LightningShow
Well-known member
It could just be a bms hiccup, as well. I hope it’s nothing serious.
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Have you called roadside? I didn't have this info but they refused to tow me 21 miles to the charging station the truck had been taking me too. They would but it would be $882 out of pocket. It also took 2.5 hours to get them to say this after being disconnected three times and no one calling back.Here is the roadside for EVs.
https://www.ford.com/support/how-to...ce/roadside-assistance-for-electric-vehicles/
Call 1-800-241-3673 or use your FordPass App to request Ford Roadside Assistance,** and we’ll tow your vehicle to one of three locations of your choice within 35 miles:
If you’re more than 35 miles from home, Roadside Assistance will tow your all-electric vehicle to the nearest charge station or Ford EV-certified dealer. This service comes with the purchase of your Ford electric vehicle and is good for the first five years or 60,000 miles, whichever comes first.
- A public charging station
- Your home residence
- A Ford EV-certified dealer within the U.S. market
I have not.Have you called roadside? I didn't have this info but they refused to tow me 21 miles to the charging station the truck had been taking me too. They would but it would be $882 out of pocket. It also took 2.5 hours to get them to say this after being disconnected three times and no one calling back.
Have you called roadside? I didn't have this info but they refused to tow me 21 miles to the charging station the truck had been taking me too. They would but it would be $882 out of pocket. It also took 2.5 hours to get them to say this after being disconnected three times and no one calling back.
I hate dealing with Ford Roadside Assistance. *edited* to keep from getting in trouble.I have not.
I would have kept pushing them to escalate to higher level.
@Ford Motor Company needs to fix this crappy roadside service experience. Keep seeing this over and over.
The 12V system literally runs everything except the drive motors and HVAC.It's simply because a big battery isn't needed to drive a huge starter motor. It's needed to provide safety mechanisms to disable HV from being active 100% of the time. And unlike your starter batteries on your typical ICE, which are used to start the engine then kept topped off, these batteries are deep-cycled more (but aren't necessarily designed for it).
Their job is to 1) enable contactors in the battery pack to enable HV energy to those systems that need it, and 2) keep regular systems alive so the vehicle can continue to operate while "off".
They're kept small because there's no need to make them huge and expensive, because the HV pack can kick on and power things.
Correct, the 12V *system* runs everything except chargers, drive motors, HVAC, and 250A DC-DC converter. But the primary purpose of the 12V *battery* is to provide power to close the HV contactors in the battery pack. It helps to run some of the other 12v components that are needed when the truck is "sleeping", but the reason the battery is there is to provide safety for the HV pack when the car isn't on.The 12V system literally runs everything except the drive motors and HVAC.