Jager
Well-known member
- First Name
- Jeff
- Joined
- May 25, 2020
- Threads
- 25
- Messages
- 338
- Reaction score
- 1,089
- Location
- Virginia
- Vehicles
- 2024 Cybertruck AWD, 2022 Model 3 LR AWD
If you'll monitor your individual cell temps while charging you'll find that L2 charging generates negligible heat. Heat, while generally one of the most significant user-controllable factors in Lithium battery degradation, is not a meaningful factor in home charging.
The bigger potential concern with C-Rate - how fast or how slow your vehicle charges - is Lithium plating. And to look at that, you have to tie C-Rate to pack temperature. Lithium plating can occur at even quite modest temps if the C-Rate is high enough. And as pack temps decline towards freezing, the C-Rate that your pack can accept without danger of Lithium plating plummets. Below freezing, any charging becomes a problem.
A lot of folks will quickly say that Tesla's BMS prevents all such ill effects. What I'll say is that it mostly does.
What I'd suggest, unless you live in a tropical climate where you never really see cold temps, or your vehicle lives in a garage which limits the lower ambient temps your vehicle ever sees.... is to do your L2 charging immediately after returning from a drive, rather than, say, waiting for middle-of-the-night rates.
Other than that, L2 charging at home - any rate you can possibly achieve - is pretty much a nothing burger.
The bigger potential concern with C-Rate - how fast or how slow your vehicle charges - is Lithium plating. And to look at that, you have to tie C-Rate to pack temperature. Lithium plating can occur at even quite modest temps if the C-Rate is high enough. And as pack temps decline towards freezing, the C-Rate that your pack can accept without danger of Lithium plating plummets. Below freezing, any charging becomes a problem.
A lot of folks will quickly say that Tesla's BMS prevents all such ill effects. What I'll say is that it mostly does.
What I'd suggest, unless you live in a tropical climate where you never really see cold temps, or your vehicle lives in a garage which limits the lower ambient temps your vehicle ever sees.... is to do your L2 charging immediately after returning from a drive, rather than, say, waiting for middle-of-the-night rates.
Other than that, L2 charging at home - any rate you can possibly achieve - is pretty much a nothing burger.
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