teslarati97
Well-Known Member
View attachment 16085
This is a chart from Battery University in Canada - yes, there is such a place. From their testing of EV batteries... say you charge daily for 50 weeks a year to commute (And a long commute at that)... that comes to 250 charges a year or 5000 cycles for 20 years of commuting. If you charge to 100% each time, after 4 years your battery's charging capacity will be down to 90%. Likewise, it will be down to 87% after ten years and 80% after twenty. Not bad when you consider most car owners buy a new car every six years. That said, the best range preservation is charging between 75-65%. Most EV chargers slow down once you reach 80% of capacity, so it is not cost effective to charge on a Level three charger above that level. Driving and charging is a compromise. What I do is charge to 100% at home on the first day of a long drive, and to 80% thereafter at public fast chargers. Generally, I keep my vehicle between 80% and the level where I need about 12 hrs of Level 1 charging at night which is closely akin to the orange line on the graph. But I also plan to keep my EV for 20 more years. The car will outlast me.
That chart is for LMO battery chemistry (Nissan Leaf) done in 2015-2016 by B. Xu et al. IONIQ 5 doesn't use LMO but SKI 811 pouch cells.