AndySpill
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Andy
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2023
- Threads
- 71
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- 1,654
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- 1,270
- Location
- Pittsburgh
- Vehicle(s)
- 2018 JL Sahara
- Thread starter
- #1
I'm considering installing one of those auto eject receptacles (e.g. https://kussmaul.com/ejection-units ) on my Sahara that are common on emergency service vehicles. To those unfamiliar, they provide an AC current male plug to attach shore power to, for purposes of running say a battery trickle charger while the vehicle is parked, and then eject that plug when the engine is cranked.
Towards this goal can anyone recommend a place on the 3.6L vehicle's circuitry that is only 12V energized when the vehicle is cold cranked (i.e. not ESS started)?
P.S. I think I came up with a way to do this, which I'd still like subject to forum critique:
https://www.jlwranglerforums.com/forum/threads/3-6l-ess-battery-diagram.14401/
The PCR (Power Control Relay) is energized during ESS events and a split second at start up to test the ESS battery, correct?
So if the PCR has been on for say, at least a second (i.e. an ESS event, not an instantaneous pre-cold crank ESS battery test,) using some timed relay, my auto ejector plug can ignore the electrical current supplied to the engine starter and not seek to push out of its receptacle any shore plug. This would represent an ESS engine start where the vehicle has long since left the driveway, the shore plug long since been ejected.
But the near instantaneous energizing of the PCR at cold crank wouldn't cause my timed relay to prevent the current heading to the engine starter to also energize the auto eject plug, pushing the shore plug out if it's plugged in, before the vehicle is taken out of park.
Towards this goal can anyone recommend a place on the 3.6L vehicle's circuitry that is only 12V energized when the vehicle is cold cranked (i.e. not ESS started)?
P.S. I think I came up with a way to do this, which I'd still like subject to forum critique:
https://www.jlwranglerforums.com/forum/threads/3-6l-ess-battery-diagram.14401/
The PCR (Power Control Relay) is energized during ESS events and a split second at start up to test the ESS battery, correct?
So if the PCR has been on for say, at least a second (i.e. an ESS event, not an instantaneous pre-cold crank ESS battery test,) using some timed relay, my auto ejector plug can ignore the electrical current supplied to the engine starter and not seek to push out of its receptacle any shore plug. This would represent an ESS engine start where the vehicle has long since left the driveway, the shore plug long since been ejected.
But the near instantaneous energizing of the PCR at cold crank wouldn't cause my timed relay to prevent the current heading to the engine starter to also energize the auto eject plug, pushing the shore plug out if it's plugged in, before the vehicle is taken out of park.
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