In this myiMiEV Forum we have had many discussions about the care and feeding of our traction battery pack, with some of us favoring -
- Not fully charging unless a long trip is imminent
- Never fully discharging
- Keeping the battery around 7-8 bars if storing the car for an extended period of time
- And I'll add that if the battery capacity is low (three bars or below), not to draw high currents (i.e., keep the red needle in the green zone)… I would expect this to be a natural reaction if down that low anyway.
In this thread there was a discussion about the iMiEV's battery management system:
http://myimiev.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=255
As mentioned in it, the battery pack uses the cabin air for its heating/cooling, and there also appears to be a cooling fan within the battery compartment itself.
After reading some of the disturbing symptoms on the myLeaf Forum which suggest possible hot-weather-related battery capacity degradation, I began to wonder how best to treat our iMiEV battery pack on a hot summer day. In addition to simply taking it easy on the go-pedal (thus minimizing high currents), the following crossed my mind -
1. Run our air conditioning on a hot day in order to provide battery cooling (I know it's counter-intuitive to use the battery power to cool itself).
2. After arriving home hot, immediately plug in the Level 1 charger and, using the Remote, turn on the air conditioning to keep the battery pack from languishing at high temperature
3. Especially in hot weather, time the charging to stop at no more than 14 bars
Does anyone think this would do any good… or is it simply a case of my paranoid "can't hurt, might help" overkill?
Being an early adopter and recognizing that the manufacturer probably doesn't have all the worst-case scenarios fully addressed yet, I'd like to give my batteries a fighting chance at longevity.
Edit 29 April 2013. I now think running the aircon and plugging in the car right after driving thinking it will cool the pack is not a good idea. See the 29 April 2013 post on this thread.
- Not fully charging unless a long trip is imminent
- Never fully discharging
- Keeping the battery around 7-8 bars if storing the car for an extended period of time
- And I'll add that if the battery capacity is low (three bars or below), not to draw high currents (i.e., keep the red needle in the green zone)… I would expect this to be a natural reaction if down that low anyway.
In this thread there was a discussion about the iMiEV's battery management system:
http://myimiev.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=255
As mentioned in it, the battery pack uses the cabin air for its heating/cooling, and there also appears to be a cooling fan within the battery compartment itself.
After reading some of the disturbing symptoms on the myLeaf Forum which suggest possible hot-weather-related battery capacity degradation, I began to wonder how best to treat our iMiEV battery pack on a hot summer day. In addition to simply taking it easy on the go-pedal (thus minimizing high currents), the following crossed my mind -
1. Run our air conditioning on a hot day in order to provide battery cooling (I know it's counter-intuitive to use the battery power to cool itself).
2. After arriving home hot, immediately plug in the Level 1 charger and, using the Remote, turn on the air conditioning to keep the battery pack from languishing at high temperature
3. Especially in hot weather, time the charging to stop at no more than 14 bars
Does anyone think this would do any good… or is it simply a case of my paranoid "can't hurt, might help" overkill?
Being an early adopter and recognizing that the manufacturer probably doesn't have all the worst-case scenarios fully addressed yet, I'd like to give my batteries a fighting chance at longevity.
Edit 29 April 2013. I now think running the aircon and plugging in the car right after driving thinking it will cool the pack is not a good idea. See the 29 April 2013 post on this thread.