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I've opened the battery from my 2013 leaf and taken everything out of
it, photos, writeup and videos are finished:

Blog post with writeup and photos:
http://www.summet.com/blog/2015/04/17/how-to-open-a-2013-nissan-leaf-battery-pack-and-remove-the-modules/

Direct Youtube Video link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPJ1O9Qu_Bg


Jay

P.S. If anybody has datasheets for the contactors, DC/DC converter,
Current sensor, or other misc. parts I posted about that I got out of
the battery, I'd appreciate a link.



Below is the "wall of text" for archival purposes:

How to open a 2013 Nissan Leaf battery pack and remove the modules
Posted on April 17, 2015        

battery_open_front

I have opened my 2013 Nissan Leaf battery pack and removed the
modules. The tools needed are:

    500 volt class 0 (or better) electrically insulated gloves
    One or two full rolls of black electrical tape, for covering your
tools and the terminals of the modules when you remove them.
    Regular leather gloves
    Side clippers and needle nose pliers for removing wire tiedowns
    1-1/2″ putty knife or chisel and hammer. (or preferably an air chisel)
    10 mm wrench (preferably a socket with ratchet)
    13 mm deep socket
    16 mm wrench and hammer (or impact driver w/ 16mm socket)
    small flat bladed screwdriver for prying clips
    # 1 Phillips screwdriver for removing screws on the sense terminal
of the modules

You can watch the 13 minute youtube video here, or spend about the
same amount of time wading through my wall of text below….

First: Remove the twelve 10mm bolts on the edges of the battery, and
the six 10mm bolts from around the service disconnect, and remove the
aluminum plate from around the service disconnect.
10mm_cover_sholder_bolt

disconnect_10mm_bolt

Second: Using a putty knife or chisel, cut the waterproof seal that is
holding the battery cover onto the shell. If you don’t mind bending
the steel, you only need to do 3 sides, but if you want to preserve
the steel of the cover and shell, you’ll need to do all four sides. An
air chisel is highly recommended, as it will take you several hours if
you do it by hand (like me). The lid fits down over a lip that is at
least an inch high, so you can just hammer through the seal material
until your chisel hits metal without having to worry about piercing a
lithium cell. The photo below shows the seal on the inside of the
cover after it was lifted up.
battery_cover_seal_gasket_glue

Third: Put on your high voltage gloves! There is a lot of high voltage
in there, even with the service disconnect removed (you DID remove the
service disconnect, right?). If you haven’t already, re-read the
warning sticker on the back of the battery.

battery_warning_message

Fourth: If you decide to risk your life working with high voltage
packs of batteries, do it safely. Use electrically insulated wrenches,
or cover as much of your wrenches as possible with electrical tape so
that if you drop a wrench across a set of terminals, it may not weld
itself to them, shorting out a good sized chunk of your battery and
causing it to burst into flames or balls of plasma.

Separate the full pack into smaller sub-packs so that the voltage
differential is smaller by removing the orange cables. The first two
cables I removed were the ones going to the ends of the row of 24
modules in the back of the battery. I covered the ends of the cables
with electrical tape as I removed them. Then I removed the two bus
bars that were marked “01” (or “10”) from the factory, shown in the
picture below. There was enough room to remove the short one from
under the long one, and then remove the long one from under the black
steel bar without having to remove the black steel bar (yet). Note
that the plastic insulation is ONLY on the top of the bus-bar, and the
bottom is bare copper, so don’t touch without your insulated gloves!

battery_steel_bar_bus_bars

Fifth: Disconnect all of the random small plugs and wires, including
the black thermocouple probes, the HV wires that go to the cabin
heater port, the several plugs for the BMS wires, and the orange wires
that go to the tin panels around the batteries. (I’m not sure if those
tin panels are a sensor that will make a connection if the battery is
crushed, or if they are some type of ground plane….but I suspect they
are the former and signal the BMS to shut things down if they touch a
battery module.)

Sixth: You need to remove that large black steel bar. It is held on by
two 16mm nuts (impact driver or hit a wrench with a hammer…) on the
ends, and two 13mm nuts (need a deep socket, but a low torque normal
ratchet is fine) in the middle. One of the middle nuts is close to a
bus bar that goes through a current sensor on the way to the service
disconnect, so use your HV insulated gloves on that one for sure. This
bar goes over BMS wires and bus bars that connect the 2-high packs of
4 to the 4-high packs of 8 modules on the left and right sides.

Seventh: You can either disconnect the bottom plates from the battery,
and lift the entire set of modules up, or you can disconnect the top
plates from the bottom plates by removing the 10mm bolts on the top,
and then manhandle the cells up and out of the battery. A hoist would
make this procedure easier, but the busbars and plastic covers will
flex a bit if you want to just lift stacks of modules out a little at
a time. They are sitting on pegs, so you have to lift them up before
you can drag them out. If you are manhandling the modules, you will
probably want to wear your insulated gloves under regular leather
gloves, as you will need to reach around the terminals/busbars at the
top of the modules to lift them.

battery_12_cell_group_out

After you get them upright, it is easy to remove busbars to split the
12 modules up into smaller groups. However, after doing this for a
while, I realized that it takes two bolts to remove a busbar, but it
only takes one additional screw to release an entire module. Because
the busbars are making serial connections between modules, removing a
module is essentially the same as removing a busbar (in that the pack
gets separated into smaller subpacks), and as an added benefit, you
have a module removed, and the busbars are left in the nice orange
plastic organizer. So I started just removing modules in such a way as
to break the packs down into smaller and smaller parts. I put the
bolts and screws back into the module terminals, and then taped over
them with electrical tape.

