JohnFoxeSheets
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- John
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2022
- Threads
- 28
- Messages
- 3,401
- Reaction score
- 5,499
- Location
- San Francisco
- Website
- johnfoxesheets.com
- Vehicles
- 2022 Iced Blue Silver Mach E GT
- Occupation
- Retired Engineer
I know I'm the one that brought up the 12V battery as a likely cause, but there was another person here recently (don't recall the thread title) who had a similar issue and it turned out it wasn't the 12V battery.
I do think that Ford should require that the 12V battery be fully charged before customer delivery. No more of this drive the car off the truck, remove the plastic and the suspension blocks and call it good.
This has been discussed at length on this forum. Yes, the HVB is supposed to keep the 12V battery charged. In the past there were a lot of problems with the choices Ford made to make that happen. Since then they've improved it but there can still be holes. Keeping the DC-to-DC converter on all the time is problematic - it draws current so it would run down the batteries faster. And there're also the risks associated with having ~400V energized in the car all the time. So instead the engineers need to figure out exactly when to charge the 12V battery and do it in a way that doesn't prematurely age that battery. It's a delicate balancing act.Something I'm still not clear about. Is the 12v supposed to charge from the HVB or only when the car is on a charge?
I also wonder about the necessity of a 12v at all, why not replace the 12v with a voltage converter from the HVB. The idea of have to "jump start" an EV seems kinda silly. I have a Zero motorcycle that uses a 80v to 12v converter eliminating the need for any additional accessory only type battery.
I do think that Ford should require that the 12V battery be fully charged before customer delivery. No more of this drive the car off the truck, remove the plastic and the suspension blocks and call it good.
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