WaterboyNorCal
Active member
Exactly this. Ya’ll need to take Rick’s advice and relax. The SOH that is showing on an OBD2 reader or Forscan is just an estimate and can be quite inaccurate due to BMS calibration issues. Just drive the truck. Only if something is really wrong (like the guy who is looking at 77% SOH at less than 40k miles) would I start to be concerned.Could be BMS drifting is an issue. Basically without going down to near zero, or 100% the BMS can lose track of actual. The SOH you are seeing is what the BMS thinks, and that may not be entirely accurate. Many people charge to 100% occasionally for this reason. I have read that the remedy is to run it to near zero, then in one continuous charge to 100% (meaning it shuts off on its own). This also has the effect of leveling all cells, meaning evenly charged which can throw off SOH calculations as well. Lastly, it's not just battery usage, it's also age of the battery pack, and environment, especially very high temps. But of course you may have a weak cell or two.
Try deep discharge to absolute full charge. Just keep it either end for as little time as possible.
My 2023 SR is indicating 97% currently at 40,000 miles driven/18 months since delivery, but I suspect the actual degradation is lower than 3%. When I first looked at the OBD2 scanner after 28k miles and 11 months of ownership, it showed 97.5%. Over the past 7 months, the SOH has varied between 96-98%, and yes, sometimes it goes up, due to the aforementioned calibration issues, as well as pack temperature and SOC when obtaining the readings. You really need to do a full discharge to below 10%, let the truck sit for at least 5 hours, and then Level 2 charge until it stops accepting juice (this will be AFTER it indicates 100% SOC). Even then, if ambient temperatures are variable, you could get different results.
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