THIS is how you get over 250k Miles out of an EV!

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 23. 05. 2024
  • In this video we are going to tell you exactly how to get a quarter of a million miles on your new EV without having to replace the batteries!
    Using a Lightning for example, right now they have a charge of about 260 miles worth of range on a singular charge. This allows for 1,000 charge cycles.
    What causes the biggest concern for batteries long term, is heat. One of the things that can cause this is constantly using a fast charger. Some of the things that you can do to fix this is letting your battery rest before charging it. Another thing you can do is reduce your state of charge. The last tip is to leave your vehicle plugged in during very very low or very very high temperatures.
    Onto warranty, the warranty is good for 100,000 miles or 8 years, whichever comes first. But if your state of charge drops below 70 before those 2 times happen, Ford will replace your battery pack.
    Lastly, maintenance. The F-150 Lightning for example is heavier than a normal truck. It is around the weight of an F-250. For this reason this vehicle can cause more wear and tear to the tires. So it is very important to rotate your tires. It's also extremely important to understand that you need that eight or ten ply tire because the amount of torque this coming out of electric motors. It puts a ton of pressure on the sidewall of those tires and it can actually cause buckling on the tire.
    0:00 Intro
    0:23 Longevity
    1:32 Battery
    10:25 Warranty
    12:34 Maintenance
    15:02 Outro
    THIS is how much it costs to replace the Battery in the F-150 Lightning! : • THIS is how much it co...
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Follow us on Instagram!
    / driveelectric_
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 75

  • @tywebb9879
    @tywebb9879 Před 7 měsíci +36

    Hi Mitchell, Great video and I agree with your assessment on longevity of the battery, if the warranty is 8yr/100k you can bet that the actuarial that works for Ford has assured them that even with abuse it will last that long. My use case is a daily driver and Lowes/Home Depot/garden shop on weekends. I drive 20 miles to work and the same back. I arrive home 6ish and have my charge start at 8pm. I am an older citizen but an early adopter of technology. I have the cabin condition daily (assuming the software works) and love the truck. I also have a 2022 F450 that I use for my 5th wheel. My energy costs are about 38% of my previous vehicle and when the power goes out I don't even start the generator any longer, too noisy. This is much like getting off horses and driving a Model T. It will take time, the infrastructure needs to improve, and people will get on board.

    • @kylekleman
      @kylekleman Před 7 měsíci +2

      Very well said!

    • @user-ry9ls2xn2i
      @user-ry9ls2xn2i Před 2 měsíci +1

      This was the best video I have ever seen on EV battery degradation AVOIDANCE. Great job on that and other aspects of EV ownership. As a Tesla S 100D owner, I have had to get this type of information from cousins who are electric engineers. However, you explained it much better than they did, on a simpler everyday kind of way. Thank you.

  • @loriw2661
    @loriw2661 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Yesterday I bought my 2023 F150 Lightening! I already love it! You’re an excellent resource. I have to say that the sales staff at Ford need to be more informed regarding these vehicles. One person said I HAD to plug it in every day & charge to 100%. Another one just didn’t know. Finally I got Alex who said the exact same things you did. I only drive 20-30 miles a day and he said I don’t need to plug in every night & it’s better not to. He said my “sweet spot” is between 20% and 80%. I love my new Lightening!

  • @kylekleman
    @kylekleman Před 7 měsíci +11

    One thing you might want to clarify is that 1000 charge cycles before the battery degrades is not quite right. Typically the charge cycle rating is when the battery is degraded 20% to 30%. It’s not when the battery will likely die. Now granted, your range will be 20-30% less which might make you want to replace the battery. However you still have 160 miles of range even on the standard range. For some customers that will still be perfectly fine.
    Excellent work! Keep these videos up!

  • @davids1816
    @davids1816 Před měsícem +1

    This is an absolutely fantastic video. I think a lot of people considering an EV don't realize that these are cars that, with a minimum of care, can easily last 20 years.

