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This guide is for general information only. EVcourse is not affiliated with Honda or BP Pulse. Charging speeds and compatibility vary by station, vehicle variant, and conditions. When in doubt, contact Honda or BP Pulse support.

Troubleshooting

Honda e:Ny1 Charging at BP Pulse

Updated March 2026

The Honda e:Ny1 is compatible with BP Pulse chargers. Here is what you need to know about charging speed, connector fit, and how to handle common problems.

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Compatibility Overview

Approximate values. Actual speeds depend on temperature, battery state, and station load.

Connector match
Compatible
Car connector
CCS2
Network connectors
CCS2, CHAdeMO
Max charging speed
78 kW
10-80% estimate
46 min
Payment
app, contactless, RFID

Why Your Charging Speed May Differ

The Honda e:Ny1 supports up to 78 kW DC charging. BP Pulse chargers deliver up to 300 kW. Your car's maximum intake is the limiting factor here, capping speed at 78 kW even on a faster charger.

  • Charging slows down above 80% state of charge on most EVs, including the Honda e:Ny1.
  • Cold weather reduces charging speed. Preconditioning may not be available on all Honda e:Ny1 variants.
  • If multiple cars share the same BP Pulse station, power may be split between stalls.

Honda e:Ny1 Charging Problems

Honda e Ny1 Charger Will Not Start a Charging Session

You have connected the charger to your Honda e:Ny1, but the session is not starting. The screen is blank, there is an error, or the car just does not respond. As Honda's first mass-market European EV, the e:Ny1 uses standard connectors but has a few quirks worth knowing.

Symptoms

  • The CCS2 or Type 2 connector is plugged in but no charging begins
  • The Honda e:Ny1's instrument cluster does not show a charging indicator
  • The charger screen shows an error code after plug-in
  • You hear the connector lock engage but power does not flow
  • The charging app shows the session failed to start

What to Do

  1. 1

    Authenticate before plugging in

    Tap your RFID card or start the session in the charging app before inserting the connector. Wait for the charger screen to show 'ready' or 'plug in now.'

  2. 2

    Unplug and firmly reinsert

    Remove the connector completely from the e:Ny1's charge port on the front right. Wait 10 seconds, then reinsert it firmly until you hear the locking click.

  3. 3

    Check for a charging timer

    On the Honda e:Ny1's dashboard, navigate to the charging settings and check if a timer is active. Disable it if you need to charge immediately.

  4. 4

    Reset the car's charging system

    Turn the car off, lock it with the key fob, wait 30 seconds, then unlock and try again. This can clear any error state from a previously interrupted session.

  5. 5

    Inspect the charge port

    Check the charge port for moisture, dirt, or debris. Clean it gently with a dry cloth if needed. Make sure the port flap opens fully.

  6. 6

    Try a different charger

    If the charger still will not start after trying all steps, move to a different unit. The charger is more likely to be the problem than the car.

Honda e Ny1 Payment Not Working at Charging Station

You are at a charger with your Honda e:Ny1 and the payment is not going through. Card declined, app not working, RFID not recognized. This has nothing to do with your car. It is a charger and payment network problem. Here is how to get past it.

Symptoms

  • RFID card tap produces no response from the charger
  • Charging app shows a payment authorization error
  • Bank card is declined at the charger terminal
  • Charger screen shows 'payment failed' or a generic error
  • You cannot find any accepted payment method on the charger

What to Do

  1. 1

    Check which payments the charger accepts

    Look at the charger screen and stickers for accepted payment methods. If none of your options are listed, you need to move to a different charger or sign up for that network.

  2. 2

    Try a different payment method

    Switch between RFID card, charging app, and contactless bank card. If one method fails, another may work on the same charger.

  3. 3

    Verify your card balance

    Open your banking app and check that you have at least 80 EUR available. Top up or switch to a card with more available balance if needed.

  4. 4

    Hold the RFID card steadily for 3 seconds

    Place the card flat on the reader and hold it without moving. Some readers are slow and need a longer contact time to register.

  5. 5

    Update your charging app payment details

    Open each charging app you use and check that the stored payment method is current. Update any expired cards.

  6. 6

    Move to another charger unit

    If nothing works on this charger, try the next unit at the same station. Individual card readers fail while other units work fine.

Honda e Ny1 Charging Slower Than Expected DC and AC

You plugged in your Honda e:Ny1 expecting fast charging, but the speed is disappointing. The e:Ny1 tops out at 78 kW DC, which is slower than many competitors. Without preconditioning or a heat pump, cold weather makes it worse. Here is what is happening and what you can do.

