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> >> -Original Message-
> >> From: EV on behalf of Michael Ross via EV
> >> Sent: Sa
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>> -Original Message-
>> From: EV on behalf of Michael Ross via EV
>> Sent: Sat 3/28/2015 10:53 AM
>> To: David Rees; Electric Vehicle Discussion List
>> Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: LEA
; -Original Message-
> From: EV on behalf of Michael Ross via EV
> Sent: Sat 3/28/2015 10:53 AM
> To: David Rees; Electric Vehicle Discussion List
> Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: LEAF EV Pack Reliability Outperforms Cynics &
> Critics (?)
>
> Yes, the rate o
hicle Discussion List
Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: LEAF EV Pack Reliability Outperforms Cynics & Critics
(?)
Yes, the rate of charge is not a problem, it is being fully charged AND too
hot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxP0Cu00sZs
On Sat, Mar 28, 2015 at 2:06 AM, David Rees via EV
wrote:
Yes, the rate of charge is not a problem, it is being fully charged AND too
hot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxP0Cu00sZs
On Sat, Mar 28, 2015 at 2:06 AM, David Rees via EV
wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 5:43 AM, Paul Dove via EV
> wrote:
> > Well that just verifies what I said. You have
On Mar 27, 2015, at 1:46 PM, Roland via EV wrote:
> The maximum battery running temperature was 68 degrees F
Just to be clear...you're reporting the weather, right? You're telling us that,
during the time you used the car that you're telling us about, the battery
never heated above 68°F, and
On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 5:43 AM, Paul Dove via EV wrote:
> Well that just verifies what I said. You have no data other than coming from
> the Leaf instruments. If it calculates capacity incorrectly it will shut down
> the car.
> You still don't know if the battery failed or the capacity measureme
-
From: Willie2 via EV<mailto:ev@lists.evdl.org>
To: Electric Vehicle Discussion List<mailto:ev@lists.evdl.org>
Sent: Friday, March 27, 2015 10:13 AM
Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: LEAF EV Pack Reliability Outperforms Cynics & Critics
(?)
On 03/27/2015 10:40 AM, Michael Ross
Paul Dove via EV wrote:
My questions is How can you be sure? Are you positive the Leaf
instrumentation measures capacity correctly. They claim it is all an
instrumentation issue not a battery issue. The I-MiEV instructs the
owner to periodically drive the vehicle almost empty and then
recharg
On 03/27/2015 10:40 AM, Michael Ross wrote:
WIllie2 and I were having a back channel about this topic. Willie was
thinking that LFP had a voltage simnilar to other chemistries. I
thought others might want to see this too.
Here is what the Handbook of Batteries 4th Ed. says. From Table 26.3
I think the main asset of LFP is it takes an extra 100C or so to ignite the
electrolyte. They can burn just not as well as others) LFP has some real
disadvantages too.
It is somewhat more costly to manufacture due to it being necessary to
make the positive electrode in an inert atmosphere.
LFP
Actually I think the "flat" V versus capacity of LFP is an asset. It is what
enables you to use Ah used, a nice stable, repeatable measurement, that
tracks Wh used quite well over most of the capacity of the pack (I've data
logged battery V and I using 1 sample/sec and compared them). I've used a
WIllie2 and I were having a back channel about this topic. Willie was
thinking that LFP had a voltage simnilar to other chemistries. I thought
others might want to see this too.
Here is what the Handbook of Batteries 4th Ed. says. From Table 26.3
Characteristics of Some Positive Electrode Mate
*"I was expecting similar or better performance on the Leaf battery."*
As far as I can tell that was an unwarranted assumption.