    • @RedWingsninetyone
      @RedWingsninetyone Před měsícem

      People act as if you're replacing a battery every 4 years

    • @davids1816
      @davids1816 Před měsícem +1

      @@RedWingsninetyone I mean, if you buy a Mustang GT and blow the motor up at 100k miles... that's going to cost some money too. You're going to spend about $50 every 5,000 miles to put fresh oil in it so there's $1000 over the 100,000 miles. If you charge at home. 1000 miles a month at 10-20 cents per kw/hr is $600-1200 vs $2,650 per year at 17mpg and $3.75/gallon. If you charge at home... and that is an if, electric cars are outrageous bargains.

  • @williamreding8306
    @williamreding8306 Před 26 dny

    possibly the best video about electric vehicles I've seen yet. Theres a lot of nuance here, and this helps explain that... They should've referred me to this video when I bought my Lightning last fall!

  • @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270
    @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Hello from France and thanks for a brilliant video. I made the switch to an EV in March 2019 with a Kia e-Niro (Niro EV in the USA). The manual recommends charging to 100% once a month if you don't need to do it for your use case. They don't tell you the reason for this but I have learned that doing this gives the BMS a chance to look at the cell voyages across the entire pack. My car has a 64 kWh useable pack but is in fact 67.5 kWh with 294 cells in total. I just had the 90,000 km service (about 55,000 miles) and a detailed battery health check showed all cells were capable of reaching the correct voltage to prove a 64 kWh pack. There must be after about 500 partial charging cycles (my estimate) some capacity loss but there has been no discernible loss of range. What you say about charging cycles is good advice.. I typically charge once a week to 80% when the SOC is down somewhere between 25%-35%. Good luck with your channel as it must be an uphill struggle there in the southern USA to convince people that EVs are the future of the car industry.

  • @crspeedautoreviews-yw2iq
    @crspeedautoreviews-yw2iq Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the info. My 2018 rwd long range model 3 just rolled 146k miles. It had only 48k when I bought it 19 months ago. I am the 3rd owner. Charging has been done 85 % at home and 15% at super chargers. In the last 98k miles Personally, I am on my 2nd set of tires and have replaced 1, 12 volt battery which only cost me $100 and replaced by Tesla mobile service in which they traveled 1 hour. I live in North east TX. I have been to Colorado twice , North Carolina twice and the gulf coast several times. The Tesla model 3 has been the most cost efficient most reliable car I have ever owned.

  • @raypeeler3585
    @raypeeler3585 Před 6 měsíci

    Great video, as always, and a lot of great info really squeezed in there. My Lightning is scheduled for production next week and I'm a nervous wreck about it

  • @the3yakuza
    @the3yakuza Před 7 měsíci +2

    A ton of good information!!!

  • @FordVideoGuy
    @FordVideoGuy Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great video, Mitch

  • @davewilson8308
    @davewilson8308 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Lot of good information…sponging all the info I can. Just purchased a Mach E GT and love it.

  • @andrewlong5007
    @andrewlong5007 Před 7 měsíci

    Love the videos, best explanation of the ins and outs of the F150 lightning I have found on CZcams. I was an early lightning reservation holder but cancelled when they jacked up the prices a few times. Start of 2024 I am pulling the trigger on a standard range XLT. Tax credit off the price of the vehicle is just a no brainer in my opinion. I don’t tow things and probably won’t so this is an easy win for me over an ICE F-150. Keep up the great content Mitchell. If you have any standard range XLT’s in stock early 2024, maybe I will a trip down from Indiana to purchase one from you lol. Peace and Love

  • @thomaszidik9086
    @thomaszidik9086 Před 5 měsíci

    Hey Mitchell, good stuff in the video. I bought my Lightning because when Ford announced the vehicle, they said they will not have any direct replacements of the battery when it needs to be replaced. They will not carry an inventory of old technology. Instead, they will only use the new version. However, if the entire battery pack will not need to be replaced, one of the ten batteries in my standard range can be added. The truck will know how to distribute the charging and discharging of the battery. A solid selling point, in my opinion.

