When I had my Subaru they changed the cats and exhaust under emission warranty only thing it cost me was an O2 sensor. Again my issue with the 80% charge is there is no way to set that 80% without doing some math with charging times. I will continue to charge to 100% when needed. This charge I’m going to 15-20%
I suppose I could set something up like that once I get the 40 amp Z-wave relay installed, whenever that might be. Of course then the best setup would be some sort of scraper that recognizes that the car has hit 80%. A timer is just too crude, and requires depleting the charge to the same level every time before plugging in. Otherwise unplugging manually every charge will be more of a PITA than it’s worth to me, because I don’t plan to drive the SE more than around 8000 miles a year.
I, for one, will not be going out and unplugging Basil when 80% is reached (usually in the middle of the night!)
So, if ever, MINI cannot refuse our battery warranty claim within the 8 years if they found out that we have been charging to 100% always; because it is not stated in our manual.
That's okay, it's just going to -25F overnight. I just got back from using an electric leaf blower to clear the snow.
Cold snow is def better than the 37 cm of heavy slop we got this weekend. After making it this far with a bare driveway, my plowing contractor’s PTO blower basically managed to compact a lot of it into an eight inch layer of hard-pack.
This may sound ignorant but I need to ask - once the charge reaches 100% is it ok to leave the charger plugged in. I usually charge later afternoon early evening. !00% may occur anywhere from late evening to early morning. Not sure if the charger senses the state of the charge and shuts off.
I doesn’t keep charging or topping up. It will use the supplied power to climatize if you activate it, so the charge won’t drop from 100.
I feel for those of you who are experiencing subzero temperatures. (I once visited my sister in Chicago in the winter time, and I never did again. The wind chill factor was -80F.) Texas is slated to drop to 7F where I live, Thursday night. Every time I look, the forecasted temperature is lower. (Temperatures during the Big Freeze in Texas in 2021 hit -2F in Dallas.) It'll be interesting to see if we have another power crisis. Fortunately, my SE is set to arrive at the Galveston port on 28-dec. So, she'll be dodging this polar vortex.
It could just be a copy paste from other BMW EV manuals… It’s irrelevant to those with older year models as the manual says to charge to 100%.
Unless BMW has discovered some preliminary degradation in early-year SE’s. That might instigate a change in the manual. Even so, I’m not losing any sleep over worry about the battery in my SE. But, I can understand that owners with a 100 mile daily commute would be concerned. Sent from my iPhone using Inside EVs
BMW are not saying anywhere not to charge to 100%, just to keep the battery between 10 and 80%? If they wanted to make an 80% charge achievable they would have given us software to enable that?! I interpret the guidance to mean: feel free to charge to 100% but then use the car immediately - ie don’t charge it fully and leave it sitting around for days at 100%. By all means charge it again to 100% but use it immediately again, else don’t charge it but use the car and keep the battery within the 10-80% range, which unless you’re doing lots of miles seems achievable. Sent from my iPhone using Inside EVs
What this means is that after 8 years your max SoC % will be 71%+ and you will not qualify for battery replacement warranty assuming the mileage is not exceeded.
How weird it is New Zealand MINI won't provide any guidance on long-term storage. "Go ask someone" isn't much help. Also, "Projection lens" versus "Combination disc" seems like really divergent language for the head-up display. Quite the cultural difference.
That’s my interpretation as well based on what is in the 2022 manual And 2022 long term storage guidance is bit different than 2021
I know right. I am confident that our 2021 (2022 model in the US) came from Oxford. The only difference from the US would be the steering wheel on the right side for us; yet the manuals are entirely different.