If anything is true, it is certain that LFP are an outlier in behavior to
the other chemistries that have Li metal oxide positive electrodes. I
heard Jack Rickard claim
Well that just verifies what I said. You have no data other than coming from
the Leaf instruments. If it calculates capacity incorrectly it will shut down
the car. You still don't know if the battery failed or the capacity measurement
is off. One would have to measure voltage and amp hours to re
On 03/27/2015 06:53 AM, Paul Dove via EV wrote:
My questions is How can you be sure? Are you positive the Leaf
instrumentation measures capacity correctly. They claim it is all an
instrumentation issue not a battery issue. The I-MiEV instructs the owner to
periodically drive the vehicle al
My questions is How can you be sure? Are you positive the Leaf
instrumentation measures capacity correctly. They claim it is all an
instrumentation issue not a battery issue. The I-MiEV instructs the owner to
periodically drive the vehicle almost empty and then recharge fully to keep the
fu
On 03/27/2015 12:50 AM, EVDL Administrator via EV wrote:
On 26 Mar 2015 at 19:57, Ben Goren via EV wrote:
That's the idea behind my suggestion of a "remaining (usable) kWh"
gauge ...
Sounds good to me.
Solectria had a simple answer to this. They gave you a straightforward amp-
hour meter. A
On 26 Mar 2015 at 19:57, Ben Goren via EV wrote:
> That's the idea behind my suggestion of a "remaining (usable) kWh"
> gauge ...
Sounds good to me.
Solectria had a simple answer to this. They gave you a straightforward amp-
hour meter. As you drove, it counted up; as you charged, it counted
On 3/26/15 10:36 PM, Ed Blackmond via EV wrote:
On Mar 26, 2015, at 8:48 PM, Jamie K via EV
wrote:
For example, if the display shows 50%, then 50% of 20kWh is 10kWh.
Why bother with the intermediate conversion to KWH? If you know how
far you can go on 50%, then you are done.
Because at a
On Mar 26, 2015, at 9:22 PM, Jamie K via EV wrote:
> It's interesting to note how gas gauges are set up, psychologically. Here's
> one explanation:
>
> http://theappslab.com/2010/12/21/how-does-your-gas-gauge-really-work/
Somehow...I'm not surprised.
The newest car I own is a 1968 VW Westfali
> On Mar 26, 2015, at 8:48 PM, Jamie K via EV wrote:
>
> For example, if the display shows 50%, then 50% of 20kWh is 10kWh.
>
Why bother with the intermediate conversion to KWH? If you know how far you
can go on 50%, then you are done.
With my 2011 Leaf, I know I can travel 10 miles on the l
Good points, Ben.
It's interesting to note how gas gauges are set up, psychologically.
Here's one explanation:
http://theappslab.com/2010/12/21/how-does-your-gas-gauge-really-work/
Compared to that, I appreciate the numeric charge percentage display on
LEAF V1.5.
Cheers,
-Jamie
On 3
On Mar 26, 2015, at 8:48 PM, Jamie K via EV wrote:
> That works for me, and it pretty much sums up what LEAF V1.5 (2013-2015)
> displays right now.
Good to know that it's a feature of one of the first-tier electric vehicles on
the market. Gives one hope that it'll be a standard long into the f
On 3/26/15 8:57 PM, Ben Goren via EV wrote:
> That's the idea behind my suggestion of a "remaining (usable) kWh"
> gauge, For a century or so drivers have done just fine with a
> "remaining (usable) gallons of fuel" gauge and a basic idea of how
> far they can make it on a gallon of fuel based on
On Mar 26, 2015, at 7:23 PM, Michael Ross via EV wrote:
> The car or some big computer can't read you mind, so if it is going to make
> an informed, accurate estimate - you are going to have to tell it what your
> destination is. You want accuracy, you have to tell it what is going to
> happen.
"
I also don't take well to stuff like "the driver would be required to enter
their destination,"
More or less this part of the thread is about how the Leaf has a crap way
of reporting remaining range. It is inaccurate.
The car or some big computer can't read you mind, so if it is going to mak
On 26 Mar 2015 at 6:26, tomw via EV wrote:
> One way ... a look up table of ... vehicle energy per mile, and ..
> maps ... The driver would be required to enter their destination.
