    18,058
    3,075
    7
    Location:
    Northern Michigan
    Vehicle:
    2006 Prius
    The Prius has other money saving factors. Read the current CR review that rates the Prius as the least expensive family car to own. Just looking at gas savings is silly. On the other hand, there are no economic savings with the proposed conversion, no matter how you look at it. If your motives are altruistic, take the money and install more panels on your house and forget the conversion. That way you offset your energy use where you get the best return. On the other hand, if you want to do the conversion because it will look cool and be a fun project, then have at it. Just don't delude yourself that it makes economic sense.

    Tom
     
  18. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2007
    2,076
    523
    5
    Location:
    Phoenix, AZ
    Vehicle:
    2005 Prius
    I need to spend more time reading this, but I'm not sure I agree with the conclusion. There seems to be a discrepancy here, as they seem to be comparing an all small car HEV fleet against a PHEV fleet of mixed vehicles including 20% full sized SUVs.

    As summarized here:
    http://www.pluginamerica.org/images/EmissionsSummary.pdf
    The majority of researchers seem to indicate a substantial reduction in CO2 and most other emissions if PHEVs are adopted. There are exceptions of course, such as SOx which would have to be addressed.

    I would agree, that a shift toward plugin vehicles must be met by equal pressure to continue cleaning up the grid and greater adoption of renewable energy sources. I would also argue that EV miles are so much cheaper than gasoline miles, that it would be no big deal to just pay the surcharge for green energy and substantially reduce all the related emissions:

    Example:
    The Prius is commonly estimated at ~250Wh/mile. Adding 85% charging efficiency, lets say AC consumption is 294Wh/mile. At the national average 9c/kWh that is only 2.6c per mile. A green energy surcharge of 1-3c per kWh would result in 2.9-3.5c per mile. Charging at night should cost less than half that. By comparison at the current average $3.28 per gallon, An average 22mpg vehicle costs 15c per mile to operate. A 50mpg Prius costs 6.5c per mile. So even with the green energy surcharge, the PHEV Prius would cost less than half as much to operate in electric mode and be nearly emissions free.

    Rob
     
  19. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

    Joined:
    Aug 21, 2007
    2,076
    523
    5
    Location:
    Phoenix, AZ
    Vehicle:
    2005 Prius
    You are correct of course, CR has proven that rather well. I was speaking mostly of those who bought their Priuses pre-2006 or so, who paid big premiums, had to wait in line, and were taking a pretty big risk with a new technology.

    I also agree there is little practical benefit to putting solar cells on a prius. On the other hand, if he can build it himself for <$1000 worth of second quality cells off ebay its not that big a loss. If it gets peoples attention and starts them thinking about things, maybe its even worth it.

    Just for kicks, you can probably get ~1 m^2 of cells on a prius, which would get you up around 200W. Assuming 6 hours a day of good exposure, thats about 1.2kWh (~11c worth) of electricity a day, or just over 4 miles of EV. At the Priuses current 6.5c/mile on gasoline, thats about 26.5c worth of gas a day, or driven 7 days a week about $96.73 per year (assuming gas doesn't go up). At that rate the payback period on the cells (assuming $1000) will be just over 10 yrs. Not that much worse than on your house really ;)

    Rob
     
  20. scienceexpert

    scienceexpert New Member

    Joined:
    May 2, 2009
    54
    6
    0
    Location:
    Las Vegas
    Model:
    II
    Adding solar panels to Prius

    I already have one 15w which I use and saw
    bigger ones at Checker Auto at $90, but after your comments it may be just wishfull thinking.

    However, when and if the Korean Middle Schoolers 3D super efficiency panels hit the market that will be a different story. Now with just 2D cells as you say it won't cut the weight. I just remember seeing the solar car running in a race.

    AWE, THE FUTURE OF SOLAR CARS HERE IN THE SUNNY HOT DESERT!