Tig170
Prominent Member
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2022
- Messages
- 1,092
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- Location
- Stratford-on-Avon
- Driving
- MG4 SE SR
To be fair, the old reason why I have a MG4 now is due to the LEAF, as was given it via work to test out.
100% charge is better for LFP than 80%, it is not that.
I don't think that's so with a modern BMS and the recommendations are to charge the SR to 100% very frequently for the balancing (as you say). For example, Tesla recommend ALWAYS charging to 100%, even daily:Not sure about that. The flat voltage curve means the BMS likes the data from a full charge to accurately balance the cells but that doesn't necessarily mean they like it up 'em
Pretty sure 100 half cycles interspersed with a few full balance charges would give less degradation than 50 odd full cycles for example.
See above in the edit for evidence. There's a load more articles on this.
Believe what you want, I have things to do. xThat’s just an odd article, a UK website using data from ‘plug in America’ ?
Yes the lack of active cooling has caused the leaf issues in hot USA states, but this hasn’t transferred over to here.
Years of UK Leaf forums, battery degradation was rarely even mentioned.
Believe what you want, I have things to do. x
clealry this is an interesting debate (I have an MG4 LFP not a tesla LFP), I've just manually reduced my ohme charger to add charge to around 80% (from 100%)- and ill try to contiune for the next few months.
Thats what I'm genuinly hoping, in that when i collected our MG4 it was showing 217 miles @100% SOC on 30/09/22, lets hope in the next month when the temp equals Sept 22 again, we will get something similar (yes I have reset the EV trend 'clock' on the dash)Interesting indeed. From what I can gather though, you won't 'damage' LFP cells by letting them drift a few mv apart through not balance charging for a couple of weeks, done this on mine at least twice.
The pack will be discharged to the first cell to reach the min voltage threshold even though other cells have more energy to release, but this slight imbalance will recover at the next 100% charge.
What should we be looking for? - mines on 40% this evening, but should charge to 100% overnight - what figures am i expecting am?I tend not to look at the GOM I must admit, don't find much use for it's optimistic view of the world
I have a cheap inductive power meter counting juice into my charger in the garage and I keep a record of that.
As long as the battery is still accepting 50 + kWh from 10% including charger losses I'll be a happy bunny.
I am finding 50kWh usable (or 45 in practical reality) about the minimum I find comfortable to live with, so I'm really hoping for minimal degradation in the 3 or 4 years I'll likely keep the car .
What should we be looking for? - mines on 40% this evening, but should charge to 100% overnight - what figures am i expecting am?
I assume GOM = GuessOMeter ? - but i still do have ABRP of 2.7% degredationFigures on the GOM ? Dunno, mine usually suggests 200 miles after a balance but I get nervous after 160 or so and tend to pay it no heed.
This morning:
MG4 SE SR
1.9% degredation
2779mi
The readout on missus MG ZS EV MK1 is the same via odb2 as what MG provide on their service paperwork.Weird, I have almost 1000 miles more and I'm just not seeing any noticeable difference in energy in with my battery, I wonder if these scans are accurate.
All will have some degradation, no doubt, cells degrade a chunk in the initial period of use, but I think I would notice a full kWh lost
Oh well, tis what it is I guess, more important things to fret about .
And you wouldn't notice 1kWh missing unless you did the WLTP tests as, too many variables in your day to day driving to notice
What class is your meter? And what class is the CT? As even the most accurate metering equipment for a utility company will have between 0.2-0.75% accuracy discrepancy as well as a minimum burden amount before they reach that level of accuracy.51 kWh plus or minus a couple of hundred wh from 10% measured from inductive loop on line in to my wall charger, has not varied by any noticeable amount since day 1, that's what I'm basing it on.
As I've only a 4mm SWA feeding my garage I limit my charger to 20 amps, has never been DC charged, battery coolant pump has never been heard to run .
My battery gets treated like a baby, mainly because I'm too tight to pay for DC charging and can't be arsed running a bigger cable to the garage.
So it's just possible that my pack is in particularly good health, but I won't lose any sleep over it.
What class is your meter? And what class is the CT? As even the most accurate metering equipment for a utility company will have between 0.2-0.75% accuracy discrepancy as well as a minimum burden amount before they reach that level of accuracy.
Many domestic electricity meters that are whole metered current have 0.5-1.0% accuracy discrepancy depending on the age of the meter.
Many 3rd party meters are class 1 permitting upto a 1% discrepancy in accuracy.
So there is easily the possibility of missing a full kWh when you're also trying to account for losses that are dependent on the temperature of everything in the circuit.