Rjs104
Active Member
- First Name
- Richard
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2023
- Threads
- 12
- Messages
- 27
- Reaction score
- 8
- Location
- London, UK
- Vehicles
- Mach E AWD ER 22 Plate in Dark Matter grey
- Occupation
- Sound Supervisor
- Thread starter
- #1
Hi All,
First of all a disclaimer - I realise I'm probably worrying too much, and should just get on with charging whenever...but...
My takeaway summary of best practice for charging the Mach E from reading the manual and various forum and online posts is:
- Best to use slow chargers where possible
- The batteries like it best around the 50% mark - which is why this is the "long term storage" sweet spot
- Best to run the batteries on broad cycles between 20% and 80% (or 85% or 90% depending on your charge-religion!)
- Only top up to 100% if a long road trip is ahead
- Best to leave a delay before charging commences after a drive (to allow batteries to cool somewhat)
- Best to be plugged in for pre-conditioning, so that the grid power can be used for this rather than the batteries.
So trying to put all this together into a method of working for myself I hit a few conundrums. My life is very ad hoc - I'm a freelancer and as such my work patterns are never regular.
Most of the time, working between 20% and 85% charge is fine for me - I rarely will have a trip over 100 miles in a day, for instance.
But I like the idea of the car being pre-conditioned before leaving, both for my comfort and for the benefit of the batteries.
I can't see a way to turn off charging completely if the car is plugged in...
What I'd love to be able to do is have the routine of always plugging my car in when I get home, regardless of its state - and so that it is plugged in ready for pre-conditioning.
And then to set some logic - if the battery is (say) between 30% and 85%, do nothing, but if it has dropped to 30% then start charging - but with a 30 minute delay after plugging in (which could be any time - I literally finish work some days at 1700, others at two in the morning).
I wonder, with a tie in with something like Home Assistant, there might be a way to engage this logic - so I'm not constantly updating schedules, etc.)
Has anyone out there achieved such a mission? Or has no-one worried about it to this degree!!
Many thanks,
Richard.
First of all a disclaimer - I realise I'm probably worrying too much, and should just get on with charging whenever...but...
My takeaway summary of best practice for charging the Mach E from reading the manual and various forum and online posts is:
- Best to use slow chargers where possible
- The batteries like it best around the 50% mark - which is why this is the "long term storage" sweet spot
- Best to run the batteries on broad cycles between 20% and 80% (or 85% or 90% depending on your charge-religion!)
- Only top up to 100% if a long road trip is ahead
- Best to leave a delay before charging commences after a drive (to allow batteries to cool somewhat)
- Best to be plugged in for pre-conditioning, so that the grid power can be used for this rather than the batteries.
So trying to put all this together into a method of working for myself I hit a few conundrums. My life is very ad hoc - I'm a freelancer and as such my work patterns are never regular.
Most of the time, working between 20% and 85% charge is fine for me - I rarely will have a trip over 100 miles in a day, for instance.
But I like the idea of the car being pre-conditioned before leaving, both for my comfort and for the benefit of the batteries.
I can't see a way to turn off charging completely if the car is plugged in...
What I'd love to be able to do is have the routine of always plugging my car in when I get home, regardless of its state - and so that it is plugged in ready for pre-conditioning.
And then to set some logic - if the battery is (say) between 30% and 85%, do nothing, but if it has dropped to 30% then start charging - but with a 30 minute delay after plugging in (which could be any time - I literally finish work some days at 1700, others at two in the morning).
I wonder, with a tie in with something like Home Assistant, there might be a way to engage this logic - so I'm not constantly updating schedules, etc.)
Has anyone out there achieved such a mission? Or has no-one worried about it to this degree!!
Many thanks,
Richard.
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