Maxx
Well-known member
No. I just see power available is at 100% instead of 85%.Have you measured "toasty"?
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No. I just see power available is at 100% instead of 85%.Have you measured "toasty"?
Can you spell this out for a civilian? Do you charge and discharge a 30% delta battery three times as often as a 90% delta battery when you compare degradation? Or the same number of charge and discharges?Our testing shows that a 90% delta (95% SOC to 5% SOC) has the most degradation at normal temperatures.
Palmer says something interesting here. He says that if customers treat their battery "gently", that he thinks, "we can give them more range... over the air".The point where Palmer explains the 90% recommendation:
No, that's not what he's saying.Palmer says something interesting here. He says that if customers treat their battery "gently", that he thinks, "we can give them more range... over the air".
SO, if we keep to a 90% limit and charge frequently (small deltas), and don't overuse the DC fast charging infrastructure, Ford might be able to (one day) distribute an OTA update that adjusts the GOM favorably relative to battery abusers? Is that what you hear him say, or is that just me?
I take it as Ford would be willing to reallocate some of the current buffer to usable storage if the vast majority of people were following the 90% recommendation rather than charging to 100% every time.Palmer says something interesting here. He says that if customers treat their battery "gently", that he thinks, "we can give them more range... over the air".
SO, if we keep to a 90% limit and charge frequently (small deltas), and don't overuse the DC fast charging infrastructure, Ford might be able to (one day) distribute an OTA update that adjusts the GOM favorably relative to battery abusers? Is that what you hear him say, or is that just me?
If you listen to what Darren says, he basically says this (I am paraphrasing for fun):I take it as Ford would be willing to reallocate some of the current buffer to usable storage if the vast majority of people were following the 90% recommendation rather than charging to 100% every time.
Right. On the Mach-E, it seemed to go to 59. Whereas when I preconditioned on the way to a charger, it went to mid-70s.Here is an interesting tidbit of info related to preconditioning. Two days ago my truck sat outside unplugged with temps in the mid 20's. I plugged my OBD device in to see that my HVB was sitting at about 34 deg. Yesterday I had it plugged in overnight, which triggers my 7am departure time, and the battery temp was at 64 deg with the same 20ish deg ambient temps.
Thanks for sharing that.Here is an interesting tidbit of info related to preconditioning. Two days ago my truck sat outside unplugged with temps in the mid 20's. I plugged my OBD device in to see that my HVB was sitting at about 34 deg. Yesterday I had it plugged in overnight, which triggers my 7am departure time, and the battery temp was at 64 deg with the same 20ish deg ambient temps.
Right. It is a great response when some says "EVs don't work in the cold".Thanks for sharing that.
side note: I always thought people in cold climates would be buying less EVs because of battery performance in cold. So I was surprised when I saw this:
Heat is the enemy of Li-ion batteries and although voltage (and usable capacity in terms of deliverable power) drops in the cold, moderate cold actually slows Li-ion elapsed time-related aging (and you recover usable capacity when the battery warms up). Can't find a quote now, but I once read that Elon Musk joked that a Tesla battery would probably last forever in Alaska. The opposite is true for a Tesla parked mostly in an unshaded open lot in Phoenix, Arizona. The BMS will not keep the battery as cool as in Alaska, and there will be a lot more charge cycling because of BMS activity. (I imagine in Alaska, you just keep the battery from freezing solid and only really use energy to warm it up when you're going to drive the vehicle, whereas in Phoenix, when it's 130 or 140 deg F in a lot, the BMS is going to be working overtime to keep the battery within acceptable limits).I always thought people in cold climates would be buying less EVs because of battery performance in cold.
we donβt get those kinda temps in my state. My truck has been in shade for most of summer except one day that it was fully exposed in our vacation property driveway in a 90+ degree day. When I turned on the truck, the fan went bananas. Made me wonder if it is doing any battery cooling at all when it is off..., whereas in Phoenix, when it's 130 or 140 deg F in a lot, the BMS is going to be working overtime to keep the battery within acceptable limits).