Great if you need navigation to get where you're going, but otherwise, I'm
not so sure. This sounds like too much
I think the ~70 Wh/lb is too low of specific energy for longer range ev's
David. The lithium cobalt chemistry used by Tesla is much higher, ~250 for
bare cells, and their battery pack is still ~1 ton. Would be nice to have
about twice the Tesla cell specific energy. But I agree the NiMH seems
pr
One way to approach it would be to use a look up table of measured vehicle
energy per mile, and google maps (courtesy of USGS). The driver would be
required to enter their destination. Present location would be read from a
GPS. A proposed route map would appear on the screen, which the driver
co
On 25 Mar 2015 at 18:07, Ed Blackmond via EV wrote:
> The Honda EVPlus had much better range than the Nissan Leaf. When I was
> forced to give it back after six years and 60,000 miles, I could still drive
> more than 100 miles on a charge.
And you lithium guys tell me I'm a derelict still thinki
On 03/25/2015 08:07 PM, Ed Blackmond via EV wrote:
On Mar 25, 2015, at 2:43 PM, paul dove via EV wrote:
Ed, are you aware of the Android app "Leaf Spy" (I think is the name)?
I don't have any experience with it but I have a similar thing for my
imiev. With a $10-$60 OBD reader, it should give
> On Mar 25, 2015, at 2:43 PM, paul dove via EV wrote:
>
> Ed, are you aware of the Android app "Leaf Spy" (I think is the name)?
> I don't have any experience with it but I have a similar thing for my
> imiev. With a $10-$60 OBD reader, it should give you the straight scoop
> on your energ
On 3/25/15 2:48 PM, Michael Ross wrote:
I won't challenge your ideas of Li ion cell life here, but there is new
information. We have gone around that recently on the list.
Why Li ion batteries die. by Dr. Jeff Dahn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxP0Cu00sZs
Dahn says that cells don't have to
Ben,
I think the problem may be more subtle than you describe.
Unless the manufacturer completely solves the problem of describing remaining
capacity, the user won't have a gauge that reads 30 kWh of remaining capacity.
The user will be faced with a gauge that still reads 50 kWh, without know
Willie, what is the app you have for the iMiEV. I just bought one and need
something like that.
From: Willie2 via EV
To: Ed Blackmond ; Electric Vehicle Discussion List
Sent: Wednesday, March 25, 2015 3:24 PM
Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: LEAF EV Pack
On Mar 25, 2015, at 2:00 PM, EVDL Administrator via EV
wrote:
> When it
> comes to estimating remaining range, the problem gets even more difficult.
I think that's where the real problems come in -- and they're the exact same
problems for any other vehicle.
Are the miles you're planning on d
On 25 Mar 2015 at 15:24, Willie2 via EV wrote:
> Have you ever wondered WHY the Leaf's instrumentation is so crappy? It
> seems to me that they must have intentionally made it so.
Probably not. A predictive "fuel gauge" for an EV is a tough nut to crack.
Just ask the manufacturers who've been
I think your point is clear, Willie2. You had a bad experience with
Nissan and will never trust them again. That's understandable. So far
you're happy with your Tesla, which is also understandable, especially
given your range needs.
I'm glad you found a better car for your purposes, and than
I won't challenge your ideas of Li ion cell life here, but there is new
information. We have gone around that recently on the list.
Why Li ion batteries die. by Dr. Jeff Dahn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pxP0Cu00sZs
Dahn says that cells don't have to die, and I believe him.
Rickard (EVTV) thi
They changed the batteries to what is called a "lizard pack". Not sure how
they achieved a more robust chemistry/structure.
Bob Bath, from his iPod, so any misspellings are from autocorrect or fat
fingers on a small device, not cluelessness...
> On Mar 25, 2015, at 9:06 AM, Michael Ross via EV
The LEAF instrumentation has changed since 2011/12. On the 2013+ LEAF
models, there is a new percentage of charge remaining display option - a
useful improvement. Also, the "guess-o-meter," the miles remaining
display, has an improved algorithm.
