Very helpful.So.. I drive easy. Charge at home at about 9 KW, 1 am to 6 am so battery cools down 4-5 hours before charging. Always precondition. My 45 mile drive takes 45 minutes due to winding rural roads. DCFC rare. Couple times a year. Can’t quite charge every other day.
Our Mach E has 55K miles and is 93% state of health.
I wouldn’t say complete voodoo, but far less important than other things to worry about. It’s a snapshot of what your truck thinks of its battery, but that can change.so the conclusion is SOH reading is complete voodoo? just like getting OTA updates?
You don' happen to have a recording of the conversation the two of you had after you came back to town?It sat for a week at 100% at my wife’s house when she left it plugged in and didn’t drive it while I was out of town.
People that put a lot of mileage on the battery in a short amount of time seem to be doing well on the average. I wonder, how much time itself has an impact. My last ICE truck was 20 years old when I got rid of it.I reconnected with an acquaintance from 20 years ago on a Tesla Facebook group. That dude uses the hell out of his battery. Over 250,000 miles and climbing on his 2019 Model 3, and half of that has been on road trips using Superchargers. Up to 100%, down to the single digits, rinse and repeat. His SoH is still above 90% and he’s had no issues to speak of.
I use this:How does one see the SOH?
You can see your SOH go up in some cases. If you charge to 100%, drive down to about 10-20% and L2 charge to above 80% again, it will balance the pack a bit and recalculate the health based on the more accurate numbers. This can result in SOH increasing because your pack actually improves overall capacity through the process. It DOES NOT mean your cells in the pack are getting healthier, just that your overall pack is performing better.Are you saying your SOH went up? I didn’t know that was possible.
Folks are saying preconditioning on the road (may be with the latest update?) does not always work. I think when it does work is when you navigate to a charging location with Ford onboard software.I am so confused by preconditioning. How do you know it is happening? When I go to charge on the road, how does the truck know to precondition? Seems like a phantom setting. Owned truck a year, still flummoxed.
Brilliant. Thank you. I just ordered the device. And thank you for the link to the software I'll need. Much appreciated.
The only way to know for sure is to watch the temperature of the battery using an OBDII reader. Last summer, 110F+ the battery temp meter on the dash was to the right of middle. I had a charger set as destination in Nav app and as I got close I saw the temp meter move to middle. It wasn't getting cooler outside (it was middle of the afternoon) so I can only assume the truck was cooling the battery in preparation for DCFC.I am so confused by preconditioning. How do you know it is happening? When I go to charge on the road, how does the truck know to precondition? Seems like a phantom setting. Owned truck a year, still flummoxed.