Carautonomy — car parts and warning lights explained
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What is an On-board Charger?

The part that lets you charge from a normal home or destination AC charger.

ON-BOARD CHARGER — AC FROM THE WALL → DC INTO THE BATTERY7kWwallbox (AC)AC mainsportOBCrectify +step-upon-board chargerDCHV batteryDC RAPID — bypasses OBC, straight to batteryHome/destination AC charging goes through the OBC — DC rapid chargers skip it for speed

Simplified animation — not to scale.

In plain English

The on-board charger (OBC) lives inside the car and is used whenever you plug into an AC source — a home wallbox, a 3-pin plug or a public Type 2 destination charger. Its job is to convert that AC electricity into DC at the right voltage to charge the traction battery. Its size (typically 3.6kW, 7kW, 11kW or 22kW) is what limits your home charging speed — not the wallbox.

A simple analogy

"Think of it as a built-in phone charger brick for your car. A wallbox is just a tap delivering AC — the OBC inside the car is the actual charger turning it into something the battery can drink."

How it works

When you plug in an AC charger, mains electricity flows into the OBC. It first rectifies it to DC, then steps it up to the high voltage the battery needs (often 400V+). DC rapid chargers bypass the OBC completely and feed the battery directly — which is why rapid charging is much faster than home charging.

Signs of trouble

  • Car charges much slower than expected on AC
  • "Charging fault" message
  • Charging stops randomly
  • No charging on AC but DC rapid still works
  • Burning smell or warm charge port
Rough UK cost

£1,150 – £3,700

Parts: £900 – £3,000
Labour: £250 – £700

Always get a written quote. Prices vary by car, region, and parts brand.

Heads up: Carautonomy is for general guidance only. If your car is showing warning lights or behaving oddly, get it looked at by a qualified mechanic.

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