Jim Lewis
Well-known member
- First Name
- Jim
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2023
- Threads
- 41
- Messages
- 820
- Reaction score
- 684
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Vehicles
- Honda Accord 2017; 2023 Lariat ER
- Occupation
- Retired
- Thread starter
- #1
Sorry if I missed a pre-existing thread on this. If so, just point me in the right direction with a link. I was chitchatting with my neighbor, who has a new Tesla Model Y. He mentioned he's not worried about Texas summer heat in parking lots, etc., because his car will use some of its battery charge to keep the battery cool even when the car is not plugged in. He thought the cooling came on when the battery was in the 95 to 102 deg F range but wasn't sure.
I've looked through the Lightning manual and searched through Lightning and Mach-E forums, but I've only seen remarks about dashboard warnings coming on advising the owner to plug the vehicle in for cooling in hot weather. So, can the Lightning, if not plugged in, use its own battery power to cool itself, and if so, what sort of a dent in % SOC is caused by an hour or two in a hot parking lot? If the Lightning can cool its own battery when not plugged in, does the owner have any control over the temperature at which the cooling comes on, through the OBDII port or by getting the dealer to adjust the settings, etc.?
The other dumb newbie question (no truck yet) is if the truck is just plugged into a 120-volt outlet with the Mobile Power Charger, can that supply enough juice to allow the truck to cool its battery pack or would I need to use the Mobile Power Charger in 240-volt mode if I want battery cooling when visiting one of the kids?
I've looked through the Lightning manual and searched through Lightning and Mach-E forums, but I've only seen remarks about dashboard warnings coming on advising the owner to plug the vehicle in for cooling in hot weather. So, can the Lightning, if not plugged in, use its own battery power to cool itself, and if so, what sort of a dent in % SOC is caused by an hour or two in a hot parking lot? If the Lightning can cool its own battery when not plugged in, does the owner have any control over the temperature at which the cooling comes on, through the OBDII port or by getting the dealer to adjust the settings, etc.?
The other dumb newbie question (no truck yet) is if the truck is just plugged into a 120-volt outlet with the Mobile Power Charger, can that supply enough juice to allow the truck to cool its battery pack or would I need to use the Mobile Power Charger in 240-volt mode if I want battery cooling when visiting one of the kids?
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