Peter WA
Established Member
Right after a full charge to 100%, when first turning on the car, what HV battery voltage do you get?
Please only reply if you have a 51 kWh LFP battery (standard range Mk2 ZS EV).
This is what I got this morning, 410V:
Background (TL/DR):
I am using OVMS to monitor my car. Doing that I noticed a very big difference in cell voltages when the battery gets full, and a lack of balancing to even out that discrepancy. I started discussing in this thread: ZS EV Mk2 51kWh LFP Battery - Not Balancing Massive Cell Deviation
Since hardly anyone has OVMS or an OBD2 dongle, that discussion is tough going. But every car owner can check the voltage on the car's screen after a full charge. Hence this new thread.
Back in 2020/2021 the Mk1 ZS EV had a software issue that, due to a lack of cell balancing, lead to severe degradation in range. Lots of discussion back then. For example this thread about the fixed software:
It is quite possible that the Mk2 ZE EV has a similar issue. One way to see whether that is the case across the board or only for a few cars, or possibly only my car, is to compare voltages when fully charged. The less balanced the cells are, the lower the voltage at the end of a full charge. Charging stops when the highest cell voltage hits 3.65V. With a big cell voltage deviation many cells will be much lower, adding up to a lower overall voltage of the battery pack.
Going by the experience from the Mk1, it took months for the issue to be acknowledged and more months for a software update to be developed and rolled out. Then it took many times of charging with the new software to get the affected battery packs back into balance.
Please only reply if you have a 51 kWh LFP battery (standard range Mk2 ZS EV).
This is what I got this morning, 410V:
Background (TL/DR):
I am using OVMS to monitor my car. Doing that I noticed a very big difference in cell voltages when the battery gets full, and a lack of balancing to even out that discrepancy. I started discussing in this thread: ZS EV Mk2 51kWh LFP Battery - Not Balancing Massive Cell Deviation
Since hardly anyone has OVMS or an OBD2 dongle, that discussion is tough going. But every car owner can check the voltage on the car's screen after a full charge. Hence this new thread.
Back in 2020/2021 the Mk1 ZS EV had a software issue that, due to a lack of cell balancing, lead to severe degradation in range. Lots of discussion back then. For example this thread about the fixed software:
Is it necessary to get the January BMS Update if my car did not get the bad one last year?
My dealer Eric Stead said that it was only needed if the car had the bad one to put it right
and that MG would tell them what updates the car was in need of. The car in question is
a ZS EV and was bought in March 2020. It has had the Comfort 2 update , the HV fuse change
and the replacement wiring loom in the door.
My dealer Eric Stead said that it was only needed if the car had the bad one to put it right
and that MG would tell them what updates the car was in need of. The car in question is
a ZS EV and was bought in March 2020. It has had the Comfort 2 update , the HV fuse change
and the replacement wiring loom in the door.
- ging353
- battery management system bms mg zs ev update
- Replies: 106
- Forum: MG ZS EV Forum
It is quite possible that the Mk2 ZE EV has a similar issue. One way to see whether that is the case across the board or only for a few cars, or possibly only my car, is to compare voltages when fully charged. The less balanced the cells are, the lower the voltage at the end of a full charge. Charging stops when the highest cell voltage hits 3.65V. With a big cell voltage deviation many cells will be much lower, adding up to a lower overall voltage of the battery pack.
Going by the experience from the Mk1, it took months for the issue to be acknowledged and more months for a software update to be developed and rolled out. Then it took many times of charging with the new software to get the affected battery packs back into balance.