Symptoms

  • DC fast charging well below the 78 kW maximum
  • AC home charging stuck at 3-4 kW instead of 11 kW
  • Charging speed drops significantly after 50% state of charge
  • Cold weather charging is extremely slow
  • Charging from 10% to 80% takes much longer than expected

What to Do

  1. 1

    Drive before charging in cold weather

    Since the e:Ny1 has no preconditioning, drive for 20-30 minutes before stopping at a DC charger in winter. The driving warms the battery through use, which improves charging acceptance.

  2. 2

    Check your state of charge

    For the best speeds, arrive at the charger between 10-20% and charge to 80%. The e:Ny1's peak power is available mainly below 50%.

  3. 3

    Choose a charger rated above 100 kW

    Even though the e:Ny1 maxes out at 78 kW, using a higher-rated charger ensures you are not bottlenecked by the charger. Avoid 50 kW units when faster options are available.

  4. 4

    Verify your AC installation

    For home charging, confirm with your electrician that your wallbox is wired for three-phase at 16A to deliver the full 11 kW. Single-phase installations will be about a third of that speed.

  5. 5

    Check if the charger is sharing power

    Look at the charger. If two cables come from the same unit and someone is using the other one, you may be sharing power. Move to a solo charger if possible.

  6. 6

    Try a different charger

    If your speed is still well below 60-70 kW at a low state of charge and warm battery, the charger may be degraded. Test a different unit.

Common BP Pulse Issues

Contactless reader not responding

You tap your bank card or phone and nothing happens. The screen does not acknowledge the tap at all, or it briefly flashes and returns to the start screen.

Symptoms

  • No beep or screen change after tapping your card
  • Screen flashes 'Card read error' then resets
  • Apple Pay or Google Pay shows 'Done' on your phone but the charger does not start
  • Reader works on one unit but not the adjacent one

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Try a physical bank card instead of your phone

    Contactless phone payments sometimes fail on BP Pulse readers even when a physical card works fine. Hold the card flat against the reader for 2-3 seconds.

  2. 2

    Check for a second tap point

    Some BP Pulse units have the contactless reader on the side panel rather than below the screen. Look for a card symbol printed on the housing.

  3. 3

    Clean the reader surface

    Wipe dirt, rain, or condensation off the contactless reader area with your sleeve. Moisture on the sensor can prevent a clean read.

  4. 4

    Start the session via the BP Pulse app instead

    Open the app, find the charger on the map, select the connector, and tap 'Start Charging.' This bypasses the physical reader entirely.

  5. 5

    Try the other connector or an adjacent unit

    If the charger has two connectors, the other side may have a working reader. Or walk to the next unit. Contactless reader failures are often limited to one specific unit.

BP Pulse app crashing on Android

The app closes unexpectedly when you try to start a session, view the map, or enter payment details. This is more common on older Android versions and after recent app updates.

Symptoms

  • App closes immediately after opening
  • App freezes on the map screen then crashes
  • Crash when tapping 'Start Charging' after selecting a connector
  • 'App keeps stopping' notification from Android

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Force close and reopen the app

    Go to Android Settings, then Apps, then BP Pulse. Tap 'Force Stop,' wait a few seconds, then open the app again.

  2. 2

    Clear the app cache

    In Settings, go to Apps, then BP Pulse, then Storage, then 'Clear Cache.' This removes temporary data without deleting your account. You will not need to log in again.

  3. 3

    Check for an app update

    Open the Google Play Store, search for BP Pulse, and tap 'Update' if available. Crashes often follow a buggy release that gets patched within days.

  4. 4

    Use contactless payment as a backup

    If the app will not cooperate, tap your bank card on the charger's contactless reader to start a session without the app.

  5. 5

    Reinstall the app if crashes persist

    Uninstall BP Pulse, restart your phone, then reinstall from the Play Store. You will need to log in again, so make sure you know your BP Pulse account email.

Charger shows 'Out of Service' with no visible damage

The screen displays 'Out of Service' or 'Unavailable,' but the charger looks perfectly fine. No broken cables, no barrier tape, no obvious reason it should be offline.

Symptoms

  • Screen stuck on 'Out of Service' message
  • Charger appears available in the app but shows error on arrival
  • Status light is red or off entirely
  • Other chargers at the same location work fine

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check the BP Pulse app for real-time status

    Open the app and look at this specific charger. If it shows as unavailable there too, the network has flagged it remotely. A maintenance team likely already knows.

  2. 2

    Look for a reset button or power switch

    Some older BP Pulse units (especially former Chargemaster ones) have a small reset button behind a panel or near the base. Pressing it can sometimes clear a stuck error state.

