RLXXI
Well-known member
Got a teen in the home, preteen? Looks like someone took a little joy ride.
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Just "Starting" the truck each day would reset the 2 cycle departure timer inhibit, so if he has a two events daily and happened to also start the truck at some point each day but not drive it, then 16% over a month could have been consumed.Something seems odd almost like it was preconditioning off plug but you’d have to drive it as well for that to keep getting activated.
True , but the question is “who” moved it 3 tenths of a mile lol, could be a kid listening to the radio and moving it.Just "Starting" the truck each day would reset the 2 cycle departure timer inhibit, so if he has a two events daily and happened to also start the truck at some point each day but not drive it, then 16% over a month could have been consumed.
WOT, wide open throttle if it's a teen lol.16% IN 3 TENTHS OF A MILE???
Perfect headline for a click-bait video and according to all the YouTubers that's the type of efficiency you can expect when towing in the cold.16% IN 3 TENTHS OF A MILE???
My best guess is the key fob. Even walking around in the house with it in your pocket could wake up the truck frequently.Checking state of charge etc or walking by the truck with your key fob or phone will also wake the truck up and use energy, likewise leaving the inverters on. If that was a Tesla, you’d be at zero.
Skimmed through this. But you lost 16% parks over an extended period? Is it possible you have a departure time scheduled on the app by accident and it’s warming or cooling the truck daily an you’re not aware of it?
My thoughts exactly!!Got a teen in the home, preteen? Looks like someone took a little joy ride.
This is where my head went. Not sure if it's possible now, but can @FloridaBreen look at "Trip 1" stats again and see what the trip timer reads? That way you could see if someone turned on the truck as the timer would capture that time the HVB was being used.Finally, is it possible that someone was sitting in the truck (for example, listening to music) with the truck on and the heater running? In cold weather, the heater can use a decent amount of battery power, and a few multi-hour listening sessions could easily account for the drop in state of charge.
Best practice if leaving the truck unused for a long period of time (weeks) is to charge it to 40% or 50%, and put the 12v battery on a maintainer with an AGM mode (or disconnect it per the Ford manual - I'd fully charge it first if doing that).My concern is where did 16% of charge go. Tbh I don't know if I put it in gear once or twice between Feb 13 and today, almost positive it didn't travel more than a foot or 2. I recall planning on driving it once but noted that the charge was low 27% and deciding not to take it for a 60 mile trip. It's been a while since I last charged it to 100% to balance the cells. I rarely drive much more than 30 miles round trip and don't drive it more than a couple times a month. Looking back I realized the really cold days were earlier than Feb 13. It's charging to 90% and I'll be taking it for a drive tomorrow 50-70 miles round trip. Plan to recharge it to 100% then see what happens. I've never fast charged an don't have time to get it to 100% before tomorrow's trip.
Do you happen to have something like car scanner to check the voltage and soc variation? Could be a cell on the way out.Just adding a data point. I also just experienced an unexpected loss of battery % while driving on Mar 14th.
Went from 96% SoC to about 66% SoC over the course of about a short 19 mile drive. Around a 30% decrease or 40kWh. Unexpected amount for the distance covered.
Motor power was showing 100%. Energy usage showed around 80% energy used by the motor, everything else was single digits.
Very different situation than OP. I'm guessing mine is a one-off unbalancing of cells. Been two or three months since I did a rebalancing.
I haven't gotten any warnings so I'm not worried. Next time I get a chance I'm going to charge up to 100% to rebalance.