Mach-Lee
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Lee
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2021
- Threads
- 262
- Messages
- 11,382
- Reaction score
- 25,070
- Location
- Wisconsin
- Vehicles
- 2022 Mach-E Premium AWD
- Occupation
- Sci/Eng
Mach-Lee's Mach-E Cold Weather Testing [Taking Requests]Figured i would update in hopes of other cold climate owners with similar issues and data logs being able to toss some data on fire. The problem continues and ford has stuck their head in the sand and gone radio silent.
I did a bunch of testing there and came to the same conclusion, the heater isn't big enough to heat both the cabin and the battery in below 0ºF temps. My Mach-E was only able to maintain a 70ºF cabin temperature differential with full 5.5 kW heater output. I think it should be able to maintain a 90ºF differential or more. If we scale that, that means the Mach-E should have a 7 kW heater minimum. Or two heaters that add up to at least 7 kW. I'd spec a 7 kW cabin heater and a 4 kW battery heater, that would be about right.
I think they could also do a better job with thermal insulation, which can increase efficiency and range. I don't like the glass roof when it's really cold, that's a large heat loss (I wouldn't have ordered it, but I had no choice). Panoramic roof needs to be a standalone option so cold climate folks can opt out of it on all trims.
I sort of did a similar test. It will probably take 30-45 minutes to fully warm up the Mach-E. Where and how you measure the temperature matters. The air temp will be a lot warmer than the seat temp, so give that some thought.So sad that this has not been addressed. It was one of the major issues with my Mach E in Maine Winters. I moved onto the Hyundai and it's night and day different. I get 115 degree air from the vents in 2-3 minutes and full cabin temp in 5-10 minutes when it's in the single digits outside. I actually achieved 110F+ in the car the other day melting ice from an ice storm within 15 minutes.
The way the Ford system works, by using a 6 kW immersion PTC heater to heat moving super cold fluid , through uninsulated piping, to a conventional heater core is so old school and slow. Also splitting the battery heat off from that same heater was a bad idea. So bad, they used the same system for the Lightning.
The way it should be done is like the Hyundai (and I did not know the system design until well after I Purchased). The Hyundai has the heat pump (6KW equivalent heating) plus a direct air duct heater (6 KW) that literally blasts the heat with up to 120F at the vents.
If Ford would ditch the heater core and replace with an electric duct heater, leave the PTC for just the battery, they would have an equivalent system. I do not recall if the Ford had a DX refrigerant evaporator for the AC in the heater box (I assume so) and only chills the water for battery heating. If Ford would go with a heat pump they would assist in Winter Range and cabin heating in cold climates, a win-win for them.
When it gets to the single digits again, a friend of mine with a Mach E and my Hyundai are going to do a "time to 70F temperature test" from dead cold for both cars, for Youtube. There was one recently for the Tesla and we want to do similar. I will post a link when complete although I am glad for only a few single digits this Winter so far.
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