17.1 kWh @ 20,000 miles

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campfamily

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2015
Messages
457
Location
Southern California
My car is about to turn over 20,000 miles this week, so I decided to run a battery run-down test once I returned home from work last night. I am showing 17.1 kWh capacity. How does that compare with what other people are seeing at this point?

No problems with the car, just two recalls (software update and modem replacement) and three tire rotations. Averaging right around 247 Wh/mi in mostly highway driving.

Keith
 
I'm at 2 years and just under 10K miles and I get about 18kWh - 18.5kWh. With winter I'm in the upper 300's of Wh/mi. :( What average freeway speeds are you getting just under 247Wh/mi??? I know you said "mostly" so you have some slow driving bringing the number down. With average freeway speeds near 70MPH around here it would be hard to match your numbers doing mostly freeway.
 
I was still getting 20kwh a few months ago at 12,000 miles
Now I am only getting 19Kwh or less at 16000miles. NOTE: if I only get 17Kwh or so at 20,000 then I will be upset.

I know it's colder but I think the fact that I kept depleting it all the time adversely affected the capacity!

Unfortunately I am always running close the limit of the range in my trips...I kind of stopped using the car in the cold as I would run short by a few miles

time to move to the '17 FFE
 
campfamily said:
My car is about to turn over 20,000 miles this week, so I decided to run a battery run-down test once I returned home from work last night. I am showing 17.1 kWh capacity. How does that compare with what other people are seeing at this point?

No problems with the car, just two recalls (software update and modem replacement) and three tire rotations. Averaging right around 247 Wh/mi in mostly highway driving.

Keith

That's right in line with my experience.
 
Ok, Yes I should know this after 18 months plus with Montgomery but what screen displays the battery capacity and what is the “buttonology” to get there? I’ve looked through the readily accessible screens several times and have yet to find this information. Obviously I’m missing something quite “simple” and I suppose I really should know my current battery capacity and monitor it even though it "seems" to be giving me the original range and charging performance.

Thanks and Cheers
Carl
 
cpwl said:
Ok, Yes I should know this after 18 months plus with Montgomery but what screen displays the battery capacity and what is the “buttonology” to get there? I’ve looked through the readily accessible screens several times and have yet to find this information. Obviously I’m missing something quite “simple” and I suppose I really should know my current battery capacity and monitor it even though it "seems" to be giving me the original range and charging performance.

Thanks and Cheers
Carl

Carl - here's what I did. I reset one of my trip odometers (I do this every Monday anyway, after recording the data from the previous week). Then, I drove to work and back. I still had about 15 miles range remaining. So, I parked the car in the garage, rolled the windows down, and turned the heater up to full blast. I left the car "running" in the garage while I had dinner in the house. When I was done, the car showed 1 mile remaining. At 0 miles remaining, I noticed the heater stopped blowing hot, and the energy useage screen showed that the Climate control was no longer using power. The car showed that it had consumed 17.1 kWh. So, I figured this was the max capacity that the battery had (maybe an extra tenth or two remaining, but not worth it to me to go any further).

For average consumption, I track my electrical consumption on a weekly basis using the trip odometers.

Keith
 
You might (or might not, I'm not sure) get a slightly different answer if you used the heater to do the entire rundown (from fully charged). The reason it might be different is that this approach uses a constant load, about 6 kW. Driving adds the variable of changing power loads and regeneration.

For laughs, you might try it once with a pure heater drawdown, compare the result.
 
michael said:
Driving adds the variable of changing power loads and regeneration.
True, but the energy measured by the trip meter will indeed "run backwards" due to regeneration (or charging), so the net result should still reflect total energy used. In theory, the "extra variables" should not matter.

I do agree, though, simply running the entire battery down via the heater is a more "constant" approach. But, I don't think anybody has any idea whether it produces a more accurate answer than just driving around to deplete the battery.

Probably any two "run-down" tests are more affected by ambient temperature than anything else. Possibly driving around will also affect internal and (clearly) external temperatures.

The best bet is to do a few run-down tests under similar circumstances and average them.
 
Agreed... I said that it wasn't clear there would be a significant difference.

However, the run forward-run backward is not symmetrical. Each round trip energy is lost to heat, it's not zero sum. For example, if you regen 1 kWh, the battery will not gain that full 1 kWh but rather something less. Unless, of course, the trip meter has a fudge factor to adjust for this. Does it? Who knows?

Enough to notice? I don't know...that's why I said "maybe" and why I suggested a test. And, as you pointed out, temperature is important. Ideally this should be done with battery at or near 98 F
 
I believe batteries provide more total energy to empty if a lower discharge current is used, so running a test with high load like the heater might yield a lower total energy result than typical driving at lower speeds until empty?
 
That is true, but the heater is a low load compared to driving.

Heater is approximately 6 kW, the battery runs down in about 3 hours. You'd need to be driving rather slowly (25, 35 MPH maybe) to drive continuously for that long.

At 60 MPH, the battery would run down in less than 1 1/2 hours.
 
2013 model - I have just over 24,000 miles and did a heater rundown from 100% to 0% with the Stop Safely Now alert on.
I got 17KWh. It took about 2.5 hours to run it down.
 
Resurrecting this thread, I did a less scientific run down test on mine. I had about 52 miles and 12.4 kW on the trip. This evening I ran the car down the rest of the way with the heater. Got to 16 kW before the depleted battery warning. My car has 38,800 miles on it. I feel like this is fairly par for the course considering stargazer recently posted they got 17 kW at 24,000 miles and OP got 17.1 at 20,000. Any thoughts?
 
Yesterday I got 12 kw on a trip with 6 miles to empty. 20k miles. Using the A/C in with the hotter temperatures are starting to kill me with this terrible battery.
 
Omen87 said:
Resurrecting this thread, I did a less scientific run down test on mine. I had about 52 miles and 12.4 kW on the trip. This evening I ran the car down the rest of the way with the heater. Got to 16 kW before the depleted battery warning. My car has 38,800 miles on it. I feel like this is fairly par for the course considering stargazer recently posted they got 17 kW at 24,000 miles and OP got 17.1 at 20,000. Any thoughts?
16 with 38,800 seems good to me.

Just adding my info for data points.
16.9 kW with 22,500 miles on a 2015.
 
Mine was in the mid-15's at three years, 50,000+ miles. I took very good care of the battery, avoided full charges when practical, charged "just in time" for departure when practical, never left the car fully charged for any appreciable time.
 
Here's what the "data points" in this thread look like so far...
gen1ffe-batterydegredatation.png
 
just got 19.2KWH at 18.5k miles on '16FFE

is there a way for that chart to keep updating? also maybe do scale to start at 15kwh instead of zero for better resolution.
 
According to ForScan, with a just charged battery, 16.3kWh.
2013, 26,000 miles. However, I believe my battery was replaced, and not repaired when I had the recall done for the connector corrosion issues. ForScan reports the battery age as 22 months.
 
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