• Welcome to F150Lightningforum.com everyone!

    If you're joining us from F150gen14.com, then you may already have an account here!

    If you were registered on F150gen14.com as of April 16, 2022 or earlier, then you can simply login here with the same username and password!

Sponsored

Lightning heater specs?

Kev12345

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 4, 2021
Threads
19
Messages
468
Reaction score
463
Location
Canada
Vehicles
Ram 1500
Honestly I mostly prefer the Mach-e setup. Yes it has a lot more parts, but those are all parts bin parts and are easily replaced if there is an issue. Issues will also tend to be more isolated. The Model Y solution puts all it's eggs in one basket - but if that part fails, it is much more expensive and time consuming to repair. Tesla has a great solution to optimize performance, while the Mach-e solution is better for maintainability.
you're right. pro's and con's to redundancy. I wonder if the limited model y parts could relate to the 16 reported failed heaters of model y in cold areas of Canada. Transport Canada has actually launched an investigation into the matter.
Sponsored

 

Sam James

Well-known member
First Name
Sam
Joined
May 15, 2021
Threads
1
Messages
348
Reaction score
536
Location
Missouri
Vehicles
22 Ford Lightning Lariat ER, 21 VW ID.4 Pro S RWD
Occupation
Accountant
Same here.
Is that with preconditioning? Our ID.4 has started out in single-digit temps and only lost about a max of 40 miles on the guess-o-meter. We did make it between Springfield and KC with no charging in-between (thank God, because there are no fast chargers in-between) by going slightly under the limit and keeping the heater at 68.

Wish VW included a heat pump for sure.
 
Last edited:

sotek2345

Well-known member
First Name
Tom
Joined
Jun 7, 2021
Threads
29
Messages
3,542
Reaction score
4,091
Location
Upstate NY
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat ER, 2021 Mach-e GT
Occupation
Engineering Manager
Is that with preconditioning? Our ID.4 has started out in single-digit temps and only lost about a max of 40 on the guess-o-meter. We did make it between Springfield and KC with no charging in-between (thank God, because there are no fast chargers in-between) by going slightly under the limit and keeping the heater at 68.

Wish VW included a heat pump for sure.
Haven't had a chance to test it on any longer hauls, but the worst I have seen is a 50 percent reduction with around town driving. Around 0 degrees, slush and ice on the road, no preconditioning (just went grocery shopping).
 

bosox8

Well-known member
First Name
Charles
Joined
Sep 2, 2021
Threads
17
Messages
267
Reaction score
208
Location
Maryland
Vehicles
MY22 Iced Blue Silver Lariat ER, 2nd Wave
Occupation
Sales
Any idea if the Lightning will operate with a heat pump system or simply rely on resistance heat for cabin conditioning?
 

sotek2345

Well-known member
First Name
Tom
Joined
Jun 7, 2021
Threads
29
Messages
3,542
Reaction score
4,091
Location
Upstate NY
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat ER, 2021 Mach-e GT
Occupation
Engineering Manager
Any idea if the Lightning will operate with a heat pump system or simply rely on resistance heat for cabin conditioning?
We haven't seen anything official, but all indications are that it is just a resistance heater.
 

Sponsored

adoublee

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 30, 2021
Threads
11
Messages
714
Reaction score
630
Location
Midwest
Vehicles
2 EVs
Any idea if the Lightning will operate with a heat pump system or simply rely on resistance heat for cabin conditioning?
I think I have seen that a 5kW resistance heater puts heat into a liquid heating/cooling loop that is shared with battery thermal management in the Mach e. Might be the same, though sounds to underperform and probably takes some extra time to get heat back out of that loop.
 

bosox8

Well-known member
First Name
Charles
Joined
Sep 2, 2021
Threads
17
Messages
267
Reaction score
208
Location
Maryland
Vehicles
MY22 Iced Blue Silver Lariat ER, 2nd Wave
Occupation
Sales
I think I have seen that a 5kW resistance heater puts heat into a liquid heating/cooling loop that is shared with battery thermal management in the Mach e. Might be the same, though sounds to underperform and probably takes some extra time to get heat back out of that loop.
Yeah, doubt they've got the Tesla arrangement down, shame.
 

sotek2345

Well-known member
First Name
Tom
Joined
Jun 7, 2021
Threads
29
Messages
3,542
Reaction score
4,091
Location
Upstate NY
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat ER, 2021 Mach-e GT
Occupation
Engineering Manager
Yeah, doubt they've got the Tesla arrangement down, shame.
Eh, they only really help in moderate cold (above freezing).
 

LightningShow

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 1, 2021
Threads
50
Messages
1,880
Reaction score
2,208
Location
MA
Vehicles
'22 Lariat ER
Occupation
Product Development
Any guesses on how much of a battery drain the resistive heating will be on the range ?

My wife who uses heating says the PHEV loses 25-40% of daily range - which is why I drive without heating the cabin. Pre conditioning avoids loss of range before leaving the house.

Depends highly on the type of driving. If you're commuting 100 miles/day on the freeway, the HVAC will be a pretty low percentage of usage. Doing errands around town it will me much higher. In my Bolt, I see a 5-10% reduction in efficiency for highway driving when running HVAC.
 

Sponsored

Roy2001

Well-known member
Joined
May 27, 2021
Threads
36
Messages
976
Reaction score
633
Location
Sacramento, CA
Vehicles
Tesla MX LR; Prius Prime
That’s a shame. It’s a pretty big boost in efficiency.

Although Tesla is having issues with model y heat pumps failing in Canada where it’s really cold -30C. They don’t have a back up resistive heater for some reason.
You cannot count on heat pump when it is -30C anyway.
 

EaglesPDX

Well-known member
First Name
Eagles
Joined
May 29, 2021
Threads
6
Messages
606
Reaction score
230
Location
PDX
Vehicles
Tesla Model 3
That’s a shame. It’s a pretty big boost in efficiency.
The heat pump only works after the vehicle's electric motors develop waste heat which is going to be about 20 minutes into the ride, maybe longer in colder weather when you need it. On long trips over 30 minutes (average commute is 30 minutes), it will help by about 2 miles an hour.

It's a feature I'd like to have, even passed on US Kona EV because it didn't have it and I drive in Winter conditions a lot, but it's likely not cost effective unless you have a two hour round trip commute and cold Winters.
 

V8BoatBuilder

Well-known member
First Name
Aaron
Joined
Jan 22, 2022
Threads
10
Messages
157
Reaction score
172
Location
New Jersey
Vehicles
22 Lightning
Currently drive a Nissan Leaf with both heat pump and resistive heat. Here's the catch:

Heat pump doesn't do anything for defrost, and the windows fog up quick unless its very dry out. As soon as you add defrost, the heat pump switches to A/C mode and the resistive heat comes on.

So if the resistive is on most of the time (snowing, fog, high humidity), why bother with the complexity of the heat pump?
 

lightspeed

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 7, 2022
Threads
23
Messages
497
Reaction score
563
Location
California
Vehicles
2023 Lightning Lariat ER
I'm not convinced heat pump matters in this case. The resistive heater is 5kW but it's not going to run at that level for more than 20 minutes (?) and then reduce to 1kW to keep the cabin warm from there? I mean imagine having a bathroom space heater running full blast in your truck at 1500 watts, you'd sweat your balls off after 20 mins.

So, if it's running at 2kW (just to be generous an account for air leaks), that would only be 6kWh out of the 131kWh battery after 3 hours of driving.

The big unknown is how much power it takes to warm the batteries. It would be nice if someone with a scan tool could post that in cold weather.
Sponsored

 


 


Top