  • @scubatrucker6806
    @scubatrucker6806 Před 7 měsíci

    Great video

  • @PassportBrosBusinessClass
    @PassportBrosBusinessClass Před 7 měsíci +3

    Many Teslas that were built in 2012 still have strong battery health to this day. A lot of it comes down to the software and monitoring of the batteries and selective charging of individual cells. Tesla is at the head of the game when it comes to software on their batteries and energy management. I think most effective batteries are due to poor quality control, or Shoddy workmanship rather than inherent failure.
    On average, Tesla batteries degrade by a mere 12% after 200,000 miles (321,868 km) of usage
    That said: I will most likely lease my first electric vehicle. I am purchasing a Cadillac lyriq all-wheel-drive sport 3.
    I will most likely lease it rather than finance it, because I may end up releasing easing into an Escalade IQ.
    I really did enjoy driving the F150 lightning, but in order to get the blue cruise, heated, cool seats and all of the tech features I’d want they would force me to pay nearly $100,000 and I’m not doing that.

  • @demonrobertketchie5409
    @demonrobertketchie5409 Před 2 měsíci

    Great informative video. I really like my 2022 Lightning. Had it for 1 year now. I only charge mine to 80% and do not drive it in the winter months so as to not expose it to the salt and brine used to deice the roads.

  • @Demonhumper9919
    @Demonhumper9919 Před 3 měsíci

    U do a good job at making have confidence in buying a ev

  • @midcobra3
    @midcobra3 Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent Video; Share with friends.

  • @John__Wayne
    @John__Wayne Před 7 měsíci +2

    You actually do sell back your spent V8 and V6 when you buy a reman engine. That’s exactly how it works with gas engines when you replace them. Its called a core return.

  • @xilbus
    @xilbus Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for this video. My hometown installed free charging stations. This is making me think of getting a ev. However i need 6 seats. I wish the lightning had the option of a ben seat.

  • @davidspaulding9811
    @davidspaulding9811 Před 2 měsíci

    Thanks for the tips! I previously had a Chevy Volt and got the Ford Lightening. I never really knew about these practices before, but I believe the Chevy Volt automatically would keep the battery conditioned while plugged in. I remember the salesman telling me that some of the cases of battery failure is as you said heat and improper care. Not sure why Ford didn't go that route with the automatic conditioning while plugged in? But now that I think about it, that should be a setting I should look into so the battery is well conditioned before any driving. The only down side is when it is left unplugged for several days, like at an airport, could cause a bit of an issue, but not extreme unless the environment at the time was extreme. That's my only concern when using an EV as an airline worker. Otherwise, I love the truck. I always enjoyed the Volt, and now I know the Lightening will be well appreciated during my ownership.

  • @raindog314159
    @raindog314159 Před měsícem

    Lightning's actually do have a regularly scheduled oil and filter change for each motor, it's at every 150,000 miles.

  • @Coyote.five.0
    @Coyote.five.0 Před 2 měsíci +1

    batteries charge best with some heat on them , and on every city on this wonderful country of ours prices per kw go down after 9 or 10 pm

  • @dkoziolek
    @dkoziolek Před 2 dny

    I've never managed to get 300K on an ICE engine, though I've come close with several vehicles. When these cars died, I was always advised to get a new car, never to replace the engine, even though the rest of the car was in good shape. If I ever need to replace the battery in an EV, I'd expect it to be far easier than replacing an ICE engine. I'd also expect the battery to be cheaper, lighter, and offer more range than the original battery. Am I wrong?

  • @alsjogren7890
    @alsjogren7890 Před 2 měsíci

    Battery State Of Health. My old Nissan Leaf with an ODB2 plug and an APP LeafSpy shows each cell of the battery pack. Is this a conceptual standard - like could I get an APP somewhere and check those details on a Ford Mach-E, for example?
    I appreciated the discussion of heat. Heat is usually not an issue in Seattle, but you identified that the battery internal temperature could be high from using the vehicle. Is there a general way to know what the battery internal temperature is?

  • @Sank1982
    @Sank1982 Před 7 měsíci

    That’s all well and good when the Ford Pass app works unfortunately it doesn’t. I set my Mach E to charge to 80% in the car saved local and still it ignores the setting.

  • @omarlarrazabal2222
    @omarlarrazabal2222 Před 7 měsíci

    Can you please clarify for me if after a 1000 full charges from 0 to a 100% the battery will be toasted/non usable/needing replacement?Thank you!

