profdraper
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Paul
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2024
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 114
- Reaction score
- 85
- Location
- Brisbane, Australia
- Vehicles
- 2023 Mach-e Select
Here’s what I’ve found (vapour blue Mach-E Select with LFP battery chemistry) & also based on practices & experience with ownership of two EVs before this. Having said this, there are also many authoritative resources to be googled elsewhere …. battery chemistry, charging practices, Tesla recommendations etc. Forget about the brand, go with the science on battery chemistry.…and I couldn’t be happier. It’s only been 9 days, but I’m thrilled. And I know I didn’t pick the car that was best at anything, but in aggregate it’s the most satisfying. I researched and drove all manner of PHEV and EV including all the favorite and obvious choices, and the end leased a 2024 Premium with extended battery in Vapor Blue with the light grey interior. In my ICE-age past I tended to drive BMWs and Audis, with the odd CTS-V thrown in to mix things up, so I know cars that perform and drive well. So when I say that the Mach-E is a car that checks all the right boxes for me, it’s a meaningful statement. But hey, I’m preaching to the choir now aren’t I?
Let me instead ask (re-ask?) questions that likely have been addressed elsewhere in this forum but that didn’t pop out easily in my searching.
1) Has anyone stumbled upon scientifically validated recommendations for best charging practices? The vast majority of what i read in forums sound like opinions, perhaps opinions informed by experience, but opinions none the less. Many of these opinions however are contradicted by equally well asserted opinions. For example, is it better to do daily charging adding only a 10% top-up (not exceeding 80% of course), or one weekly charge of 70%? This subject is a famously confused issue with opposing opinions scattered all over the interweb.
2) Is it better to keep the car plugged in at all times, or just when necessary? Once again, opinions move in opposing directions and each claim that ‘…it really makes no significant difference’. Being a retired manufacturing executive/enghineering manager, I like to see actual data, and perhaps results proven through scientific repetition. But what I’ve found that has the look and feel of science has so far not taken a firm position on these topics.
Finally, being a new driver, I see a little app box on my screen that purports to show me in realtime my miles-per-kilometer. I have been thrilled to see that using ‘whisper’ mode (which is more than satisfactory in an EV with 365 HP and 500 lb-ft of torque) and a shall I say, ‘sedate’ driving style (but I’m not holding up traffic either!), that this little ‘this trip’ box has been reporting 4.4+ miles/Kwh in a car model not reputed to be so efficient. Should I believe it?
Anyway, I’m thrilled with the car and happy to be part of this forum’s family. Thanks in advance for any helpful responses!
You have a Premium & hence the long range NMC battery chemistry (quite different charging & maintenance practices to that of the Shorter range LFP battery - google it if you need).
1) Like ALL EVs, the standards here are pretty much the same in this case for NMC (as per Volvo, Tesla long range etc). Charge to 80% on a regular basis, to 100% every six weeks or so (home charger). This should also be done where convenient from a lower state of charge, say 20-30% or so. Reason being there is also a ‘battery balancing’ routine that goes on irrespective of brand, which aligns the cells & gives the most accurate SoC when charging to 100% from (say) 30%. Ford are one on the few that don’t really seem to mention this much, but that’s the way the batteries work in general. Before this 30-100% charge also remember to reset the trip meters, this helps with the GoM (’guessometer’), again, same for all EVs at present.
2) No reason to keep the car plugged in, some kind of magic fairy tale there … What you DO need to be carful about is OTA updates which ’may’ flatten the 12v battery (happens everywhere, Ford, Volvo, Hyundai etc). PITA really & likely the best solution is to turn that off & leave it to the service centre. YMMY of course. In some territories (Australia & New Zealand) Mach-Es OTAs are not implemented at all & likely makes sense as to why. IT makes zero difference if the car is plugged in or not, it would need to be charging or turned on for the main battery to support the 12v. Only other way to support this would be to connect a 12v battery support unit (just like in a service centre) but likely also a PITA in terms of expense and/or monitoring. Oh and the Mach-E usually won’t let you OTA if charging.
I enjoy the car & package very much as well. But your’e right, the range estimation is rubbish & supposedly ‘learns’ your driving behaviour. BS. My car gets 440ks regularly, fully changed, nothing more, but despite the fact it is advertised as 470k WLTP. Again, BS. My previous EVs did exactly the same thing every time: After resetting the trip meter, mild to hot weather, the distance readout was always exactly as per the advertised WLTP range. Now, how efficient it was or how it discharged over time & conditions dependent was a different matter. In the Mach-E there seems no such consistency, however, I just take it as 440ks & get on with enjoying the car.
BTW - for various reasons, Engage is the best & most consistent mode to be using. It reports better, drives better and is no less economical that the other modes in principle (mostly about governing the accelerator pedal response & exactly like other EVs with E, N & S). The the regen is better, as is now we can see Break Coach reporting on the HUD, as is the slightly firmer steering. Engage mode, you can also refer to the hows, whys & recommendations of this in Ford’s own documentation.
oh, PS
the new 2024 Mach-Es appear to be quite a different animal, or at least with some pretty serious hardware upgrades including Ford motors from the F150 Lightning, vasty improved internal power distribution systems, better range & GoM (one would hope) and it would appear that they are moving 100% the new Chinese CATL battery tech (the Select short range was already a CATL LFP battery). We shall see, but Ford appear to have taken some serious steps here. The GT in particular should benefit enormously from this.
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