Sponsored

Flashlight tip

Cletts

New Member
First Name
Craig
Joined
Nov 12, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
4
Reaction score
7
Location
New Jersey
Vehicles
R1T
Occupation
Retired
If you are like me you may only very rarely use the flashlight. It’s probably not good to leave it plugged in 100% of the time while never pulling it from the door. I leave the flashlight in my underseat compartment. I dropped something on the floor while driving in the dark. It was great to quickly grab the light and find the card I dropped. I can put it back in the charge compartment whenever it needs it…
Sponsored

 

Marchin_MTB

Well-Known Member
First Name
Marcin
Joined
Jun 25, 2022
Threads
14
Messages
1,508
Reaction score
1,975
Location
Colorado
Vehicles
2015 i3, 2011 Honda CRV.
Occupation
Aerospace Engineer turned Space Physicist
Clubs
 
I like the idea of having it accessible from the cabin. What is the concern with leaving it plugged in all the time?
 

R1TCA

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2021
Threads
8
Messages
121
Reaction score
92
Location
Florida
Vehicles
BMW R9T Scrambler
I like the idea of having it accessible from the cabin. What is the concern with leaving it plugged in all the time?
I may be wrong but I’ve heard it’s like having a rubber band stretched fully, all the time, which leads to less capacity/flexibility. So in the case of the batteries it’s good to have them not sit at 100% all the time and better to have the cells of the battery activate(discharge then charge back) on a regular basis. This way their full capacity isn’t dormant for too long whereas a full battery may lose some of its capacity if it’s unused for long periods of time.
 

Marchin_MTB

Well-Known Member
First Name
Marcin
Joined
Jun 25, 2022
Threads
14
Messages
1,508
Reaction score
1,975
Location
Colorado
Vehicles
2015 i3, 2011 Honda CRV.
Occupation
Aerospace Engineer turned Space Physicist
Clubs
 
I may be wrong but I’ve heard it’s like having a rubber band stretched fully, all the time, which leads to less capacity/flexibility. So in the case of the batteries it’s good to have them not sit at 100% all the time and better to have the cells of the battery activate(discharge then charge back) on a regular basis. This way their full capacity isn’t dormant for too long whereas a full battery may lose some of its capacity if it’s unused for long periods of time.
Yes. Ive heard this argument for phones etc. and it does make sense if one is aware of the reserve margin designed in at the top of the SOC. Then I suppose I could prevent my laptop or roomba, from charging to 100% but at some point I feel like these devices should be smart enough to manage their own battery health... In principle I dont disagree, but in practice I may be too lazy :)
 

rkalbiar

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ruben
Joined
Feb 21, 2022
Threads
32
Messages
393
Reaction score
306
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
2022 Rivian R1T , 2024 Rivian R1S
Do we know Rivian did not design this, with that in mind?
Also, would it not be under warranty?
 

Sponsored

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
148
Messages
13,542
Reaction score
27,328
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
The cell is LFP, it's fine to have it charged to 100% all the time.
 

COdogman

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jan 21, 2022
Threads
33
Messages
11,641
Reaction score
34,494
Location
CO
Vehicles
2023 R1T
Occupation
Cyber defender
Clubs
 
If the flashlight uses the same type of cell as the battery pack and they recommend not keeping your Rivian charged to 100% all the time, wouldn’t the same apply to the flashlight? Obviously the stakes are lower, but…
 

MoreTrout

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jay
Joined
Sep 12, 2021
Threads
19
Messages
554
Reaction score
841
Location
PA
Vehicles
Ford Fusion Hybrid, Rivian R1T
Occupation
Retired USN
The cell is LFP, it's fine to have it charged to 100% all the time.
Not saying you're wrong, but where did you find this information? In two years of pre-production show and tell events every Rivian employee talked about this being the 7777th battery and identical to the 7776 in the truck's battery packs. Those aren't LFP. Maybe I missed when they slipped in an announcement that the flashlight was no longer the same as the cells in the truck.

Even if leaving the flashlight charged to 100% isn't the best for its long term health I seriously doubt it would ever have any practical change in the life and usability of the flashlight. I have no idea how long it would take the light to be on to run it to 0%, but I bet it's 100s of times longer than I or most people would ever need to use it as a light source. Heck, if after 5 years it was only at 50% capacity it would still probably last way longer than I would need to use it.
 