  3. 3

    Report it in the app

    Use the 'Report a problem' option on the charger's detail page in the BP Pulse app. This helps BP Pulse prioritize repairs and updates the status for other drivers.

  4. 4

    Move to another charger

    An 'Out of Service' state usually means a backend fault, a communication issue with the network, or a pending software update. You cannot fix these yourself. Use another unit or location.

Charging session drops after 5-10 minutes

Charging starts normally, but the session ends on its own after a few minutes. Your car shows it is no longer receiving power, and the charger returns to the welcome screen.

Symptoms

  • Car dashboard shows charging stopped unexpectedly
  • Charger screen returns to 'Plug in to start' after a few minutes
  • You receive a session-ended notification in the app with a very short session
  • This happens repeatedly at the same charger

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check the connector is fully seated

    Unplug the cable, inspect the connector pins for dirt or debris, and plug it back in firmly until you hear a click. A loose connection can cause the charger to drop the session.

  2. 2

    Check your car's charge limit

    If your car's charge limit is set very close to the current battery level, some vehicles will stop charging almost immediately. Set the limit to 80% or higher and try again.

  3. 3

    Try the other connector type

    If the charger offers both CCS2 and CHAdeMO and your car supports CCS2, make sure you are using CCS2. Using the wrong connector obviously will not fit, but a worn CCS2 connector on one side may work better on the other unit.

  4. 4

    Start a new session at a different unit

    Repeated drops at the same charger point to a hardware fault on that unit. Move to another charger and try again.

  5. 5

    Report the faulty unit

    Note the charger ID (printed on the unit) and report it via the BP Pulse app or call the BP Pulse support number shown on the charger. This helps get the unit serviced.

Subscription vs pay-as-you-go pricing confusion

BP Pulse offers a subscription plan with lower per-kWh rates and a pay-as-you-go option with higher rates. It is not always clear which pricing you are on, or whether the subscription is worth it for your usage.

Symptoms

  • Charged a higher rate than expected on your receipt
  • Unsure whether your subscription is active
  • Signed up for subscription but still seeing non-member prices
  • Cannot figure out how to switch between plans

How to Fix It

  1. 1

    Check your plan status in the app

    Open the BP Pulse app, go to your account settings, and look for your subscription status. If it says 'Active,' you should be getting the lower rate automatically.

  2. 2

    Make sure you are starting sessions through the app

    Subscription pricing only applies when you start the session via the BP Pulse app or RFID card linked to your account. Tapping a contactless bank card will charge you the standard pay-as-you-go rate.

  3. 3

    Review your charging history for rate discrepancies

    In the app, go to Charging History and check the per-kWh rate on recent sessions. Compare this to the subscription rate listed on the BP Pulse pricing page.

  4. 4

    Cancel or change your plan if needed

    You can manage your subscription in the app under Account, then Subscription. If you charge infrequently, pay-as-you-go may actually cost less overall despite the higher per-kWh rate.

BP Pulse App Tips

  • Enable notifications in the BP Pulse app to get alerts when your session ends, when the charger becomes available, or if there is a problem.
  • Use the app's filter to show only available chargers and filter by speed (rapid, ultra-rapid) to avoid arriving at an occupied or slow charger.
  • Add a payment card in the app before you need to charge. Setting up payment while standing in the rain at a charger is not fun.
  • The app shows real-time charger status. If a charger shows 'Available' in the app but 'Out of Service' on arrival, report it so the status updates for others.
  • If you see Chargemaster branding on a charger, it is still part of the BP Pulse network. The app will recognize it.

Payment Tips

  • Contactless bank card payments work without an account, but you will always pay the higher pay-as-you-go rate. Use the app for subscription pricing.
  • Some BP Pulse chargers accept RFID cards from roaming providers like Octopus Electroverse or Shell Recharge. Check your roaming provider's coverage map first.
  • If a contactless payment fails, the charge will not appear on your bank statement. No session started means no charge. You will not be double-billed.
  • BP Pulse subscription includes a monthly fee. Do the math: if you charge less than a few times per month on BP Pulse specifically, pay-as-you-go may be cheaper.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the Honda e:Ny1 charge at BP Pulse?
Yes. The Honda e:Ny1 uses a CCS2 connector, which is supported by BP Pulse chargers. Maximum charging speed will be up to 78 kW.
How long does it take to charge a Honda e:Ny1 at BP Pulse?
Charging a Honda e:Ny1 from 10% to 80% at BP Pulse takes approximately 46 minutes at up to 78 kW. Actual times vary depending on temperature, battery condition, and station load.
How do you pay at BP Pulse?
BP Pulse accepts app, contactless, RFID. Check the BP Pulse app or website for current pricing and subscription options.

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