pullinggs
Well-known member
Maybe we disagree on the definition of "dramatically?"Right. In summary, the Lightnings with heat pumps are dramatically noisier than those without.
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Maybe we disagree on the definition of "dramatically?"Right. In summary, the Lightnings with heat pumps are dramatically noisier than those without.
Interesting. I never thought it would do that.It heats up to around 90F, then cools, then heats, then cools. So if the vehicle is already 70F, it will run less than if the vehicle is 25F, and feel cooler to the driver.
I'll let you know when winter gets here.In the winter, my truck makes no noise running the heat. Your truck makes the same noise as it does in the summer. That noise, IN THE WINTER, is much louder than my truck's noise in the winter. Which of course you know, and understand.
It never gets to New Orleans...I'll let you know when winter gets here.
This past January it did. Had 10" of the white stuff in my backyard.It never gets to New Orleans...
It heats up to around 90F, then cools, then heats, then cools. So if the vehicle is already 70F, it will run less than if the vehicle is 25F, and feel cooler to the driver.
If you look on the Mach-EI understand that it does this, but why? If I want a HOT steering wheel let me have it HOT. If it gets too hot I can turn it off. I also have increased my wheel temp to 39C from the usual 35C (which made it significantly better). My wife's Volvo has 3 heating levels. High will make your hands warm through a pair of gloves, so super awesome on really cold days and WHEN that is too much you can turn it down/off.
As an aside to your asideAs an aside, the lack of a remote start on the key is very frustrating. Fortunately I have the truck linked to Home Assistant to it's easy enough for me to trigger the climate control to turn on remotely from a physical button by the door, but the key fob remote start on my last F-150 was so convenient.
Yes, that's the point I was trying to make I guess, lol!AS an aside to your aside, Home Assistant is using the FordPass API - just like you using the FordPass app on your phone. So I think HA will be just as reliable/unreliable as using remote start on your phone app.
I've been looking at getting one of these, even to then hook it up with a couple of transistors or even a couple of SwitchBot Bots to physically actuate the buttons. It'd ridiculous to me that this is necessary when my truck is literally authorized to connect to (a firewalled VLAN on) my network where I could send commands that way. I also wonder whether something is possible via the OBD-II port.@RLXXI posted here about getting a keyfob for a 2025 with remote start. I have a similar one for my 2022 (different frequency fob) and it works great. You press Lock first, then Start 2 times.
Correct.Well we're a tick above freezing this morning and I took a trip to town for breakfast and then back home again and it's showing me that I used almost a full quarter of my energy on climate control. Ouch. It's not even winter yet. We've got a long way to go. This is going to get interesting.
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This is where setting a departure time or remote starting climate though the app pays off. Pre-heat (or pre cool) the cabin while plugged in so the initial heat or cooling is done with home power, not battery power. Once the cabin is at a comfortable temperature the heat pump sips power. The initial heating from say 35 to 68 takes a lot more power.Well we're a tick above freezing this morning and I took a trip to town for breakfast and then back home again and it's showing me that I used almost a full quarter of my energy on climate control. Ouch. It's not even winter yet. We've got a long way to go. This is going to get interesting.
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Once you get into this cold of territory, you may want to use departure time. As mentioned above, you can do the math as to how much power you’re using to preheat. It really depends on the cost of your power to decide if it’s worth the comfort. I ran a bunch of tests on my 24 Flash last winter and it was anywhere from an extra .25 to $1 for me to preheat depending on outside air temp. I found I would recover most of this on the back end charge that evening though as I didn’t spend all the energy to heat on my trip. It was slightly more costly energy wise though, so pick your poison, comfort or quarters.Well we're a tick above freezing this morning and I took a trip to town for breakfast and then back home again and it's showing me that I used almost a full quarter of my energy on climate control. Ouch. It's not even winter yet. We've got a long way to go. This is going to get interesting.
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