It isn't just the FFE!

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.

jmueller065

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 12, 2013
Messages
2,398
Location
Southeastern MI
Well folks you may be surprised (or not LOL) to know that My Ford Mobile, and the Energi cars are just as messed up as the FFE is! LOL

https://spareelectrons.wordpress.com/2016/01/25/buggy-car/

Adding to my list in that post I got this yesterday as a charge location:
nulllocation.jpg

LOL! (The car was sitting in my garage)

Seems like Sync 3 doesn't play nice with MFM...
 
I read your 2 posts about the Energi...

About that guess-O-meter: On this car it is much more stable than it was on the FFE. Ford really should have whoever wrote the software for the C-Max’s GOM take a look at the FFE’s code. As an example: on the FFE if you drove the highway for a while and then took a leisurely drive down some residential streets the GOM value would increase pretty rapidly as you drove slow. On the C-Max I notice no such large swings..instead it creeps slowly by tenths of a mile.
Where are you seeing 1/10ths of miles on the GOM? Ford completely removed the GOM from the Energi models for 2015 cars, showing only the blue battery icon & no mileage range prediction.

Not sure if this is a bug or not: While waiting to value charge the car will leave the EVSE contactors engaged even though it isn’t drawing any current. The FFE would disengage the EVSE while it was waiting to value charge.
Our Fusion Energi does this too. It appears to draw a small amount of power to charge the 12V battery. It also runs the HVB cooling fans a lot. The Energi models seem to charge the 12V battery a lot more than the Focus Electric. My parents' C-Max Energi still reports 98-100% 12V battery SOC after almost 3 years of ownership.

I’ve remote started the car several times while it was plugged in. In all but 1 instance the car started on electricity and kicked on the HVAC as I had expected. In the 1 instance: after about 10 seconds it attempted to start the engine and then immediately shut down. I restarted it and it did the same thing. Like it was confused: part of the car knew it was plugged in and another part of the car didn’t (I’ve seen similar behavior in the FFE when one part of the car didn’t know about something another part of the car knew).
The Energi will turn on the ICE when remote started while plugged in, so be careful with this if you park inside an enclosed garage. You can minimize starting of the ICE by tweaking your remote start settings on the left dash menu. Make sure front defrost is set to off. You also want to make sure that you are in EV Now when you turn the car off. If you are in EV Auto or EV Later when you turn the car off, then remote start will turn on the ICE if the ICE coolant temp is below 60 F.

There are other things about the car that I’m still learning/getting used to: The Auto/EV Now/EV Later button’s state “sticks” until the car switches back to hybrid mode (e.g. the “EV battery” is discharged). I was kind of expecting that to reset back to Auto on a key cycle (although it makes sense that it would stick).
Only EV Now & EV Auto should stick. If you turn off the car in EV Later mode it should change to EV Auto when you start it again.

Auto/EV Now/EV Later: This is an intriguing function of the car. You can put it into one of the three modes. Auto is normal operation as a hybrid. EV Now will bias operation towards driving around as an EV more and EV Later biases operation towards using the ICE more to conserve battery power. From what I can tell the modes simply change the maintain point on the battery (e.g. in EV Later it attempts to keep the battery 92% charged, EV Now it moves that point further south, almost to 0%).
Ford uses different terms in the workshop manual for these modes, these terms may help you understand them better.
  • EV Now = Locked Electric Mode
  • EV Auto = Charge Depleting Mode
  • EV Later = Charge Sustaining Mode
  • 2D battery icon = Hybrid Mode

When in EV Now the ICE is kept off except in the following circumstances:
  • You accelerate briskly & press OK when prompted on the dash with a question if you'd like to turn on the ICE
  • You press the Max Defrost button
  • You turn on Defrost only HVAC in winter
  • The ambient air temp drops to -10 F or colder

EV Auto biases toward depleting the HVB completely before turning on the ICE, but it sets a fairly low acceleration threshold to turn on the ICE. It also will turn on the ICE when you request heat, rather that depleting the HVB via the electric heater. It will also turn on the ICE when the ICE coolant temp drops below 60 F under certain conditions.

