Phrogz
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Gavin
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2021
- Threads
- 23
- Messages
- 115
- Reaction score
- 173
- Location
- Boulder, CO
- Website
- phrogz.net
- Vehicles
- '66 Ford Jeep, '01 SLK 32AMG, '10 Wrangler, '19 Q7
- Occupation
- Autonomous Driving Software
- Thread starter
- #1
I live a ~mile up a steep mountain road (average grade about 13%, some sections around 20%). With an ICE car it is imperative to use lower gears to save brake pads over time.
When I leave home in the morning, with regen braking set to "High", I get about 2,000' along and 300' descent down the road before the regen braking on the R1T starts telling me that I'm force-feeding it too fast. For those that haven't seen it, there's a useful visualization of small blocks eating in from the far end of the regen showing the limit. Within a ~few seconds the blocks eat the entire regen region, the truck is coasting as though there is no regen braking present, and I have to use the brake pedal. After braking for a bit the blocks start to back off--even more quickly if I use the accelerator--and then I get regen braking back for another 50 or 100 feet before the regen capacity is gone and I have to start using the brakes again.
Once I get off the steep mile I can travel the remaining 4 miles at an average 3% grade with no problems. Regen braking works as you'd hope with no limitations.
I'm trying to understand what this "force feeding" is, and how to avoid it, or expand its capacity.
When I leave home in the morning, with regen braking set to "High", I get about 2,000' along and 300' descent down the road before the regen braking on the R1T starts telling me that I'm force-feeding it too fast. For those that haven't seen it, there's a useful visualization of small blocks eating in from the far end of the regen showing the limit. Within a ~few seconds the blocks eat the entire regen region, the truck is coasting as though there is no regen braking present, and I have to use the brake pedal. After braking for a bit the blocks start to back off--even more quickly if I use the accelerator--and then I get regen braking back for another 50 or 100 feet before the regen capacity is gone and I have to start using the brakes again.
Once I get off the steep mile I can travel the remaining 4 miles at an average 3% grade with no problems. Regen braking works as you'd hope with no limitations.
I'm trying to understand what this "force feeding" is, and how to avoid it, or expand its capacity.
- Although I understand we can't use regen braking if the batteries are at 100%, this does not have to do with overall battery charge. I left home with 37% charge today and it was the same as when I'm at 70%.
- I don't think it is affected by ambient temperature. My truck is parked outside overnight and the behavior seems the same whether it's 75°F or 34°F in the morning.
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