chl
Well-known member
- First Name
- CHRIS
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2022
- Threads
- 6
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- 847
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- Location
- alexandria virginia
- Vehicles
- 2001 FORD RANGER, 2023 F-150 LIGHTNING
One thing to consider might be the ambient temperatures and the protective active heating and cooling operations in the Lightning or any other modern EV.Hello group. I am storing my Lariat ER for several months. The Ford manual under 'Preparing Your Vehicle for Storage' recommends that when storing the vehicle for more than 30 days the state of charge should be 50% and they recommend disconnecting the 12 volt battery 'which will reduce system loads on the HV battery'. I did search the forum and see some discussion but to be clear does this mean we do NOT connect the LV2 charger, then disconnect the 12v battery - LEAVING the frunk open - and maybe put the 12v battery on a trickle charger to maintain it. It sure seems like this is what is being suggested, rather than leaving the Lightning on the charger with the charge limit set at 50%. If it does - I cant think of a safe way of removing the 12v battery with the HV charger attached to the pickup. Remove the 12v and then attach the LV2 charger - does it work with the 12V removed??
I don't know exactly how the Ford handles the active heating/cooling, but I presume it requires the 12V battery to run the computing that detects HV battery temperature and implements the cooling or heating, just a guess.
So if you are storing it in an area subject to 'extreme' high or low temperatures, unless the Lightning is in a heat/cooled garage, I'd say be sure to keep the 12v battery on a trickle charger and don't disconnect it
I think Ford says to disconnect the 12v battery because the background processes of the Lightning, and other electrical leakage will discharge it. 12v batteries like to be kept 100% charged for longevity. Even so-called deep-cycle ones will last longer if kept fully charged.
For what it's worth, back in the 1970s when I was studying engineering, and battery tech, I learned that the very best way to store any lead-acid battery long term is, after disconnecting it, 1) fully charge it and then 2) drain the battery acid from it and put it in a cool dry place. That's the way the manufacturers did it, or used to anyway, with the battery acid being added at the point of sale when purchased and put in a vehicle. But now there are sealed batteries, and gel pack batteries, and batteries turn over faster at retailers, etc., so maybe that doesn't apply anymore except the 100% charge aspect.
The HV battery is not going to discharge much from the 50% level in 'several months' so keeping it connected to the L2 EVSE should not be needed. I only connect my Leaf to the L2 EVSE when it needs a charge, charging it 3-4 hours after 1 am to keep the electric bill minimized. I never noticed any HV discharge even after storing it for 2 months unplugged from L2.
I keep my 2012 Nissan Leaf 12v on a trickle charger when not in use and not parked in the sun where the roof solar cell trickle charges the 12v battery.
One year, I had it stored for about a month unused without a battery tender when I first got it and the 12v battery discharged running the charge timer and telemetrics so the Leaf was stuck in my garage until I bought a long enough jumper cable to reach it. Lesson learned. My salesman had assumed that with the L2 EVSE connected that the HV battery would maintain the 12v battery - wrong. The HV battery only charges the 12v when the vehicle is on - go figure. Still wondering why that is since having a fully charged 12v battery would be a good thing and it wouldn't take much stored energy from the HV battery to do it.
Maybe another option if you don't have the trickle charge availability would be to remotely turn the Lightning on for a period of time to let the HV battery recharge the 12V? The pre-conditioning function. Maybe that could be programmed into the vehicle to run every day?
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