EV Later stops the car from depleting the HVB any more. If your current charge level is higher than about 95% displayed SOC the car will continue to discharge the HVB until it reaches about 95% SOC. The car may turn on the ICE, but it won't actually use it to power the wheels, it will just waste gas & consume lots of HVB range to power the wheels. EV Later makes the car operate like a C-Max Hybrid. The ICE does not turn on immediately when you engage EV Later, it waits until your power demand is sufficiently high. When you first engage the ICE in EV Later at an SOC below 95% the ICE will initially work to propel the car & charge the HVB. As it increases the HVB SOC it will reduce the energy spent on charging & decrease its output. The C-Max Hybrid Forum has lots of great resources to help with learning how to maximize ICE performance. The Fusion Energi Forum has great resources posted by larryh with BSFC calculations for the ICE, efficiency maps for the traction motor during acceleration & regen, charts of how cold temperatures impact the HVB and charts of how colder temperatures decrease MPG due to an increase internal friction from thicker eCVT fluid.

You can tell when your car has entered Hybrid Mode because the dash HVB icon switches from being a 3D icon to a 2D battery icon. Once you are in Hybrid Mode you cannot select EV Auto, EV Later or EV Now. Hybrid Mode should be avoided except at the very end of a trip to protect the HVB. HVB mV cell variation increases greatly at the low SOC of Hybrid Mode. Extended time driving in Hybrid Mode will likely cause more aggressive HVB capacity loss. You can leave Hybrid Mode by doing enough regen that the 2D battery icon is completely full. Once this happens you can again select EV Now, EV Later & EV Auto. We were able to do this when driving through the Rocky Mountains in our Energi.

Please let me know if you have other questions I could help answer. Feel free to send me a PM & we can talk through e-mail.
 
hybridbear said:
You can tell when your car has entered Hybrid Mode because the dash HVB icon switches from being a 3D icon to a 2D battery icon. Once you are in Hybrid Mode you cannot select EV Auto, EV Later or EV Now. Hybrid Mode should be avoided except at the very end of a trip to protect the HVB. HVB mV cell variation increases greatly at the low SOC of Hybrid Mode. Extended time driving in Hybrid Mode will likely cause more aggressive HVB capacity loss. You can leave Hybrid Mode by doing enough regen that the 2D battery icon is completely full. Once this happens you can again select EV Now, EV Later & EV Auto. We were able to do this when driving through the Rocky Mountains in our Energi.
Sadly this will be a daily occurrence as there isn't enough EV range for my entire commute (and I can't plugin at work). Good thing its a lease...
 
jmueller065 said:
hybridbear said:
You can tell when your car has entered Hybrid Mode because the dash HVB icon switches from being a 3D icon to a 2D battery icon. Once you are in Hybrid Mode you cannot select EV Auto, EV Later or EV Now. Hybrid Mode should be avoided except at the very end of a trip to protect the HVB. HVB mV cell variation increases greatly at the low SOC of Hybrid Mode. Extended time driving in Hybrid Mode will likely cause more aggressive HVB capacity loss. You can leave Hybrid Mode by doing enough regen that the 2D battery icon is completely full. Once this happens you can again select EV Now, EV Later & EV Auto. We were able to do this when driving through the Rocky Mountains in our Energi.
Sadly this will be a daily occurrence as there isn't enough EV range for my entire commute (and I can't plugin at work). Good thing its a lease...
You could put it into EV Later then to save a little bit of EV range for the very end of your commute home.
 
hybridbear said:
You could put it into EV Later then to save a little bit of EV range for the very end of your commute home.
True, before it switches to hybrid mode I could switch to EV Later to preserve the battery...

Speaking of range: What is the max EV range you've seen on your Fusion in the summer?
 
jmueller065 said:
hybridbear said:
You could put it into EV Later then to save a little bit of EV range for the very end of your commute home.
True, before it switches to hybrid mode I could switch to EV Later to preserve the battery...