Autolycus

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 2, 2021
Threads
15
Messages
2,234
Reaction score
3,430
Location
ATL
Vehicles
ICE only :(
Not saying you're wrong, but where did you find this information? In two years of pre-production show and tell events every Rivian employee talked about this being the 7777th battery and identical to the 7776 in the truck's battery packs. Those aren't LFP. Maybe I missed when they slipped in an announcement that the flashlight was no longer the same as the cells in the truck.
Cleverly, I don’t think they ever said it was the same cell. I think they just said it was the 7,777 cell in the truck.

Here’a a Reddit thread discussing the battery in the flashlight. It’s a different size than 21700 and since it’s a 3.2V cell, it’s almost certainly LFP.

 

Dark-Fx

Well-Known Member
First Name
Brian
Joined
Jul 15, 2020
Threads
148
Messages
13,542
Reaction score
27,328
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
R1T, R1S, Livewire One, Sierra EV, R1S
Occupation
Engineering
Clubs
 
Not saying you're wrong, but where did you find this information? In two years of pre-production show and tell events every Rivian employee talked about this being the 7777th battery and identical to the 7776 in the truck's battery packs. Those aren't LFP. Maybe I missed when they slipped in an announcement that the flashlight was no longer the same as the cells in the truck.

Even if leaving the flashlight charged to 100% isn't the best for its long term health I seriously doubt it would ever have any practical change in the life and usability of the flashlight. I have no idea how long it would take the light to be on to run it to 0%, but I bet it's 100s of times longer than I or most people would ever need to use it as a light source. Heck, if after 5 years it was only at 50% capacity it would still probably last way longer than I would need to use it.
I took mine apart. It's not even the same size cell as the ones in the truck battery. 3.2V nominal makes it LFP.
Rivian R1T R1S Flashlight tip PXL_20220519_141710918
Rivian R1T R1S Flashlight tip PXL_20220519_141510441
 

Sponsored

Gshenderson

Well-Known Member
First Name
Greg
Joined
Sep 28, 2019
Threads
13
Messages
1,229
Reaction score
2,777
Location
Park City, UT / Kemmerer, WY
Vehicles
2015 Tesla S 85D, 2019 4Runner TRD Offroad, R1T
If it’s anything like the truck battery, phantom drain will make sure it’s not at 100% all the time ?
 

Zoidz

Well-Known Member
First Name
Gil
Joined
Feb 28, 2021
Threads
226
Messages
5,192
Reaction score
11,696
Location
PA
Vehicles
23 R1S Adv, Avalanche, BMWs-X3,330cic,K1200RS bike
Occupation
Engineer
Two points to consider:
1. This is a single cell, not a pack. Some of the full charging concerns are related to variances in the cells in a pack, that is not an issue here.

2. We don’t know if they use a smart charger or not. If it’s a smart charger, it reduces the charging level after achieving a full charge to optimize cell life.

I would not worry about it.
 

NY_Rob

Well-Known Member
First Name
Rob
Joined
Feb 9, 2022
Threads
23
Messages
5,400
Reaction score
7,977
Location
long island
Vehicles
Model 3 LR AWD, BMW i3 REX, 2024 Rubicon 4xe
Occupation
IT
Well one great feature of LifePO4 cells is that they only experience between 1-3% drop per month so even if you kept it out of the door socket for 6 months you'd still have over 80% capacity remaining energy.
 

madgrey

Well-Known Member
First Name
Allan
Joined
Feb 26, 2022
Threads
4
Messages
903
Reaction score
1,241
Location
Fidalgo Island, WA
Vehicles
2022 R1T, 2016 Miata, 2015 Viper
Occupation
Hardware Design Verification
I got used to keeping a compact flashlight in my center console on all my vehicles, e.g.: an Olight S1 or something similar that uses a single CR123 to keep it small. Cell phone LED works o.k. too, unless you need the light to find your phone after dropping down a between the seat crevasse.
 

Yellow Buddy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 10, 2022
Threads
26
Messages
939
Reaction score
1,440
Location
Behind You
Vehicles
Rivian R1T, F-150 Lightning Pro, Model S, Model X
Occupation
Smart Ass
The cell is LFP, it's fine to have it charged to 100% all the time.
But..but this is cell 7777th cell in the vehicle and identical to the ones in the pack. Right? Right?

And if not identical, are there 7777 cells in the truck? What about the camp speaker?

They didn’t like me at the Venice hub…
Sponsored

 
 








Top