Sounds right, although I'm not sure on #4 whether they put the extra 3kWh above or below the 0% line on the 2022s. Since the official range increased, I wonder if they just programmed it above 0% to count it as normal range, but put it below 0% on the 2021s so the official range didn't need to be updated?Here's my understanding.
1. The battery is the same as before the software change. Of course.
2. The new software allows an extra 2 or 3 kWh of the battery's capacity to be used for driving.
3. So, we can drive an extra 5-10 miles per charge. Whether we should drive the extra few miles is less clear - battery is stressed when run down low, but that may be better than getting stranded 5 miles from home. So the change can only be a good thing (or at worst, a non-issue if we choose never to use the extra range).
4. 2021 Mustangs now work exactly the same way as 2022 Mustangs, in this respect. I.e., there is no difference in range between the two model years after the needed software update is applied.
Does that sound right?
My car received 21P22 back in April.I am unsure of exactly which update unlocked it, but after applying all updates in FDRS, my car now has 91kwh useable at 100% SoC.
I did reach out to a contact at Ford and got permission to share that yes the car does in fact have 91kwh useable now. However, the extra 3kwh has been added as a buffer below 0 on the GOM so that you can still drive a short distance after 0.
I thought I'd start a discussion on this as it seems to be a weird way to add in the extra capacity. It feels like the people that made this decision were trying to make it more like an ICE vehicle where you still have some range after you hit empty. However, I don't think EV drivers are normally driving their cars past 0 miles and would much rather have this capacity in the normal useable range.
![]()
![]()
I am pretty sure it is because you are calculating the energy to empty, and the calculation is not very accurate. Charge your car to 100% and see what you get.I don't understand why it would show 94 and not 91. I'm assuming it is because it is 100F outside.
If you divide by the displayed battery SOC, you get 90.85kWh.I connected FORSCAN to my Mach-E. Here are my stats. If I divide BAT_TO_EMPTY by the BATT_CHAR (78.134 / 0.8307), I come to 94.06 so it looks like my 3% has already been unlocked. I don't understand why it would show 94 and not 91. I'm assuming it is because it is 100F outside.
![]()
agreed, I would have preferred to have it added above 0. There was already a small buffer below 0, and whatever it was was good enough for me, because my nerves don't like me to get below 5%.Just not sure I like how they added it. It's basically added in a way that it will almost never get used.
Now this makes sense to me.Thanks for the clarification @mkhuffman and @generaltso
Charged at 100%, I'm now showing 91.488kwh usable.
![]()
Don't get your hopes up ... the SYNC update hasn't gone out to all Job 2 yet (not even all early access). I'm early access (clearly not earliest access) and have not received the OTA nor is it in FDRS.I'm hoping they will update all my modules again so I can also get Apple Maps EV Charging.
The capacity/100 would work. Not 100 to 99 is 5% (real bug) and there is another 3.5% you don't see. Sounds pretty involved for a 1 to 100 scale.Umm…. I’d just like the SOC to accurately reflect the usable state of charge. Is that asking too much? Ford can do whatever it wants with the GOM.
Except that with batteries, capacity is a moving target.The capacity/100 would work. Not 100 to 99 is 5% (real bug) and there is another 3.5% you don't see. Sounds pretty involved for a 1 to 100 scale.
I say make it simple. 91/100 (0.91 Kwh = every 1%). Whatever it has/100 since percentage used along with distance traveled say it all under current driving conditions. That is once percentage becomes linear. The consumption appears somewhat accurate. Never notice the GOM just further complexity. If I could shut it off and put a big percentage scale (maybe consumption numbers also) in its place I would. I just need an accurate gas gauge (%). Miles to empty I have never had or needed before.