HughJazzol
Well-Known Member
thank you Paul for your clarifications.No, this is not correct. The 12V battery is charged in the following situations:
- When the car is ON (fully ON, accessories mode doesn't count)
- While the HV battery is being charged
- When the on-board computer determines the 12V battery has dropped below a certain threshold and the high voltage battery is not itself very low in charge (above 15%, as a rough approximation)
So this implies three more things. If you think your 12V battery needs to be charged more, you can:
- Leave your car ON for longer, even if you're not driving it (i.e. by leaving it in a secure location like a garage while ON and auto-off disabled)
- Slow down your charging - i.e. if instead of charging at 48 amps you can charge at lower speeds with a programmable EVSE (EV supply equipment) or even using the 120V Ford mobile charger
- Take steps to make sure you have received recent software updates which makes the car maintain the 12V at a more robust voltage.
There's also a fourth option, if you are so inclined - you could pop off the plastic frunk covers and use a 12V battery charger directly, though this is probably overkill in almost all situations.
So, the 12v charges while the car is parked and charging. Cool.
"When the car is ON" - does it charge as we drive it? I assume so.
What steps can I or anyone take to make sure we've received the ECG 12V battery update? I just sat in my car, turned on and attached to WIFI, disabling and enabling the updates toggle switch. Another thread mentioned that doing so, may trigger updates from Ford. What else can we do?
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