LightningShow
Well-known member
- Thread starter
- #1
I was just fooling around with trip planning for the Lightning and I still feel a little in the dark on the real DCFC rates. I know @OutofSpecKyle will have something out soon but I'm wondering what that 50%-80% taper will look like in reality. I had been assuming that the rate tapers off from ~150kw to ~125kw shortly after 50% then mostly holds there until 80% but I just watched Kyle's video from San Antonio more closely and he plugged in at 47% at 5:25pm and got to 80% at 5:44pm. That's an *average* of 137kW delivered to the battery from 47-80%. He was also well over 170kW (from the station) prior to 50%. That would be pretty great if it can average 135kW to the battery from 50%-80%.
If it will average 155kW from 0-50 and 135kW from 50-80, it should be able to go from essentially dead to 80% in 43 minutes, which is way better than the "15%-80% in 41 minutes" that Ford has been quoting. I suspect Kyle's charge rates have something to do with the fact he was ripping on the truck and had the battery temp primed to take max charge so that's a factor. Also, who knows whether the programming on that truck was the same as production, though I assume it *was* an early production truck.
Anyway, can't wait for some full DC charge tests!
ETA: I just noticed that a steady taper from 155kW to 120kW from 50-80% gives you a 137kW average. Seems like that's maybe what Kyle experienced.
If it will average 155kW from 0-50 and 135kW from 50-80, it should be able to go from essentially dead to 80% in 43 minutes, which is way better than the "15%-80% in 41 minutes" that Ford has been quoting. I suspect Kyle's charge rates have something to do with the fact he was ripping on the truck and had the battery temp primed to take max charge so that's a factor. Also, who knows whether the programming on that truck was the same as production, though I assume it *was* an early production truck.
Anyway, can't wait for some full DC charge tests!
ETA: I just noticed that a steady taper from 155kW to 120kW from 50-80% gives you a 137kW average. Seems like that's maybe what Kyle experienced.
Sponsored