Dc Fast Charging Issues

Ford Focus Electric Forum

Help Support Ford Focus Electric Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

joeyfraser

Active member
Joined
Feb 5, 2017
Messages
43
Hi,
I want to share a bad experience. I live closed to Montreal in Canada and it was very cold today, about -10 C / 14 F.
I have stopped to a DC charging station and my car was charging at only 30 amps.
After 5 minutes I decided to go to another DC charging station and the charging speed was only at 40 amps.
After spending 30 minutes on the phone with the technical team, I have decided to charge with a level 2 charger because it was less expensive at the same speed.
After 10 minutes I decided to try one last time the DC fast Charging station and finally I got fast speed at 325 V/108 amps .
Does someone have an explanation for my issue. I will call Ford tomorrow to know if there is an issue in cold weather with DC fast charging.
Thanks for your help
 
joeyfraser said:
Hi,
I want to share a bad experience. I live closed to Montreal in Canada and it was very cold today, about -10 C / 14 F.
I have stopped to a DC charging station and my car was charging at only 30 amps.
After 5 minutes I decided to go to another DC charging station and the charging speed was only at 40 amps.
After spending 30 minutes on the phone with the technical team, I have decided to charge with a level 2 charger because it was less expensive at the same speed.
After 10 minutes I decided to try one last time the DC fast Charging station and finally I got fast speed at 325 V/108 amps .
Does someone have an explanation for my issue. I will call Ford tomorrow to know if there is an issue in cold weather with DC fast charging.
Thanks for your help
Possible the cold was related. I know performance is supposedly impacted by cold temps (although I haven't seen temps that low to verify yet) but it sounds like it behaved once it had more charging time under its belt.

Another great reason why all charging stations should charge by the kWh, not time...
 
I don't have any specific knowledge of how DC quick charging is implemented on the FFE but I do know that when cold soaked to sub freezing temperatures, a lithium battery will be destroyed if you try to charge it. It has to do with how the cold affects the chemical reactions in the battery. I vaguely remember something about the lithium ions do not stay ions and plate the cathode with lithium metal. This reaction is not reversible. I'm probably remembering wrong but something bad along those lines happens. I'm going to make the assumption that your battery was cold soaked and to prevent battery damage the car was not allowing the battery to be fast charged until it was heated up.

Since cold alone doesn't harm the battery I always make sure my battery is warm in winter by driving the car around allowing the battery heaters to do their thing before trying to charge it. Then once it's charged who cares if it gets cold soaked to sub freezing temps.
 
Hi,

Quick update, I have called my local dealer about the problem and he will open a ticket with the technical support service. I should have an update today.

I had 51% battery left at start. I have remote started my car 2 times because it was not plugged for charging. When I left the parking, I had 45% battery left. I need a minimum of 50% in the winter to get back home (about 55 km). So I had to drive 15 km to the 1st DC quick charging station.

I agree that charging stations should charge by kWh instead of time. It would be more fair when they have less power to provide.

Thanks all for your answers and feedback.

Joey
 
joeyfraser said:
I agree that charging stations should charge by kWh instead of time. It would be more fair when they have less power to provide.
I couldn't agree more! I don't know how it is in the great white north but in ohio they have to charge by time because otherwise if you charge by the kWh you technically are an electric utility company according to state law and are subject to all the laws and regulations associated with being a utility company. This is really stupid and I hope someday they fix this.
 
Hi all, just wanted to share an experience of charging the car in a cold temp.
This am I went to charge my car with DC fast charging after about 32 KM (20 Miles) drive. The temperature was -15 C or 5 F and my battery had only 9% charge. Normally, when I charge, the voltage is about 350 V and current is about 124 amps (this starts decreasing as the charge is going over 84%). This morning, the voltage was 350 but the current started at 35 amps and then started increasing to 124 amps after about 20 minutes. After this stage, the rest was as normal. Take care.
 
Lucky you.
My 2017 in Toronto was parked outside for the last 4 days, not plugged in. Temps were minus 15C overnight. I took it to fast DCFC across the street at 7 AM, and charging started super slow, at 4.8 kW (320v, 15 Amp). As time progressed, I could feel cold air, blown in the foot well by, I assume, battery heating elements, was getting warmer and warmer. Eventually, after an hour or so, it was pulling 8 kW.
So, no more fast DCFC charging apparently.
AFAIK, battery is fairly big, plus split into 2 units, and it takes awhile to heat it up to the optimal charging temps.
I'd say at least to 0C.
 
Triangles got the theory exactly right. You all have stumbled on the problem charging in the cold - a cold battery can't be charged quickly. For exactly the reasons Triangles said. The software protects the battery from being harmed.

This only applies for rapid high rate DC charging. Level 1 or Level 2 will be slightly slower than normal, but will charge a cold battery.

The operative word here - always start charging your battery when you arrive. Don't wait until the end of the day or the next morning to start charging your car in the cold. A cold battery will just not charge quickly.

It isn't the fault of the charging equipment or the cold weather - it is the fact that your battery is cold. Driving a car around will warm up the battery - but you probably have to drive for about 20 or 30 minutes for that to really work. That can be a problem if you battery is down to next to nothing and you need to get going. A level 2 charge will help get the battery warmer.
 
This is probably why my car always pops up a message in the dash that tells me its cold outside, plug the car in when not in use. Its been in the teens and single digits the last couple of days.
 
Back
Top