jthiesse13
Well-known member
I'm planning on replacing my 3 year old 12v battery in My Lightning. Can I simply disconnect it like in an ICE vehicle or are there special steps to take since the Lightning is electric? TIA
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I did what I saw some others had done an put a small hole in the plastic near the charge port door hinge and ran a wire to the battery compartment, Easy to reach in when the frunk is open to route the SAE charge wire - I had a spare with a built in fuse I used.How did you add a battery maintainer? Just plug it in to the frunk outlets? And run the maintainer into the battery compartment?
I did what I saw some others had done an put a small hole in the plastic near the charge port door hinge and ran a wire to the battery compartment, Easy to reach in when the frunk is open to route the SAE charge wire - I had a spare with a built in fuse I used.
I bought a NOCO Genius1 - it has a proprietary charge plug on it so had to also get the adapter for the SAE standard ($15 groan), and I got a 15ft SAE extension cord so I could put it in my garage next to my FCSP EVSE and run the wire next to the CCS1 cable to my driveway.
Here are some pics:
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The port door closes fine with the SAE cord there.
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I had used a plastic bag and some twist ties to cover the CCS1 and the SAE wire connection when we had a snow and ice storm - kept them dry very well.
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Inside my garage I can plug the NOCO in out of the weather.
See this thread for other ideas on ways to use a maintainer with the Lightning:
https://www.f150lightningforum.com/forum/threads/charging-12v-battery.16979/
One thing you have to do is reset the BMS when you put in the new battery:I'm planning on replacing my 3 year old 12v battery in My Lightning. Can I simply disconnect it like in an ICE vehicle or are there special steps to take since the Lightning is electric? TIA
Yes, as a matter of fact, in the owners manual it tells you to disconnect it for long periods of storage. Nothing special, 10mm wrench and disconnect the negative terminal.I'm planning on replacing my 3 year old 12v battery in My Lightning. Can I simply disconnect it like in an ICE vehicle or are there special steps to take since the Lightning is electric? TIA
I'm confused by "so the battery can slide under the rear seat". My battery is behind the plastic in the back of the frunk.![]()
so the battery can slide under the rear seat.
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Rear seat in the battery tray. It's the bar at the back of the battery tray where the base of the battery slides under to hold it securely.I'm confused by "so the battery can slide under the rear seat". My battery is behind the plastic in the back of the frunk.
I feel so silly!Rear seat in the battery tray. It's the bar at the back of the battery tray where the base of the battery slides under to hold it securely.
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Great, thanks!Yes, as a matter of fact, in the owners manual it tells you to disconnect it for long periods of storage. Nothing special, 10mm wrench and disconnect the negative terminal.
Welcome.Great, thanks!
I don’t have any hard evidence but I don’t believe the BMS is only concerned with voltage. I believe it is a ”fuel gauge” type of BMS and is monitoring the current in and out of the battery. If it only cared about the voltage it would just connect to the positive lead and would not need to be in series with the current path. That is why it is important to always connect a charger downstream of the BMS. A voltage only BMS would not care where you connected.
Thinking about it some more it still probably doesn’t matter but the SOC number will probably be wrong. The BMS is calibrated to a full 35 Ah battery so if for example you have drawn 3.5 Ah from the H3 it will show 90%. If you have an H4 your actual SOC after drawing 3.5 Ah will be 93%. You will always read lower than your actual SOC which should actually help keep it charged.
The BMS has a few more tasks than just getting to a full state of charge:BMS system generslly should not care about the battery capacity. Its only job is to get it to a full state of charge.
Maybe the Lightning BMS also adds some sort of charge time limit algorithm which says "a 35Ah battery at X SOC should be done charging in Y time at Z temperature". Using lookup tables to fill in X, Y, & Z.
Assuming your LVB SoC isn't 100%, yes, but it doesn't stay at 15V no matter what.The voltage at the posts goes to 15v when charging the HVB, and when the truck is ON and stays there until the HVB is done charging or you shut off the truck.
I'm interested in what you've seen on this front.Assuming your LVB SoC isn't 100%, yes, but it doesn't stay at 15V no matter what.
Same here big difference from Ancel 200 compared to car scanner. Removed and returned to Amazon.I see you have a BT (Ancel?) battery monitor. I've had my Ancel BM200 for almost 3 weeks and it still gives extremely incorrect SOC readings compared with my OBD reader. Anyone else have that monitor behavior? Is mine malfunctioning or does it take a very long time to equilibrate?