Sponsored

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
147
Messages
13,522
Reaction score
27,291
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
It's also the threshold for completely disallowing regenerative braking. Last winter it seems like Rivian would always aggressively heat a cold battery until it reached 50F, unless you had regen braking assist turned on (I don't typically use it, so I don't have the historical data of when/if they'd be as aggressive at heating)

Got into my R1T this morning, which has been unplugged and sitting outside for several days. Over night low was 10F, battery temp had dropped down to 14F.
I did not do any sort of preconditioning at all before leaving.
Rivian R1T R1S Battery temp of 15°F now appears to be where Rivian stops aggressively heating the battery 1736948232887-z6
Rivian R1T R1S Battery temp of 15°F now appears to be where Rivian stops aggressively heating the battery 1736948320548-q6


I didn't manage to capture the transition from aggressively heating to what seemed like it could have just been passive heat, but I did observe it. A short time after the battery hit 15F, the front motor temps were into the mid 100Fs and the rears were climbing past 100, before starting to fall back down.

By the time I was 3.5 miles from home, the truck had already used 6% of the battery, and the cabin overall was still fairly cold. I had defrost on HI for this whole period. You can see where the 15min efficiency curve started to head back up over 1 mi/kWh, and that correlates with the period where the truck stopped being aggressive with motor/battery heating.

Rivian R1T R1S Battery temp of 15°F now appears to be where Rivian stops aggressively heating the battery 1736948673278-
Rivian R1T R1S Battery temp of 15°F now appears to be where Rivian stops aggressively heating the battery 1736949332305-5j


15 Minutes into my drive, the battery was now at 19F.

Rivian R1T R1S Battery temp of 15°F now appears to be where Rivian stops aggressively heating the battery 1736948925998-v8


After arriving at work after 32 minutes, it was at 22F. Regen was still severely restricted. The last part of my commute is mostly downhill, and on slower roads, so that's the reason my efficiency kept going up to the end. I used 17% of the battery for my 18.5 mile commute.

Rivian R1T R1S Battery temp of 15°F now appears to be where Rivian stops aggressively heating the battery 1736949009352-wu
Rivian R1T R1S Battery temp of 15°F now appears to be where Rivian stops aggressively heating the battery 1736949082264-rz


Next week we're supposed to have below zero overnight lows, so I'm planning on repeating this experiment then.
Sponsored

 

egar

Active Member
Joined
Jul 20, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
34
Reaction score
33
Location
Minnesota
Vehicles
2025 R1T
Clubs
 
Very interesting observation. I’m looking forward to your updates!
 

Nixapatfan

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 23, 2024
Threads
7
Messages
589
Reaction score
1,212
Location
Massachusetts
Vehicles
R1T
Nice, was wondering where that point was as I've seen mine hit as low as 17 so far and didn't see it trying to heat the motors/batteries at all. Also I noticed the biggest efficiency drop seems to occur after hitting battery temp somewhere in the mid 20's, when it is warmer I'm able to hit 2m/kwh under that it's almost impossible to get that graph in the green.
 

Sponsored

zefram47

Well-Known Member
First Name
Aaron
Joined
Feb 6, 2022
Threads
18
Messages
2,750
Reaction score
4,512
Location
Denver, CO
Vehicles
Rivian R1T, Alfa Romeo 4C
Occupation
Software Engineer
Interesting. If it's going to be that inefficient anyway, curious they're not just being as aggressive as before to get the battery warmed up. Maybe the thought is that from fleet data they've noticed relatively short trips and heating the battery doesn't make sense when the truck is just going to sit and cool off again at the office for most of the day then be an ice cube again on the way home. If they've deemed the battery safe to use at 15F then there'd be no strong reason to heat it as aggressively. The biggest ugly for me is not having regen, but I don't care to use the regen "assist" as I'd rather just use the brake pedal...but that was when regen wasn't severely limited or non-existent for most of the drive because of the aggressive warming.
 

1stPlace

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2023
Threads
9
Messages
258
Reaction score
464
Location
SE MI
Vehicles
Rivian R1S
Clubs
 
I think last Winter my R1S battery only heated to ~50degF when pre-conditioned. It would certainly be a big waste and drain of energy otherwise to keep it at that continuously.

