DarrenDonovan
Active member
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2015
- Messages
- 44
I've seen different numbers, anywhere from 18 kWh to 21 kWh.
Thanks,
Thanks,
Nashco said:Yup, ran it out on purpose to see how it reacted. Pushed it 500 feet to the charging stations had hoped to make it to, all in the name of science!
Bryce
agdodgerfan said:Sorry but that did not help. How can i tell if my capacity has degraded? Is there a light that will turn on? Or do i have to run it to zero to see how much energy i used?
In general, the degradation in EVs has been much better than previously expected.agdodgerfan said:Sorry but that did not help. How can i tell if my capacity has degraded? Is there a light that will turn on? Or do i have to run it to zero to see how much energy i used?
I would have expected more like a 10% loss at 50K miles. Model S charge loss data I've seen was around 5% loss at 50K miles. Do you know if this is typical of RAV4 EV owners?TonyWilliams said:My 2012 Tesla powered RAV4 EV has about 15% loss at 50,000 miles and 28 months. I have three other Tesla powered cars, but they are all too new to get viable data from.
FutureFolly said:I would have expected more like a 10% loss at 50K miles. Model S charge loss data I've seen was around 5% loss at 50K miles. Do you know if this is typical of RAV4 EV owners?TonyWilliams said:My 2012 Tesla powered RAV4 EV has about 15% loss at 50,000 miles and 28 months. I have three other Tesla powered cars, but they are all too new to get viable data from.
agdodgerfan said:Thanks for the info. Since I drive almost 36k a year need to plan for a new battery before i finish paying off my car.
It should be about as difficult as replacing a Volt battery pack. The 2015 Spark EV battery pack is built in the same facility as the Volt's battery pack with the same cells. The 2014 Spark EV battery pack was built by A123 with their iron-phosphate cells.TonyWilliams said:agdodgerfan said:Thanks for the info. Since I drive almost 36k a year need to plan for a new battery before i finish paying off my car.
At 100,000 miles, your degradation in any lithium car battery will likely be at least 20%. In a Nissan LEAF, it could easily be 30-40%.
A new Nissan LEAF battery is about $6000. For a Chevy Spark EV, I suspect that it might be difficult to gat any new battery (merely because of the extreme limited production, and it's all built in Korea). But, there's no reason you can't get a battery from a wrecked car with far lower miles.
The smartest move for an extreme high mileage driver is to just get a new car more frequently, never allowing any car to get to the "new battery" phase. Or drive a car with more range than you need, so that you can keep driving it with 30-40% degradation.
TonyWilliams said:agdodgerfan said:Thanks for the info. Since I drive almost 36k a year need to plan for a new battery before i finish paying off my car.
At 100,000 miles, your degradation in any lithium car battery will likely be at least 20%.
Nashco said:TonyWilliams said:agdodgerfan said:Thanks for the info. Since I drive almost 36k a year need to plan for a new battery before i finish paying off my car.
At 100,000 miles, your degradation in any lithium car battery will likely be at least 20%.
I think you're oversimplifying.
Reduced battery pack capacity isn't necessarily the same as reduced range (or reduced usable kWh). OEMs have the capability to adjust how users are able to use the battery throughout its life. If they're conservative, they're not going to give you the whole battery when it's new, and over time continue opening the usable SOC to keep range consistent throughout the life cycle. If they're aggressive, they'll let you use the whole battery and you're going to notice significantly reduced range over the life of the vehicle. And many shades of gray in between.
This is the secret sauce that no OEMs share openly, so it's really tough to decipher how cars will age over time when compounded with the variety of chemistries, battery management, thermal controls, etc.
Bryce
TonyWilliams said:Perhaps it's oversimplified. I do not know of a single other manufacturer except GM who hides the battery degradation.
None of us know if the method used on the Volt is similar to the Spark.
Nashco said:TonyWilliams said:Perhaps it's oversimplified. I do not know of a single other manufacturer except GM who hides the battery degradation.
None of us know if the method used on the Volt is similar to the Spark.
How do I monitor battery degradation on a RAV4 EV? M-B B-Class? Fiat 500e? Energi? smart ED? Focus electric? Prius plug in?
There is no industry standard for this. In most cases, only hacking these cars can figure this out. In other cases, an OEM can even display "battery health" but with undistinguished units of degradation and has the ability to change what it means and displays through a simple software update.
The point is, nobody knows how YOUR battery is going to hold up for YOUR vehicle over time. We can only make rough approximations based on how that OEM's products have shown over time.
For example, Volt batteries are doing pretty darn good compared to the industry.
Will that carry into the Spark EV? Hard to say since the Volt has different chemistry and significantly different duty cycles, but we have seen that GM is pretty conservative in their estimates compared to real world experience. On the flip side, Nissan has been extremely aggressive in their estimates compared to real world experience. Only time will tell how that carries forward into the future.
We certainly shouldn't trust anybody saying that a Spark EV will have X% of reduced range at 100,000 miles, since the only people who could possibly estimate that are at GM or their battery suppliers, and they'll never say what that number will be (best case OR worst case).
Some schmoe on the internet who doesn't have a Spark EV, a vehicle with the same batteries as a Spark EV, and doesn't work for a company that provides Spark EVs or their components definitely doesn't know before vehicles start hitting 100,000 miles in the real world. Maybe it's 5% reduced range, maybe it's 35% reduced range...???
At best, we can approximate usable kWh through the methods described earlier in this thread. By tracking it over time, we users will start to get an idea of how things are holding up. This is what EV drivers have been doing for quite some time, and probably will until there are industry standards on broadcasting battery health statistics as part of normal on board diagnostics requirements.
Enter your email address to join: