PreservedSwine
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2023
- Threads
- 25
- Messages
- 312
- Reaction score
- 371
- Location
- Fort Myers
- Vehicles
- 2023 Lightning
- Thread starter
- #1
I’ve heard the owners manual recommend charging to 100%. I haven’t been able to find where it says this, but can’t find where it suggests charging to something less, either.
Battery health and longevity being key, I believe it’s common knowledge that staying between 80% and 20% of a batteries capacity seems to be the golden rule.
If Ford is suggesting we charge to 100%, perhaps “100%” isn’t really 100%. Perhaps when it displays 100%, in reality, it’s only 80% or 90%. Alternatively, when it goes to 0% and shuts down, I suspect it’s not really zero. I believe fully discharging this battery completely would cause irreparable harm.
Does anyone know for sure?
I use the truck as a work truck, and need as many miles as I get get (some days) most of the advice I can find is based on 100% really meaning 100%. If I’m charging to 80%, am I really only charging to 60%-70%?
I hope I’m properly conveying the question- these are all things I wish I would have thought about before buying the vehicle. Hindsight being what it is- better late than never
Battery health and longevity being key, I believe it’s common knowledge that staying between 80% and 20% of a batteries capacity seems to be the golden rule.
If Ford is suggesting we charge to 100%, perhaps “100%” isn’t really 100%. Perhaps when it displays 100%, in reality, it’s only 80% or 90%. Alternatively, when it goes to 0% and shuts down, I suspect it’s not really zero. I believe fully discharging this battery completely would cause irreparable harm.
Does anyone know for sure?
I use the truck as a work truck, and need as many miles as I get get (some days) most of the advice I can find is based on 100% really meaning 100%. If I’m charging to 80%, am I really only charging to 60%-70%?
I hope I’m properly conveying the question- these are all things I wish I would have thought about before buying the vehicle. Hindsight being what it is- better late than never
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