Pioneer74
Well-known member
100 miles, 6 days a week most of the time. Can't wait to leave the gas station in my rear view mirror.I used to do 170 4x a week…it sucked!
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100 miles, 6 days a week most of the time. Can't wait to leave the gas station in my rear view mirror.I used to do 170 4x a week…it sucked!
My guess you’ll like it better when you can retire and leave that commute behind!100 miles, 6 days a week most of the time. Can't wait to leave the gas station in my rear view mirror.
I will. But I'm too young to retire. Got about 10 years left.My guess you’ll like it better when you can retire and leave that commute behind!
What is your test vehicle that you speak of for 4 years at 100%?Yes I know - my logic is that L2 charging is slow enough that 100% (equals 80-90% actual) is fine as I have personally seen in 4 years of no degradation at 100%.
For DCFC, I know that batteries heat up due to high voltage fast charge so 90% is reasonable for me.
But it's still long and it's taking forever to get through it!!$80,000 truck. Download from owner.ford.com to all your devices.
A comment on that. Ford's VP of EVs, Darren Palmer, has done many interviews. In one last year with EV Insider, he made a couple of statements regarding what Ford will be doing in the future. I'll paraphrase:It will be interesting to see if you charge repeatedly to 100% if Ford gives you any warning. Likely someone has already tried, not sure if they tell you that is not a good thing or not. Tesla will warn you after 2 or 3 100% charges in a row that it is not good unless you require it for the upcoming travel.
Fact-based answers? You have a direct Ford statement saying 90%.DISAPPOINTING Thread – @ChrisCon thanks for asking the question that is on so many of our minds. Unfortunately, I found nearly all of the responses to not be helpful. I was hoping for fact-based answers to the question, not a lot of opinions.
But, given the Lightning is so new, there’s probably not much fact-based data available. So, at this point, I’ll rely on the opinions of experts. Seems like @MickeyAO may know the most, and he suggests 30% to 80% so that’s what I’m going to go with until MickeyAO finishes his cell-level testing.
So many of the answers point to about the same thing. If you can't come here and participate and learn and draw conclusions from history and other leading brands then maybe you should just go read your manual and drive your truck.DISAPPOINTING Thread – @ChrisCon thanks for asking the question that is on so many of our minds. Unfortunately, I found nearly all of the responses to not be helpful. I was hoping for fact-based answers to the question, not a lot of opinions.
But, given the Lightning is so new, there’s probably not much fact-based data available. So, at this point, I’ll rely on the opinions of experts. Seems like @MickeyAO may know the most, and he suggests 30% to 80% so that’s what I’m going to go with until MickeyAO finishes his cell-level testing.
Strongly suggest you to charge to 90-95% for daily driving in order to mitigate capacity degradation.I am going to charge to 100% on L2 every week.
90% for L3 DCFC - very rare.
Well everyone is different and situations are varied for each person's decisions.Strongly suggest you to charge to 90-95% for daily driving in order to mitigate capacity degradation.
I used to have a laptop on power supply 100% of the time and after 3 years the battery won't hold the charge. Since then I set laptops to charge to 55% (as they connect to PSU all the time) and after years capacities are still good, including a XPS 9560 which is 6 years old.
Sorry if someone else already answered this.I guess I was just thinking about minimizing overall charging cycles. The difference between 15 and 30% minimum is one days worth of commute, which defers the need to charge by 1 day between charges. Although TBH have not yet dug into the wealth of knowledge here re: EV batteries and best practices for longevity
Ford builds a SOC buffer onto the charger so that you can't really / truly charge to 100% capacity - I know that it really is less than 100% as the onboard chargers cut out well before then......
With a sizable buffer you can probably charge the truck to 100% daily with no issues, but why bother maxing it out for daily use?