KRo
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Kory
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2022
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 103
- Reaction score
- 235
- Location
- Portland, OR
- Vehicles
- 22’ R1T, 22", RBlue, OCoast, no Tonneau
- Occupation
- Business owner
I’ve owned a Kia Niro EV for a few years now, and their battery care instructions seem to make a bit of sense to me, and I’m employing the practice on my R1T as well. We’ve seen no discernible change in range on the Niro.
In a nutshell: general daily use, charge as needed to 80%. Each month or two, drain the battery down to at least 20%. Also each month or two, charge to 100%. Never leave the battery for prolonged periods below 20% or at 100%.
The theory behind this is to cycle each individual cell through its capacity range and charge back to its full capacity, which also balances all of the cell capacity and discharge rates within in the pack. Cells that are kept only within a nominal range can ‘forget’ their capacity and discharge rates… and over time will have different discharge curves causing cells degradation and an unbalanced battery pack. Ultimately, you want all cells to operate as similarly as possible for proper operation and longevity.
Anywho, makes sense to my brain.
In a nutshell: general daily use, charge as needed to 80%. Each month or two, drain the battery down to at least 20%. Also each month or two, charge to 100%. Never leave the battery for prolonged periods below 20% or at 100%.
The theory behind this is to cycle each individual cell through its capacity range and charge back to its full capacity, which also balances all of the cell capacity and discharge rates within in the pack. Cells that are kept only within a nominal range can ‘forget’ their capacity and discharge rates… and over time will have different discharge curves causing cells degradation and an unbalanced battery pack. Ultimately, you want all cells to operate as similarly as possible for proper operation and longevity.
Anywho, makes sense to my brain.
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