Mach1E
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2021
- Threads
- 93
- Messages
- 10,508
- Reaction score
- 13,293
- Location
- Florida
- Vehicles
- 69 Mach 1, 11 GT, 21 GTPE- sold, 24 Taycan 4S, 20 F type R
I kept the battery charged higher for a couple reasons-Among the mach-e and other EV owners I know around here, no one routinely charges at 50%. Most wait till it's lower and they need a charge. Charging around here is a topic of conversation, given the dearth of public charging and the 51¢ base rate for electricity. YMMV
Neither condition really matters tbh. What's the practical point of frequent charging if your typical usage is 30 to 40 miles a day? For me, that's about 10% in around-town use (We have really cool rolling hills here). I'll charge up maybe after day 6 unless I have something planned. If I have a series of trips planned to Kona or Hilo, then I'll charge up before the first and after the third.
Now, I think it'll be a different story if we're talking EREVs. I think folks are going to be surprised at just how small those HV batteries will be. I think we're looking at LFPs that are less than half the size of the current mme HVB. Perhaps substantially less. Then charging at 50% SOC would make a lot more sense. That's one reason I think most folks buying an EREV will end up just not charging at all. It's easier just to gas up and let the ICE take care of things.![]()
1. Just in case. Never wanted to be in a situation where I could go where I wanted to because I had to wait to charge.
2. Horsepower. This car loses significant power even starting below 90% charge and really loses power below 50%.
But to the point I was making above- people obsess over maximum range and most don’t need it and may NEVER use the max (meaning a time they charged to 100% and drove to near 0%).
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