Ventorum94
Well-known member
You ask a question that raises an even more fundamental question: why have a GOM at all? This universal obsession with GOM accuracy is so unnecessary. The best it can do is predict future consumption based on recent past consumption (whether or not to include things like recent towing or ProPower use, is only one question that cannot be answered to every driver’s satisfaction…) Better than a GOM is a human brain: monitor displayed SOC, and calculate the range yourself while driving.This weekend tropical storm Ophelia came through North Carolina. On Friday night I went ahead and plugged the truck into my transfer switch in case we lost power. We never did lose power but it did flicker a couple of times just before bedtime so I went ahead and switched over instead of having to get up in the middle of the night to switch. I was plugged into the EVSE and had finished charging back to my normal 80% before I switched. I noticed a couple of interesting things.
First, when I switched on ProPower the truck starting charging at full power for a few minutes. Then it seemed to drop down and pull just about enough from the charger to run the ProPower. When I checked my charge in the morning I was still at 80% so it did not use any battery to keep the ProPower running. It seems that if you supply power to the charger and use the power from the ProPower you basically turn the truck into a very large UPS.
The other thing I noticed is that using ProPower affected the GOM. Usually at 80% my GOM shows about 180 miles (SR battery) but after running ProPower all night it was only showing 158 miles. The software really shouldn't use any zero mile trips to calculate the GOM numbers. I've got a road trip next weekend and this is going to make my estimates even less accurate. If @Ford Motor Company would give us a generator mode in the software it could prevent this and improve the accuracy of the GOM.
The screenshot shows the power supplied to the truck. I only drove a couple of miles on Friday so the initial charge on the left was only a few minutes. When it turns on again is when I was getting the truck started and making the switch. After the switch (the vertical line) the power drops and starts to mirror what the house was using.
Example: if you have an ER pack, take displayed SOC and multiply by 3, and there’s your range! (add 10% if you’re driving under 50mph, subtract 10% if you’re driving over 70mph- subtract 50% if towing large trailer). Monitor displayed SOC, and update your brain-GOM range as you drive.
If you have an SR pack, multiply displayed SOC by 2, add 10% for a trip under 50mph, or subtract 10% for a trip over 70mph, subtract 50% if towing large trailer (or tailor your own towing correction based upon experience with your trailer). Monitor displayed SOC, and update your brain-GOM range as you drive.
Your brain-enabled GOM will be accurate enough never to leave you stranded, and you won’t have to wonder. Try it and see if it doesn’t end GOM anxiety altogether.
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