I have a 2012 iMiEV SE. I bought it in July 2013, and it currently has 43,000 miles on it. Up until this past Sunday, it has charged fully (16 out of 16 kWh bars and around 70 miles +/- of RR) every time I have allowed it to charge until full. The Friday after Thanksgiving, we went on a mini vacation out of state for the weekend. We drove our Pacifica Hybrid and left my Meepster at home unplugged. Sunday night when we got home, I plugged the Meeptser into the Leviton L2 EVSE in our garage to make sure it was fully charged and ready for my work commute on Monday. The next morning, I came out to drive to work and found that the Meepster had only charged to 75% (only 12 out of 16 kWh bars and 40 miles RR). Confused as to how this happened, I drove to work and plugged it into the Chargepoint L2 EVSE at work.
During the workday, I received the automated text message from Chargepoint letting me know that my vehicle had completed charging. At the end of the day, I went out to my car to find it once again had only charged 75% (12 out of 16 kWh bars and 40 miles RR). I drove home with the heat on and got home with about 4 kWh bars remaining. I plugged in at home and let it start charging immediately instead of putting it on the schedule.
A couple hours later, I checked in on the Meepster and saw that the charging light on the EVSE was green indicating my car was fully charged. That was odd because it should have taken much longer than that to fully charge. I pressed the "Send" on the remote to check the charge status, and it showed only 2 out of 3 bars. I unplugged my Meepster and plugged it back in to see if it would start charging the rest of the way. It initially made the loud click and the fan noise usually associated with charging, but the EVSE then clicked off after about 10 seconds. I tried unplugging and replugging a couple more times to no avail. At this point, I left it alone assuming I was going to have to call the dealership in the morning to make an appointment.
Just before going to bed, I took my keys out to the Meepster and turned the ignition to the "On" position so I could check the miles on the odometer because I wanted to include that info in this post. After getting the miles and turning the car back off, I decided to try unplugging/replugging one more time just for the heck of it. This time, the charging light stayed on and the car made all the different noises usually associated with charging. The EVSE kept the charging status light on for the entire 5 minutes I was standing there watching it. I assumed that whatever issue my Meepster had been having with its charging system must have cleared up by me turning the car on while it was plugged in. I went to bed hopeful that I would have a fully charged iMiEV in the morning.
This morning, I went to go to work and found that my Meepster, once again, was only showing 12 out of 16 kWh bars charged and only 40 miles of RR. Grrrrrrr!!!!!
I am now at work and will be calling the dealership to make an appointment to bring my car in. I figured I would post here first to see if anyone has any suggestions or recommendations on things I could checked to hopefully clear up this problem. Or is this definitely something only the service department at the dealership is going to be able to fix? This certainly does not seem like the normal and expected battery capacity degradation that is mentioned and warned about in the owners manual. If the Meepster still fully charged to 16 kWh bars but was steadily getting fewer miles on a full charge, then I would assume it was the expected battery degradation. However, this situation is my car suddenly not even fully charging to the 16 kWh mark! I assume this must be indicative of bad cells in the traction battery, right? Or is there something else that might cause this? It's definitely not my home EVSE as this is happening on my work's EVSE, too.
During the workday, I received the automated text message from Chargepoint letting me know that my vehicle had completed charging. At the end of the day, I went out to my car to find it once again had only charged 75% (12 out of 16 kWh bars and 40 miles RR). I drove home with the heat on and got home with about 4 kWh bars remaining. I plugged in at home and let it start charging immediately instead of putting it on the schedule.
A couple hours later, I checked in on the Meepster and saw that the charging light on the EVSE was green indicating my car was fully charged. That was odd because it should have taken much longer than that to fully charge. I pressed the "Send" on the remote to check the charge status, and it showed only 2 out of 3 bars. I unplugged my Meepster and plugged it back in to see if it would start charging the rest of the way. It initially made the loud click and the fan noise usually associated with charging, but the EVSE then clicked off after about 10 seconds. I tried unplugging and replugging a couple more times to no avail. At this point, I left it alone assuming I was going to have to call the dealership in the morning to make an appointment.
Just before going to bed, I took my keys out to the Meepster and turned the ignition to the "On" position so I could check the miles on the odometer because I wanted to include that info in this post. After getting the miles and turning the car back off, I decided to try unplugging/replugging one more time just for the heck of it. This time, the charging light stayed on and the car made all the different noises usually associated with charging. The EVSE kept the charging status light on for the entire 5 minutes I was standing there watching it. I assumed that whatever issue my Meepster had been having with its charging system must have cleared up by me turning the car on while it was plugged in. I went to bed hopeful that I would have a fully charged iMiEV in the morning.
This morning, I went to go to work and found that my Meepster, once again, was only showing 12 out of 16 kWh bars charged and only 40 miles of RR. Grrrrrrr!!!!!
I am now at work and will be calling the dealership to make an appointment to bring my car in. I figured I would post here first to see if anyone has any suggestions or recommendations on things I could checked to hopefully clear up this problem. Or is this definitely something only the service department at the dealership is going to be able to fix? This certainly does not seem like the normal and expected battery capacity degradation that is mentioned and warned about in the owners manual. If the Meepster still fully charged to 16 kWh bars but was steadily getting fewer miles on a full charge, then I would assume it was the expected battery degradation. However, this situation is my car suddenly not even fully charging to the 16 kWh mark! I assume this must be indicative of bad cells in the traction battery, right? Or is there something else that might cause this? It's definitely not my home EVSE as this is happening on my work's EVSE, too.