    • @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270
      @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Perhaps I can help. I've been running an EV here in France for almost 5 years and 90,000 km. To be clear your battery will not be 'toasted' after 1,000 full charges. Unless there is an internal fault in the battery such as a module failure, the pack will decline gradually. In reality no one charges to 100% every time and even gets close to 0%. The lowest I've ever been is 7% and our typical regime is plugging in once a week when the car is at 25%-30% range and charging to 80%. There is so much nonsense in the MSM and channels here about EVs and their batteries. The fact is that most EV batteries will still be at 80% of their original range when an ICE engine has died or needs serious $ worth of work. As EVs age we will see them on the used market at 15 to 20 years old, with perhaps 60% of their original range but still good for the school run or handing over to your kids for them to drive. And the electric motor is unlikely to fail in all that time. Hope that helps.

    • @bob-qi4nr
      @bob-qi4nr Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@kiae-nirodiariesencore4270 Explain why 93% of all new car buyers won't buy an EV. Because you are WRONG. EV's Suck!!!

    • @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270
      @kiae-nirodiariesencore4270 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@bob-qi4nr 93%!!!....where did you get that number from...out of a hat!? And are you talking about UK buyers? USA? Globally? In the UK EVs are now 20% of all new car sales, more like 25% is you count plug in hybrids.

    • @bob-qi4nr
      @bob-qi4nr Před 7 měsíci

      @@kiae-nirodiariesencore4270 I am in the US. Here sales are at 7%

    • @S.s.s_88
      @S.s.s_88 Před 6 měsíci

      true @@bob-qi4nr

  • @Ryan-cf6lc
    @Ryan-cf6lc Před 7 měsíci +2

    I’m really interested in F150 lightning, but I’m concerned my local dealership has no clue how to service and maintain it? What questions should I be asking at the dealership during the sales process?

    • @sombritos
      @sombritos Před 7 měsíci

      This is an issue i am having right now. Each dealer that is selling an EV should have a technician who can work on EVs. At least that is my understanding. The issue that I ran into is that there was only one technician who was authorized to work on EVs and it took over a month to get a simple repair done to my EV.

    • @Magicinstalls
      @Magicinstalls Před 6 měsíci

      Your concern is very real. My Mustang Mach e has been in the shop for six weeks now with no end in sight.

    • @Tnga
      @Tnga Před 4 měsíci

      EVs need much less servicing. Windshield wiper fluid and tires pretty much.

    • @matthewholzmueller6292
      @matthewholzmueller6292 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@Tngayour right to an extent. Still have suspension, body and a bunch of electrical. I wouldn't be running from a falling sky, but it's often overlooked until something happens and a qualified tech isn't available.

    • @Tnga
      @Tnga Před 2 měsíci

      @@matthewholzmueller6292 from an engineering point of view, I like that there are only 20 moving parts compared to over a thousand for vehicles with a gas engine, so I think there should obviously be fewer issues down the road. I’m happy that my 10k service costs around $20 at the dealer. I am concerned about battery recalls but fingers crossed as I haven’t experienced this yet.

  • @user-oz3zf6oz2r
    @user-oz3zf6oz2r Před 5 měsíci

    So if I live in Minnesota in winter it gets -20 below and battery goes dead and freeze and can break, it's 30,000 dollars to replace the battery on a Ford f 250 electric pickup

  • @Magicinstalls
    @Magicinstalls Před 6 měsíci +1

    I'm kind of confused because you contradicted yourself in that you said that there are some built-in buffer in the battery. So go ahead and charge it to 100% and you'll still have that buffer and then on the other hand you're saying only charge it to 80% so which is it? 80 to 100% on your gauge would be different than 80 to 100% of actual state of charge because we cannot actually see 100%.

  • @mrFIST-usa
    @mrFIST-usa Před 2 měsíci

    Tell me please. Is it normal that I can only travel 140 miles on an extended 300+ battery? No trailer, no boot loaded and no heating. when the temperature outside is 60. I just bought brand new F150 lightning platinum. And I can’t understand how people drive if a full charge doesn’t even last 200 miles.