Here is a picture of the serial busbar connections on one of the 12
module “side” set of cells (I have removed one short vertical busbar
from the far left before the picture was taken).
12_pack_bussbars

Eight: For removing the “back” pack of 24 modules, you need to unbolt
it from the shell. It is held on with 3 13mm bolts on each side, plus
eight 10mm bolts on the front and back (16 total). To get to the 3
bolts on the BMS side, you will probably want to remove the BMS unit,
which is relatively easy. It has four plugs on the bottom and two on
the side, and they all are easy to unplug. Just use one screwdriver to
push the catch in, and another screwdriver to push them out. The wires
have high voltage potential, but the plugs you remove are female, so
they are relatively well protected.

BMS_wires2

If you have a hoist, it is relatively easy to lift the entire 24
module half-pack out of the shell. If you don’t, it is possible for
one person to lift a corner out, and walk the half-pack around a
corner at a time to get it onto a mat.
24_modules_manhandled

There is a bracket along the bottom that is bolted to the plates that
are in the pack every so often. It will make it difficult to stand the
modules up to work on the busbars, so I took it off. It is held on
with 12 10mm bolts and 4 10mm nuts.
bottom_bracket_24_modules

Then, it’s just a matter of removing some plates from the top of the
half-pack. Two of them held on by 5 bolts each cover the bms wires and
busbar guards, and must come off. One long one that goes across the
top could potentially be worked around, but it has some protrusions
that go over the busbars, and it is close to the plastic catches on
the white plastic guards, so I also took it off.
24_module_top_view

Ninth: Snap off the white plastic guards (one at a time) and start
removing sense screws and bolts. I went ahead and removed every 3rd
bussbar, separating the pack into 24 volt segments, and then snapped
the busbars back into the plastic guard after I got it all the way
off. After I freed up 8 of the modules, I slipped a piece of coroplast
under the orange plastic guard, separating the busbars and sense tabs
from the modules, and then moved on to the next 8 modules.
24_module_removing_busbars

24_module_coroplast
24_modules_with_bussbar_off

And at this point, it’s just a matter of moving the half-pack off to
storage until you need the modules.
moving_24_module_stack

I measured just how “compressed” Nissan keeps the modules before I
unbolted anything. The full set of 24 modules (with the separating
metal plates between every two cells) was 32 inches when measuring at
the corner. Six modules was eight inches, and 12 modules was 16
inches, so I think it’s safe to say that 1.33333 inches per module is
a good compression to aim for.

The busbars are 1.61mm thick, and 20mm wide, and appear to be made of
solid copper. So apparently that is the size you need for 250 amps at
400 volts. The smaller busbars are 54mm in length, have 7.8mm hole
diameters, and I believe the holes are on 34mm centers, which is
1.33858 inches, or perhaps just 1.33333inch centers. There is a bit of
slop in the holes around the bolts anyways.

Other than the modules themselves, there are some other interesting
things inside the battery.
If you unbolt the service disconnect and turn it over, it has a 500
volt DC fuse rated at 225 amps (I don’t know if that is a slow or fast
blowing fuse…)

service_disconnect_225A_DC500V_fuse

Also under the service disconnect is a box which I believe is a DC to
DC converter that powers the BMS unit. I suspect it takes the entire
390+ volt pack voltage down to something appropriate for the BMS unit,
and considering that this is an automotive application, I would expect
it to be 12-15 volts DC. No idea how much current, but perhaps the
numbers on the side can be helpful. (295US 3NF0A / 3NFOA DC-SNB2ECU
38131 )
dc-dc_overview

dc-dc-numbers

Also, mounted on the busbar going to the service disconnect is what
looks to be a current sensor. Funny enough, the numbers on the side of
it match up to a current sensor that one online website says is
connected to the 12 volt accessory battery, so perhaps the same sensor
is used in two different places…or perhaps they got their numbers
mixed up…( 294G0 3NF0A 1304260034 )
service_disconnect_current_sensor

current_sensor_numbers

Near the front of the battery is the main contactors on both the
positive and negative side (Panasonic AEV6505A) which I assume are
rated for at least 250 amps at 400-500 volts, although I haven’t been
able to find a specification sheet for them online.

contactor_board

There is also a smaller relay/contactor for the pre-charge circuit.
(AEV6501C)
pre_charge_relay

Which is connected via a 40 watt 30 ohm power resistor. (400 volts at
30ohms is 13 amps?) I believe the “J” after the 30 ohm is a +/- 5% on
the ohm rating.
pre_charge_resistor

And of course, the 96 cell Nissan specific BMS unit and associated
wiring, which I’m sure costs a good amount to manufacture, but is
basically useless to a hobbyist until somebody reverse engineers the
CAN bus signals.
bms_busbars_complete1

They do have a lot of copper busbars, but they are only useful if you
are using the packs in series of 60 Ah modules just like Nissan. I
plan on using 3 parallel modules to make 180 Ah “batteries”, so my
busbars will need to be able to handle 2-3 times the current that the
stock ones do. (Although I’m sure they over engineer things, I have a
120 volt high amperage system on my S10 pickup, while they have a 400
volt not as high amperage system.)


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