agzand said:BMW came up with departure time charging scheme for the i3, the hope is that you won't let the car sit at 100% charge for extended periods. If you charge to 100% using departure time, it is OK. The problems arise when you charge to 100% and the car sits for a few days, or weeks.
eNate said:Likewise, even BMW with their new i4 and iX is providing an 80% suggestion, plus charge limiting, and even current limiting.
3pete said:agzand said:BMW came up with departure time charging scheme for the i3, the hope is that you won't let the car sit at 100% charge for extended periods. If you charge to 100% using departure time, it is OK. The problems arise when you charge to 100% and the car sits for a few days, or weeks.
Departure time charging scheme? When was this introduced and how do you get to it?
Are you saying it allows you to tell the car you're leaving at 7am tomorrow and it will charge to 80% immediately then wait to charge the rest of the way so it hits 100% at 7am?
I have only ever noticed the departure time to impact:
1) Battery conditioning overnight and pre-departure
2) Cabin pre-heating or cooling pre-departure
3) A notification that your car will not be charged to 100% if your departure time does not allow enough charging time.
eNate said:I speculate BMW can't retroactively introduce charge limiting into i3 software because it would open them up to a whole bunch of claims. So they'd rather stay mum on the matter and move on to the next...
agzand said:It has been on all i3s from the beginning. I guess your are charging on a low amp charger. If you have a high power charger, the car will calculate when it needs to start charging to get to 100% just before your departure time. The idea is to minimize the time the car spends at 100%.
When you plug in the car, it will do a quick charge to measure how much the charger can deliver. Based on that number it will schedule charging to start at appropriate time. If you want to charge to 80% instead of 100%, you can set your departure time 30 min or 2 hours (based on your charger power) later than your actual departure time.
Again this is all a moot point if your charger cannot deliver enough energy to fill the battery by departure time.
eNate said:The problems with the workaround of setting a later than planned departure time is that it leaves the car unclimatized ahead of a planned departure, and if not shut off after driving, the car will likely be parked somewhere cooling or heating the cabin when it's not needed.
A climatized cabin is one of the nicest benefits of owning an EV and I'd be loathe to give that up.
I'm fortunate that I charge primarily L1 at work, 30% gain per work day, and I normally don't bother plugging in if I'm above 50%.
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