mudito
Well-Known Member
Lower than 10% SoCWhat is deeper discharge value ?
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Lower than 10% SoCWhat is deeper discharge value ?
Again, to summarize. Nothing to panic about.I think I did that once in 2 and a half year
This is Texas, out of nowhere you might need 200mi of range on a normal Thursday. I don't blame him for charging to 80%. He won't cause any harm to the battery with his behaviorBeen in the ev world since 2013. Three tesla MS's, a Lightning and now a R1T. Member of multiple ev forums and always hear these same questions. I've always just followed the manufacturer recommendations and not tried to cross recommendations. If Rivian recommends 70% daily why do 80%? Because you know more than the manufacturer? I'm not saying occasionally doing 100% for a trip or something is going to hurt anything but that's the real issue. How often is occasionally? Once a month, 6 times in a row on a trip but back home back to 70%.
This is all fun until your battery starts dying prematurely. Heard tons of Lightning owners that bought std range batteries because they couldn't afford a bigger one. Forum gurus assured them 100% daily is fine. I get it but those owners be the first to complain if they think their degradation is too much. Not sure if Ford has the software chops to pull charge stats but I guarantee Tesla can. And that's where the argument ends.
I just plug in when I get home and unplug when I use the car/truck again. Sometimes I'll charge two or three days in a row other times the car will sit for four or five days (fully charged back to 75%). Tesla said don't over think, it just plug in when you get home. Battery replacment for Teslas were something talked about on the Forums. Not much today. They do know a thing or two about BMS's and their batteries.
I've got over 250k ev miles and it's worked well for me.
70% is a conservative Cover-Your-Ass recommendation. And if you've been observing Rivian, at its young tender age, they tend to be very conservativeāin order to avoid unnecessary (and damaging) litigation. 80% on the regular is fine, if that's what is needed to get by. My personal scenario, I can't charge at home, 80% means I don't have to DCFC as often. And my range estimates have not changed since delivery 2+ years ago.Been in the ev world since 2013. Three tesla MS's, a Lightning and now a R1T. Member of multiple ev forums and always hear these same questions. I've always just followed the manufacturer recommendations and not tried to cross recommendations. If Rivian recommends 70% daily why do 80%? Because you know more than the manufacturer? I'm not saying occasionally doing 100% for a trip or something is going to hurt anything but that's the real issue. How often is occasionally? Once a month, 6 times in a row on a trip but back home back to 70%.
This is all fun until your battery starts dying prematurely. Heard tons of Lightning owners that bought std range batteries because they couldn't afford a bigger one. Forum gurus assured them 100% daily is fine. I get it but those owners be the first to complain if they think their degradation is too much. Not sure if Ford has the software chops to pull charge stats but I guarantee Tesla can. And that's where the argument ends.
I just plug in when I get home and unplug when I use the car/truck again. Sometimes I'll charge two or three days in a row other times the car will sit for four or five days (fully charged back to 75%). Tesla said don't over think, it just plug in when you get home. Battery replacment for Teslas were something talked about on the Forums. Not much today. They do know a thing or two about BMS's and their batteries.
I've got over 250k ev miles and it's worked well for me.
I have been noticed my 2023 quad r1s total battery capacity on Electrafi went from 129 kwh earlier this year to now 126.4. ( it was at 126.7 two weeks ago). My vehicle has 41K miles. Is this something I should be concerning about? My charging is to 80% daily and rarely use L3 charging.
| 136,467 Miles 2025.18.1 | Battery 97.2 / 126.9 kWh | Drive Mode All-Purpose |
Been in the ev world since 2013. Three tesla MS's, a Lightning and now a R1T. Member of multiple ev forums and always hear these same questions. I've always just followed the manufacturer recommendations and not tried to cross recommendations. If Rivian recommends 70% daily why do 80%? Because you know more than the manufacturer? I'm not saying occasionally doing 100% for a trip or something is going to hurt anything but that's the real issue. How often is occasionally? Once a month, 6 times in a row on a trip but back home back to 70%.
This is all fun until your battery starts dying prematurely. Heard tons of Lightning owners that bought std range batteries because they couldn't afford a bigger one. Forum gurus assured them 100% daily is fine. I get it but those owners be the first to complain if they think their degradation is too much. Not sure if Ford has the software chops to pull charge stats but I guarantee Tesla can. And that's where the argument ends.
I just plug in when I get home and unplug when I use the car/truck again. Sometimes I'll charge two or three days in a row other times the car will sit for four or five days (fully charged back to 75%). Tesla said don't over think, it just plug in when you get home. Battery replacment for Teslas were something talked about on the Forums. Not much today. They do know a thing or two about BMS's and their batteries.
I've got over 250k ev miles and it's worked well for me.
I can see why this makes sense, but it is incorrect. Itās much āeasierā on this type of chemistry to charge from 70-80% ten times (for a total of 100%) then to charge from 0-100% once.I tend to charge up to 80% every 2-3 days and drive till I hit below 20% and repeat⦠I think charging to 80% is a lot less hard on the battery than cycling an additional charge each week 50+ times a yearā¦
I typically charge to 70% daily, though infrequently to 85-94% (or even 100% if I actually need it) for the odd longer trip. Most days I don't dip below 50% and I charge daily. As someone else mentioned in this thread, Engineering Explained and others have some good videos talking about various lithium battery chemistries and the smaller the range of the battery typically used the better and somewhere around 50-70% is kind of "good for it". But you paid for the whole battery, so if you actually need the range, use it and don't overthink it. Just don't leave it at high (or low) state of charge for long periods of time, especially if it's very hot or very cold.What is deeper discharge value ?
Except I never find myself charging from 60%-80%ā¦I can see why this makes sense, but it is incorrect. Itās much āeasierā on this type of chemistry to charge from 70-80% ten times (for a total of 100%) then to charge from 0-100% once.
Thereās a good Engineering Explained video about how this rationale.