Carsten Haase
Well-Known Member
@Rexsio, the thing you are measuring is the EME. The enclosure includes the inverter, the DC/DC converter, and an ECU controlling a bunch of things like the motor parking lock. It also happens to have two internal temperature sensors and is liquid cooled (see #2 and #12 below for coolant in/out)
The outer surface of the EME enclosure will not match the temperature of the internal components and cooling the outside surface won't necessarily make the internal components cooler because they probably have a very small contact area with the enclosure (a couple of mounting screws) and will have very low heat transfer
If you really want to keep the temperatures down for the important components (motor/inverter/battery) the best thing you can do is to keep the power meter as low as possible and avoid strong regen.
The outer surface of the EME enclosure will not match the temperature of the internal components and cooling the outside surface won't necessarily make the internal components cooler because they probably have a very small contact area with the enclosure (a couple of mounting screws) and will have very low heat transfer
If you really want to keep the temperatures down for the important components (motor/inverter/battery) the best thing you can do is to keep the power meter as low as possible and avoid strong regen.