Speaking of range: What is the max EV range you've seen on your Fusion in the summer?
I've been able to drive about 28-29 miles in the summer in EV mode. Usually the GOM shows about 26 miles in the summer and around 19-20 in winter with HVAC off & a full charge. Have they brought back MPGe or can you not see that? What does your Advanced Trip Meter view show? Ford has been steadily removing features from the Energi models since they came out in 2013...
 
Hybridbear said:
Have they brought back MPGe or can you not see that? What does your Advanced Trip Meter view show?
No MPGe, no way to turn on the advanced trip meter thus I only get:
Provides trip odometer, trip average fuel economy and trip timer.
Distance traveled on battery power only with the engine off is shown in blue next to total trip distance.
For Energi vehicles total plug-in electricity used in kilowatt hours (kWh) is shown in blue next to trip average fuel economy.
 
jmueller065 said:
Hybridbear said:
Have they brought back MPGe or can you not see that? What does your Advanced Trip Meter view show?
No MPGe, no way to turn on the advanced trip meter thus I only get:
Provides trip odometer, trip average fuel economy and trip timer.
Distance traveled on battery power only with the engine off is shown in blue next to total trip distance.
For Energi vehicles total plug-in electricity used in kilowatt hours (kWh) is shown in blue next to trip average fuel economy.
Ok, our shows MPGe & gallons in addition. That's super annoying that Ford continues to take away features.

Where do you see .1 mile GOM increments?
 
Ok it really isn't the GOM, its the miles per charge calculation that I've been talking about:
milespercharge.jpg

Here is my trip meter:
tripmeter.jpg

and what I've been using for "My View":
myview.jpg


Thanks for the tip about EV Later--I've been experimenting with my commute on when to best use the different modes and your tip finally nailed what I'll be doing: Precondition, use EV Now for the trip in, use EV Later for the highway portion of my trip home and then EV Now again once I exit the freeway. Worked like a charm and I still had a mile or so left when I pulled into the garage.

Now if I can only get the Go times working...! LOL
 
jmueller065 said:
Ok it really isn't the GOM, its the miles per charge calculation that I've been talking about:
milespercharge.jpg
Miles/charge screen is new. That is not on the 2013-2016 Fusion Energi AFAIK. Your C-Max is 2017, right?

Is the Go Times something simple like a time zone issue in MFM or your car? We've had some issues when doing road trips in our Energi & crossing time zones. There is a time zone setting in MFM for the car. I believe all the cars default to Pacific Time when you first add them to MFM. If the car wants to precondition at 8:00 am Pacific Time it won't precondition at 8:00 Eastern Time. It appears that the command to begin preconditioning comes from MFM server & not from the car. We had times on road trips where we had changed the car time to the local time, but since our MFM time zone still showed Central Time the car did not begin preconditioning for us. Once I adjusted the MFM time zone to the local time zone our issues were solved.
 
hybridbear said:
Miles/charge screen is new. That is not on the 2013-2016 Fusion Energi AFAIK. Your C-Max is 2017, right?

Is the Go Times something simple like a time zone issue in MFM or your car? We've had some issues when doing road trips in our Energi & crossing time zones. There is a time zone setting in MFM for the car. I believe all the cars default to Pacific Time when you first add them to MFM. If the car wants to precondition at 8:00 am Pacific Time it won't precondition at 8:00 Eastern Time. It appears that the command to begin preconditioning comes from MFM server & not from the car. We had times on road trips where we had changed the car time to the local time, but since our MFM time zone still showed Central Time the car did not begin preconditioning for us. Once I adjusted the MFM time zone to the local time zone our issues were solved.
C-Max is a 2016--they aren't selling 17's yet.

Display is Sync 3, not My Ford Touch--I think that is the issue: They haven't worked the bugs out of the system. It properly highlights the next go time, just doesn't do anything (then properly highlights the next one, etc.). Go times worked once... I have some time to fiddle with it :)
 
Back
Top