Its PJ Bia
Well-known member
I charge to 90% during the week, the once every couple of months I will charge to 100% to rebalance the cells.
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Charging to 100% or depleting to 0% won't kill your battery. Doing it regularly will age them faster.I literally went from 100% to 0% just a week and a half ago. Running out did not cause irreparable harm, there’s a reserve and a buffer but not to the tune of 148kW.
Rebalancing the cells does not happen often even when you charge to 100%. It has happened once in my 18 months of ownership on my wife's MME and not yet on my 11-month-old Lightning. When the MME did a top balance, the next day I drove 50km before the SOC meter came off 100%. It was an interesting experience. That day I probably could have driven 500km on the 430km MME.I charge to 90% during the week, the once every couple of months I will charge to 100% to rebalance the cells.
Source?You have to charge over 80%.
Rebalancing happens any time the polarization curve dips below the average charge/discharge time constant learned by the BMS. This may mean spending more than 8-12 hours of just resting.Rebalancing the cells does not happen often even when you charge to 100%. It has happened once in my 18 months of ownership on my wife's MME and not yet on my 11-month-old Lightning. When the MME did a top balance, the next day I drove 50km before the SOC meter came off 100%. It was an interesting experience. That day I probably could have driven 500km on the 430km MME.
BECM engineers.Source?
Am I likely to have any cell rebalancing problems if I never charge above 80% but often let my truck sit for days just plugged in, not charging, at 50% charge? And, since I've never charged to 90% or 100%, will I be missing some capacity achieved by cycling new cells? According to actually trip experience and to GOM estimates, I am achieving the Lariat EPA range estimates in spite of my above practices, so I'm a happy camper, mainly interested achieving the maximum battery lifespan with retained performance. Based on my experience so far and my ignorant interpretation of your post that I'm referencing, it seems like I should be doing OK.Rebalancing happens any time the polarization curve dips below the average charge/discharge time constant learned by the BMS. This may mean spending more than 8-12 hours of just resting.
I really don't want to, but I do have to refute the 90% AC vs DC is no different. There is a world of difference based on the current levels used.
@PreservedSwine if you want to know how to make the cells last virtually forever, find the guy that runs the Energy Storage Technology Center, read all his post of 12 years of hands on testing and data. Should take a couple of hours to get through them all.
BTW, I do not follow his advice on acceleration, but I do on SOC levels.
One of the myths is that using your phone will have any appreciable impact on efficiency.There is all kinds of miss information and myths about EV Batteries...
Talk to much on your phone and constantly using Apps your battery will go down fast.
I couldn't get the second timepoint in Moloughney's YouTube video to play correctly by adding it to my previous post. So here it is by itself in hopes the video starts at the point intended. Perhaps some sort of caching issue I don't understand.Note: this website does not correctly handle the 2nd YouTube timepoint in Moloughney's video. I'll try putting the link in a 2nd independent post to see if that works better.
Once upon a time I had a ‘62 VW Bug. It had a 10 gallon tank. Would go forever on a fill up. One day I ran the needle below reserve. Pulled into the gas station. Put 10 gallons in it (to a couple of inches below the fill tube).Does anyone know for sure?