Tarrngtn said:
<span>If my intent is to wait until I am down to about 20% charge and then recharge to about 80%, can it be done remotely? My plan is to set off-peak from midnight to 4AM, and set leave time at 4AM as well. Peak time is set for 4AM to midnight. And it is set for off-peak charging. If the car is down to 20% and I plug it in at say 11:30 or so, will it begin to charge at midnight and stop at 4AM? Or will the programming preference to leave me fully charged override my off-peak charging and leave time instructions? Or would I be doing it incorrectly? The owners manual is not clear on this point, or at least I can’t find where the clarity is found. I have a level 2 <a href="http://www.amazon.com/s/?field-keywords=electric%20vehicle%20charger&tag=myelecarfor-20" class="interlinkr" target="_blank">charger</a> in the garage.</span>
I believe that it depends on which combination of charging parameters you have set.
Delayed charge? Departure Charge? Off-peak only charge? Priority Charge? (pg. 129) . Location-based Charge?
For one thing, If "Priority Charge" is set, then the battery will immediately start charging until the battery is at 40%, then stop until the other conditions are met before resuming charging.
On Pg 125
Charge Mode Selection
Departure :
The vehicle will schedule charging to complete by the programmed departure time. The vehicle estimates the charging schedule based on programmed departure times, charge rate limits, electric rate preference and schedule, and priority charging settings.
Also, on page 127 it says : "
if the selected electric rate settings result in a very long charge completion time, the vehicle will start charging immediately upon plug-in."
So, it appears that using departure charge mode means that the car will start charging at just the right time to guarantee a full charge at your departure time (90% if you are using Hilltop Reserve) -
ignoring the rate info If it can't charge the car fully charging only during off-peak.
It seems that your best bet is to figure out at what time your off-peak rate ends (which is when you want to stop charging, I assume). You figure out your charging rate (kW) and calculate how long it would take your car to charge to (say) 70-80%, then calculate your departure time to be just far enough past off-peak such that your battery would be at 70% full at the time that off-peak ends.
Example:
Your level-2 EVSE and 240V circuit & breaker can provide 32A. 32A * 240V = 7680W (7.6kW), but the vehicle only draw a max of 7.2 kW, correct?
Your off-peak ends at 7 a.m.
You want to end the charge at about 70% SoC. You have hilltop reserve set (only charges to ~88% SoC). You need to calculate how long it would take to charge from 70% to 88%.
- The battery is rated at 60 kWh. 18% of 60 is 10.8 kWh.
- at 7.2 kW, you will get 7.2 kWh per hour (duh). 10.8/7.2 is 1.5. So, you program your departure time to be 1.5 hours AFTER off-peak ends.
However, that means that you
must go out and unplug the vehicle just before off-peak ends if you want to charge at off-peak rates, meaning that you would be getting up at 7 a.m. any morning that you wanted to do this.
OR :
Just set hilltop reserve, and set the departure time to be 30 mins before peak rate ends, and simply plug in the car. It will start charging at the proper time to have the battery 'full' (about 88% of the 'usable' capacity) just before peak rates end. Since the 'usable' capacity is about 90-92% of the actual 'full-rated' capacity (based on calculation of the battery capacity by multiplying # of cell/packets in the battery), filling to about 90% of 'usable' capacity is filling to about 80-82% of rated capacity. And if on work days you are up before 6:30 anyways, you can simply walk out to the garage and unplug before it gets to 88% full.
And personally, I wouldn't ever let the charge go below 35-40% SoC during everyday (non-travel) use. Not because of battery longevity, but because I would always want to be able to jump in the car and drive a minimum 80 miles without having to think about it.