MattVT
Active member
- Thread starter
- #1
Following the mantra of Always Be Charging, I've got myself into the habit of plugging the truck as soon as I get home, every time I get home. I get a reminder to plug the truck in 15 minutes after I get home if I've forgotten, and another at 9:15pm if the truck is unplugged but home.
Always Be Charging.
Except it's not. Because we're on a time-of-use rate plan, and our EVSE (Emporia Pro) has the hours programmed in so that it won't charge the truck during peak hours which are 1-9pm, Monday-Friday. So even if it's plugged in, it's not actually charging unless it's during off-peak hours.
And as best I can tell, it's not just "won't charge" the truck, but also "won't let the truck maintain battery temperature" either - I guess it's pretty dumb and there's no negotiation about "why" the truck wants power, so it just cuts the truck off during those hours.
It gets pretty cold here in Vermont - last night we got down to -5°F (-20°C) and didn't get above 20°F (-7°C) all day. If today is like yesterday, it'll be 5°F (-15°C) by the time the charger lets the truck have some power at 9pm.
If I'm understanding correctly, the truck will not do anything to heat the battery if it isn't plugged in. The truck does know that it's plugged in, but charging is paused - if I look in FordPass via HACS, I can see "EV Plug: CONNECTED" but "EV Charging: PAUSED". So technically the truck is plugged in and knows it, but will it do any battery heating?
Does anyone know how often the truck would actually be pulling grid power to heat the battery in conditions like these, assuming it did have access to power?
I'm wondering about whether it's worth configuring my charger to allow the truck to "charge" during peak hours, but only if it's already at the maximum configured SoC (90% for me, most of the time). That would essentially mean it's only using peak-hours power to maintain the truck, but not to actually charge it.
Also, what happens if I limit the charge current to something like 5A? Will the truck still run the battery heater?
Always Be Charging.
Except it's not. Because we're on a time-of-use rate plan, and our EVSE (Emporia Pro) has the hours programmed in so that it won't charge the truck during peak hours which are 1-9pm, Monday-Friday. So even if it's plugged in, it's not actually charging unless it's during off-peak hours.
And as best I can tell, it's not just "won't charge" the truck, but also "won't let the truck maintain battery temperature" either - I guess it's pretty dumb and there's no negotiation about "why" the truck wants power, so it just cuts the truck off during those hours.
It gets pretty cold here in Vermont - last night we got down to -5°F (-20°C) and didn't get above 20°F (-7°C) all day. If today is like yesterday, it'll be 5°F (-15°C) by the time the charger lets the truck have some power at 9pm.
If I'm understanding correctly, the truck will not do anything to heat the battery if it isn't plugged in. The truck does know that it's plugged in, but charging is paused - if I look in FordPass via HACS, I can see "EV Plug: CONNECTED" but "EV Charging: PAUSED". So technically the truck is plugged in and knows it, but will it do any battery heating?
Does anyone know how often the truck would actually be pulling grid power to heat the battery in conditions like these, assuming it did have access to power?
I'm wondering about whether it's worth configuring my charger to allow the truck to "charge" during peak hours, but only if it's already at the maximum configured SoC (90% for me, most of the time). That would essentially mean it's only using peak-hours power to maintain the truck, but not to actually charge it.
Also, what happens if I limit the charge current to something like 5A? Will the truck still run the battery heater?
Sponsored