Stainer85
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I've had my truck for three NJ winters, and the range seems to have worsened, but only during the cold season. I typically average between 2.3 - 2.4 mi/kWh in the spring, summer, and fall. Come winter, my average efficiency drops to between 1.85 - 1.9 mi/kWh. On the low end, that's a 19.57% drop in efficiency. I could accept around 10%, but an almost 20% hit is excessive. Same driver, in the same conditions, same travels, with the same tires for the first two winters (stock Pirelli), and I now have Michelin Defenders, which I get slightly better efficiency than I did with the Pirelli tires. This is all on the stock 21” wheel/tires, except the last 7k miles since changing to the Michelin Defenders. The truck has over 43k miles now—95% of driving done in All-Purpose mode.
I precondition/schedule climate settings ahead of my travels and sometimes manually through the app, turn on climate settings, and keep my truck plugged in so I can charge it about a half hour before driving it. My battery temperature is typically between 40* to 45* without charging and can reach mid_50* to about 60*, with the latter resulting in better efficiency but nowhere near normal ranges. Scheduled climate settings and charging a while before my drives seem to get the battery temps up in the higher end of the range.
So, as far as I can tell, I'm doing what I should to get a “normal” winter range, but I’m not getting it.
Am I missing something? What do I need to do to get better range? I brought this to the attention of the Service Center last winter, and they told me they tested the truck, and everything seems normal.
I know there has been debate as to whether charging at home on a level two charger sends enough power to the truck to affect the battery temperatures, so for anyone out there who is knowledgeable in that regard, my Rivian charger is on a 60-amp circuit, delivering 48 A to the truck.
Thanks in advance for any insight you all might be able to share.
I precondition/schedule climate settings ahead of my travels and sometimes manually through the app, turn on climate settings, and keep my truck plugged in so I can charge it about a half hour before driving it. My battery temperature is typically between 40* to 45* without charging and can reach mid_50* to about 60*, with the latter resulting in better efficiency but nowhere near normal ranges. Scheduled climate settings and charging a while before my drives seem to get the battery temps up in the higher end of the range.
So, as far as I can tell, I'm doing what I should to get a “normal” winter range, but I’m not getting it.
Am I missing something? What do I need to do to get better range? I brought this to the attention of the Service Center last winter, and they told me they tested the truck, and everything seems normal.
I know there has been debate as to whether charging at home on a level two charger sends enough power to the truck to affect the battery temperatures, so for anyone out there who is knowledgeable in that regard, my Rivian charger is on a 60-amp circuit, delivering 48 A to the truck.
Thanks in advance for any insight you all might be able to share.
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