bbulkow
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Brian
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2022
- Threads
- 24
- Messages
- 889
- Reaction score
- 729
- Location
- menlo park, california
- Vehicles
- Honda CRV
I thought the manual says "100% for LFP, 90% for NMC" (2023.5's).it was my understanding that the 2023 MME with the LFP should be charged to 90% when the older ones should be charged to 80%. I could be wrong. I have a charge schedule set to charge from Midnight to 5am to 90%.
There was that nice video from a battery chemist who said "always be charging", and you'll wear your battery more by waiting until you get to 40% or 30% before charging. Little charges are less stress. Didn't Ford say the same thing?
I have no idea why people would disregard Ford's advice on the matter, and avoid DCFC when possible, and charge to either 90% or 100% depending on chemistry, and on NMC, reserve 100% charges for days where that 10% is going to come in handy. I believe they also advise charging every day (leave it plugged in), although I'm not sure I saw that in a manual.
I have NMC and I charge to 85%. My SoH meter (you all can go check yours) shows really minimal degradation after 17k miles, and I'll be happy at 150,000 miles.
Go check your SoH, because probably, when the battery pack is too worn to be useful, it'll be time to scrap your car and it'll be worth zero - just like *theoretically* you can replace engines on cars but *practically* it's not worth it because a body / interior with 150k miles isn't worth putting a new engine into. There's no sign that battery replacement is going to be cheaper than engine replacement, even if battery prices come down 4x, it'll probably be around what a new engine is these days, which is still in the impractical zone.
(To the person who pointed out Apple's charge system: Android's attempt to save batteries is a bit different. They attempt to slow-charge overnight, so they figure out when "overnight" is for you, then charge at as low a speed as possible so that it'll be full when you start using it in the morning. I think this is primarily because Android phones need 100% to get through a good day, mine certainly does, and avoiding the low 10% is probably better than avoiding the high 10%. If you start using your phone during this, it'll pop a notif and say "dude, want to charge fast"? So they charge to 100% but they do it as slow as possible. It would be interesting to be able to choose "charge to 90" *and* slow charge at night.... And, it would be really nice if windows laptops got some similar trickery, I just replaced a battery on my main laptop....)
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