LightningShow
Well-known member
I think the problem is that you’re assuming the GOM is giving you the actual range. What you’re seeing is a problem with Ford’s calculations not the actual battery capacity.
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So under a very limited set of conditions you can warm the battery on 110v. But even still it will barely warm it. I think once you have a level 2 charger and setup departure times it will be much better.Thank you for checking
Drives me nuts this is only on the calm screen, since this isn't my preferred driving setting. Should show percentage on the main screen in the corner at all times.% soc is what you get on calm screen.
Oh yes you will see a difference when you set up your Power Pro Charger. Pulling 15amps from a 20amps/115v outlet is a lot different than pulling 65-70amp/240v line on a 100amp circuit. Then once you get the 80amp charger, you be trying to make it work with your apps, which up to this point hasn't worked for me yet.I'm waiting for my charge station pro to get hooked up so this won't be a problem then. I hope all you guys are right and it's just a matter of heating.
that’s why i almost exclusively use the calm screen.% soc is what you get on calm screen.
I don’t think its off. It is more conservative at the high end down to about 80 miles of range or so and then it gets more and more accurate and firm close to the actual miles driven. Its one of the better ones out there, much better than the one we all like to make fun off.it does sound like the way ford set up the calculation is off somehow. my kona EV with its 250 mile range jumped around but it seems more predictable then what ive read here with the lightning.
First statement is correct.Let the truck learn from your driving habits.
Put some miles to it and you get the numbers way up.
Completely agreed. My lifetime average (after only ~700 miles to be fair) is between 2.0 and 2.1 mi/kWh. As we head into winter and I do a planned road trim in a few weeks, I expect it will continue to fall and level off around ~1.5 to 1.7 mi/kWh or about 190-220 miles at 100%.First statement is correct.
Second is not. Driving will yield a more accurate range, not a higher one. Lower for most. 2.56 miles per kWh is higher than most will get.