I’ve mentioned thus before, but my experience (until just now on the forum) was that battery pre conditioning was used to prepare the battery for rapid charging (which I have had on a couple of my cars). It could involve heating (mostly for me) or cooling the pack ahead of rapid charging.
That was the purpose.
I’m now reading that it is also used to make the pack more efficient during normal use - which is a completely new one on me.
It’s a bit like warming your engine up to help it run more efficiently.
Anyway I’m interested to find out more on how this works
I was of the same opinion myself
@Cocijo TBH.
I believe I have seen a settings, to turn on the battery precondition in the head unit.
So why bother having a manual switch then.
Unless it automatically turns on the heater, when the pack drops below a certain minimum / negative degree in ambient temperature.
I know it has been cold ? last week ( -6 here ) but I would have expected it to be lower than that, before it kicked in automatically myself.
I see this as a bit of a “Chicken & Egg” situation.
If you are using the battery heater either manually or automatically, to improve the actual range in freezing ? conditions.
Then the energy do this has to come from somewhere.
Either from the stored energy in the pack itself or from your wall box if plugged in.
So, I am charging the pack over night using cheaper off peak energy, then using energy on an expensive daily rate to heat the pack ?.
I can’t see any advantage myself, unless you have tariff that suits this type of behaviour.