Using the percentage of charge display and the
On 03/25/2015 03:14 PM, Ed Blackmond via EV wrote:
Their instrumentation is not very linear. When fully (100%) charged,
the state of charge gauge indicates 12 bars. The 12th bar lasts for
about 3 miles on residential/commercial (25mph -
bar left. The first 36 miles took 8 bars, the last 37.5
On 03/25/2015 12:37 PM, Jamie K via EV wrote:
Willie2, it sounds like the Model S is a great fit for your needs. If
70% of the initial LEAF range meant it "lost nearly all its utility"
then you were really on the edge with that car. Given the battery
improvements since then, I would expect th
> On Mar 25, 2015, at 9:11 AM, Michael Ross via EV wrote:
>
> According to my understanding of Li ion cells, it is possible to select
> cells, make packs and manage them for nearly unlimited life with no loss of
> capacity. You have to cool them, oversize them, undercharge them, and under
> disc
On Mar 25, 2015, at 12:47 PM, EVDL Administrator via EV
wrote:
> So maybe my analogy above is wrong. EVs vs ICEVs is more like satellite or
> digital radio vs traditional FM broadcast: they're better, all right, but
> they solve a problem that most users / buyers just don't care that much
>
On 25 Mar 2015 at 12:11, Michael Ross via EV wrote:
> If I had to buy a $5500 pack and some unknown labor every 5 years that
> would really suck. I expect cars to last 10+ years.
You and everyone else. This is much of what killed the few lead-battery EVs
offered in the 1980s and 1990s. Owne
hold up longer than what you experienced. Time will tell.
Cheers,
-Jamie
Peri
-- Original Message --
From: "Willie2 via EV"
To: ev@lists.evdl.org
Sent: 25-Mar-15 9:45:08 AM
Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: LEAF EV Pack Reliability Outperforms Cynics &
Critics (?)
On 03/25/2
On 3/25/15 10:11 AM, Michael Ross wrote:
Yes, the severe problem is in hot climates. So much of Europe is not
going to see the issue. Though some may. Put a charged Leaf in a
garage on a rock in Greece or Spain, let it heat up good in the summer
sun and you will see some deterioration like in
5 9:45:08 AM
Subject: Re: [EVDL] EVLN: LEAF EV Pack Reliability Outperforms Cynics &
Critics (?)
On 03/25/2015 10:34 AM, Jamie K via EV wrote:
Failures below spec are eligible for warranty replacement.
Replacements are with the so-called "Lizard" battery pack, which is
repo
On 03/25/2015 10:34 AM, Jamie K via EV wrote:
Failures below spec are eligible for warranty replacement.
Replacements are with the so-called "Lizard" battery pack, which is
reported to be more tolerant of hotter climates.
I know from personal experience that Nissan has been less than honorab
Yes, the severe problem is in hot climates. So much of Europe is not going
to see the issue. Though some may. Put a charged Leaf in a garage on a
rock in Greece or Spain, let it heat up good in the summer sun and you will
see some deterioration like in AZ. Unless they have made some improvement
On 3/25/15 3:03 AM, brucedp5 via EV wrote:
% Some U.S. Leaf owners would state differently %
Yes, but to be fair it looks like the quoted articles are about Europe.
AFAIK the US problem was primarily in hot climates in some earlier
models. It's been reported that the packs have been updated
Does anyone here know if Nissan implemented any technological responses to
the failures in southwestern US? Those that are the subject o af lawsuit?
All I know about is the test results showing deterioration under high temp
and high SOC conditions. Did Nissan make any changes and when?
Mike
% Some U.S. Leaf owners would state differently %
https://3d-car-shows.com/nissan-leaf-battery-reliably-outperforms-cynics-critics-and-alternatives/
NISSAN LEAF BATTERY RELIABLY OUTPERFORMS CYNICS, CRITICS AND ALTERNATIVES
March 23, 2015 By Gerald Ferreira
[image
https://3d-car-shows.com/wp-
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