There really needs to be a way to ensure the battery is heated for maximum range when leaving for longer trips. Hopefully they implement a manual pre-condition button in the app and allow it to be done while plugged into a level 2 charger at home as well, so that we can actually get maximum possible range.
 
OP
OP
Dark-Fx

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
147
Messages
13,522
Reaction score
27,291
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
That battery temp threshold jives with the info from this article...
https://stories.rivian.com/cold-weather-testing
They definitely are not warming until "full performance" as stated in the article, though. It did used to be closer to that originally versus what I observed today.

Interesting. If it's going to be that inefficient anyway, curious they're not just being as aggressive as before to get the battery warmed up. Maybe the thought is that from fleet data they've noticed relatively short trips and heating the battery doesn't make sense when the truck is just going to sit and cool off again at the office for most of the day then be an ice cube again on the way home. If they've deemed the battery safe to use at 15F then there'd be no strong reason to heat it as aggressively. The biggest ugly for me is not having regen, but I don't care to use the regen "assist" as I'd rather just use the brake pedal...but that was when regen wasn't severely limited or non-existent for most of the drive because of the aggressive warming.
I suspect that's why the behavior seems to have changed a little. I imagine this change is at least partially responsible for the improvement in cold weather EPA range when they tested gen2 as well.

At least it's still possible to force it into heating by navigating to a nearby DC charger.
 

Sponsored

supernu8

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2022
Threads
3
Messages
86
Reaction score
127
Location
PA
Vehicles
R1T
Occupation
Engineer
This is interesting, and explains why I haven't seen the motors doing their heating cycle in my truck so far this year.

At least it's still possible to force it into heating by navigating to a nearby DC charger.
Any chance you could switch into sport mode during one of your experiments to see if the temperature regulation kicks in to a higher level?
 

1stPlace

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2023
Threads
9
Messages
258
Reaction score
464
Location
SE MI
Vehicles
Rivian R1S
Clubs
 
At least it's still possible to force it into heating by navigating to a nearby DC charger.
I do not believe it is helpful to pre-heat for range unless the energy is coming from your level 2 charger, and navigation does not appear to pre-condition the battery if you are still plugged in--I just checked. If you are not getting more energy from the wall, then you are better off just driving to heat the battery.

So I think the question of how to pre-heat for more range is still unsolved at this time.
 

HyperionMark

Well-Known Member
First Name
Mark
Joined
Apr 22, 2022
Threads
14
Messages
416
Reaction score
358
Location
South Dakota
Vehicles
R1T and Model Y (previously a 3 and X)
Great info, thanks!

I too am curious how different modes might affect the temp threshold.
 

Jonger1150

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jon
Joined
Jun 28, 2024
Threads
4
Messages
1,024
Reaction score
962
Location
Howell, MI
Vehicles
2024 R1T & 2024 Chevy Blazer EV
Occupation
Nerd
Clubs
 
Even a 110V extension cord is a massive step up from nothing. When you run the climate, it will lock the motors and heat the fluid that cycles through the battery.

I see 30F to 65F in like 20 minutes. That 65F slowly ticks down all day, but my Rivian (In Michigan) has never gone below 40F yet this winter.

Use the app ABRP and you can monitor battery temp and every other stat in real time.
 
OP
OP
Dark-Fx

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
147
Messages
13,522
Reaction score
27,291
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
I do not believe it is helpful to pre-heat for range unless the energy is coming from your level 2 charger, and navigation does not appear to pre-condition the battery if you are still plugged in--I just checked. If you are not getting more energy from the wall, then you are better off just driving to heat the battery.

So I think the question of how to pre-heat for more range is still unsolved at this time.
Oh, for sure it's disadvantageous for range to heat the pack from energy in the battery. I'd typically rather have full regen/power than the extra range on a day-to-day basis. I know others don't like seeing the efficiency so poor for so long, and if you actually need the range, it definitely sucks to watch the range drop from pack heating.
Sponsored

 
 








Top