pollenface
Established Member
After reading some of the posts here and other places on the internet, I'm forming the opinion that there is a lot of parasitic drain on the 12v battery when the car is switched off and the car does not fully charge the battery when driving.
I've had my ZS EV for 3 months, in this time while driving (I'm always watching the power screen) I have observed it bump up the 12v battery to 14.2v for a few mins and then drop it back down to 13.8-13.6v, basically keeping it in float but never giving it a full absorption charge.
I know a lot of people on this forum are in the UK and it's probably freezing over there, knowing what I know about lead acid batteries is that they require a higher voltage charge (or temperature compensated charge) in cold weather or they will not reach 100% and will begin to sulfate and lose capacity.
What I'm suggesting is to connect an external charger to the cars' 12v battery maybe once or twice a week to give it a full temperature compensated absorption charge, hopefully that helps with the 12v battery life and reliability.
I've had my ZS EV for 3 months, in this time while driving (I'm always watching the power screen) I have observed it bump up the 12v battery to 14.2v for a few mins and then drop it back down to 13.8-13.6v, basically keeping it in float but never giving it a full absorption charge.
I know a lot of people on this forum are in the UK and it's probably freezing over there, knowing what I know about lead acid batteries is that they require a higher voltage charge (or temperature compensated charge) in cold weather or they will not reach 100% and will begin to sulfate and lose capacity.
What I'm suggesting is to connect an external charger to the cars' 12v battery maybe once or twice a week to give it a full temperature compensated absorption charge, hopefully that helps with the 12v battery life and reliability.