bmwhitetx
Well-known member
Yep, I was skeptical too, but it matches what the Home Assistant integration shows for LVB SOC and CarScanner. All three showing 89% while my HVB is clearly at around 83%.It’s definitely the 12V battery.
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Yep, I was skeptical too, but it matches what the Home Assistant integration shows for LVB SOC and CarScanner. All three showing 89% while my HVB is clearly at around 83%.It’s definitely the 12V battery.
That’s how I knew for sure - I looked at it showing 78% when my truck was down in the 40s.Yep, I was skeptical too, but it matches what the Home Assistant integration shows for LVB SOC and CarScanner. All three showing 89% while my HVB is clearly at around 83%.
Yep, I was skeptical too, but it matches what the Home Assistant integration shows for LVB SOC and CarScanner. All three showing 89% while my HVB is clearly at around 83%.
I logged in and love seeing that on the ford.com. I haven't done the leg work to see if it matches my true 12v battery SOC, but I can tell you it doesn't match my HVB SOC. The number of miles do match though. So I'm still really wondering if it is LVB or HVB.That’s how I knew for sure - I looked at it showing 78% when my truck was down in the 40s.
In my experience the Ford Account data on the web does very slow updates. In Home Assistant it will tell you the last time it updated. Often it is more than 12 hours for me when not driving. The nice thing about HA is you can force a refresh and it will ping the Ford servers. I know in the app you can pull down on the screen and get a refresh but since this LVB is on the website I don't know how to force a refresh - it's likely just pushing the same stale data (i.e., clicking F5 doesn't refresh data).OK - This SOC is even crazier. I went to read the MachE thread and clicked the link there - logged into my Ford Account again - I took these screen shots 25 minutes apart. I've not been to the truck, I didn't start the truck, I haven't driven the truck and now my "SOC" what ever it is from now shows it is 10% less AND I gained a mile of range. My mobile app now show 211 miles DTE too.
First screen shot taken at 5:11 PM Central, the second taken at 5:36 PM Central. SOC drops 10%.
In my experience the Ford Account data on the web does very slow updates. In Home Assistant it will tell you the last time it updated. Often it is more than 12 hours for me when not driving. The nice thing about HA is you can force a refresh and it will ping the Ford servers. I know in the app you can pull down on the screen and get a refresh but since this LVB is on the website I don't know how to force a refresh - it's likely just pushing the same stale data (i.e., clicking F5 doesn't refresh data).
In other words your 63% could be from many hours ago and it refreshed between 5:11 and 5:26.
Theres a glitch in the site - that is actually your 12V battery SOC.OK - This SOC is even crazier. I went to read the MachE thread and clicked the link there - logged into my Ford Account again - I took these screen shots 25 minutes apart. I've not been to the truck, I didn't start the truck, I haven't driven the truck and now my "SOC" what ever it is from now shows it is 10% less AND I gained a mile of range. My mobile app now show 211 miles DTE too.
First screen shot taken at 5:11 PM Central, the second taken at 5:36 PM Central. SOC drops 10%.
Agree this is one of the dumbest things Ford has every done, nobody gives a rats arse about the LVB in general unless trying to install an update. On the other hand the HVB is what an EV driver thinks of when it comes to day to day driving. Here is an idea for you Ford...how about you put them both on this screen at Ford.com on our vehicle dashboard with emphasis on the HVB. geez lolIt’s definitely the 12V battery.
I’ve been looking at this all day and have no rhyme or reason. So I’m just going to agree with this. Dumb. Voltage goes up (even tested under a load) and capacity goes down. Voltage goes down capacity goes up. At least I’ve convinced myself it’s not the HVB.Agree this is one of the dumbest things Ford has every done, nobody gives a rats arse about the LVB in general unless trying to install an update. On the other hand the HVB is what an EV driver thinks of when it comes to day to day driving. Here is an idea for you Ford...how about you put them both on this screen at Ford.com on our vehicle dashboard with emphasis on the HVB. geez lol
An even better idea. Allow both HVB and LVB to be displayed somewhere on the dash or on the Sync screen in our trucks. Since you can be stranded on the road if the LVB goes dead, I kinda disagree that it's not so important except for updates to know how the LVB is faring. Just like the engine and battery temperatures, there at least ought to be an idiot light somewhere to flash an annoying warning light when your LVB is getting perilously low on SOC or charge capacity. AIA, in case there's already such an indicator that I haven't learned about.Here is an idea for you Ford...how about you put them both on this screen at Ford.com on our vehicle dashboard with emphasis on the HVB.
Normally it's "Failure is not an option."It is really sad when the most dependable "feature" of the OTA update process is failure.
There is ..... lower right corner of the instrument cluster symbol of battery, it's displayed while we are in accessory mode as a gentle reminder that we are running minor accessory from the 12v LVB.there at least ought to be an idiot light somewhere to flash an annoying warning light when your LVB is getting perilously low on SOC or charge capacity. AIA, in case there's already such an indicator that I haven't learned about.
Yep, I was skeptical too, but it matches what the Home Assistant integration shows for LVB SOC and CarScanner. All three showing 89% while my HVB is clearly at around 83%.
Yes, the proverbial idiot light lolThere is ..... lower right corner of the instrument cluster symbol of battery, it's displayed while we are in accessory mode as a gentle reminder that we are running minor accessory from the 12v LVB.