    • @matthewholzmueller6292
      @matthewholzmueller6292 Před 2 měsíci

      How fast are you going? Usually if you're going above 70 range drops fast. If that's not it, take it to the dealer it's still under warranty, remember all service centers are not equal. Good luck.

    • @mrFIST-usa
      @mrFIST-usa Před 2 měsíci

      @@matthewholzmueller6292 I took my car to the service, and they found 9 issues. They have only fixed 3 so far. It's funny because it's uncertain how long they'll continue fixing

  • @davekertscher8661
    @davekertscher8661 Před 4 měsíci

    Had mine towed 10 days ago. Error codes, stalled in my driveway. Needs a new battery cell. Wont get it back for another week. Not a confidence booster.....

  • @scotth5357
    @scotth5357 Před 6 měsíci

    I have a Lightning and Mach e, both of my manuals say 90%

  • @superlativeopulence
    @superlativeopulence Před 2 měsíci

    It's called driving and maintenance

  • @user-oz3zf6oz2r
    @user-oz3zf6oz2r Před 5 měsíci

    The ford f 150 electric pickup battery cost 30,000 dollars to replace

  • @sombritos
    @sombritos Před 7 měsíci

    I would love to know my battery health without are there any products that non Tesla owners can buy that accurately show our battery health?

  • @Teamvenomracing
    @Teamvenomracing Před 5 měsíci

    You did not factor in warranty numbers!
    That is huge!
    Also, you did not factory ICE vehicles maintenance over 200,000 miles.
    Add those to this spreadsheet 🤠🏁

  • @yamahapiano
    @yamahapiano Před 6 měsíci

    4:06 after explaining that just plugging it isnt a charge cycle unless its at 0% and charge to 100% and does the math assuming that and it almost never is the case for most people. VERY misleading!

  • @SumDumBro
    @SumDumBro Před 4 dny

    $35k for a battery and $4k for a module.

  • @raindog314159
    @raindog314159 Před měsícem

    Lightnings and FSD's do not have the same ply tires, lightning's use regular four ply tires, FSD's use eight ply tires..

  • @QuietStormX
    @QuietStormX Před 7 měsíci

    You don't have to fully charge your EV if you don't drive that much. Say only every 2-3 days...

  • @ThatOneGuy_1.0
    @ThatOneGuy_1.0 Před 7 měsíci +1

    It's easy ... you cant

  • @702Wolfi
    @702Wolfi Před 4 měsíci

    I might buy one when a new and much better battery chemistry hits the market. Lithium ion batteries suck ass and then ask for seconds.

  • @randolphlacroix6239
    @randolphlacroix6239 Před 7 měsíci +1

    That’s not a truck, owners of that thing live in fantasy land

  • @mcsmith7606
    @mcsmith7606 Před 7 měsíci

    Buy a Tesla!

  • @robertphillips864
    @robertphillips864 Před 2 měsíci

    get 100 people in a group to go on a 500 mile road trip . 50 with gas 50 with electric .. refilling gas takes minimal time .. refilling electric is a hassle and time is crazy and find 50 fast chargers and pull on grid is crazy in small town and electricity is coming from fossil fuel.... pollution is not local but concentrated at the source of electric production.. cool for the rich people but what happens when all those poor people get in front of you at the charger ..oh yea the rich just pay a premium to reserve a time to jump the line..

  • @outkast40
    @outkast40 Před 5 měsíci +1

    FORD ! What a poor example of an EV. The recall king has bad batteries from the factory.

  • @paulg8065
    @paulg8065 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Step 1: buy a Tesla

    • @ScantyMantis989
      @ScantyMantis989 Před měsícem

      Step 1:*
      Don't buy a tesla there doodoo

    • @paulg8065
      @paulg8065 Před měsícem

      @@ScantyMantis989funny, I sold my Model S with 260k miles and it was running perfectly. I transferred my free supercharging to a new one.

  • @marcelmetcalfe6900
    @marcelmetcalfe6900 Před 7 měsíci +2

    EV is a pain in the neck!

    • @mikeflanary642
      @mikeflanary642 Před 7 měsíci +7

      I feel the same about ICE. We have put 13,000 miles on our EV. Had a service appt at 10,000 and they rotated the tires and filled up the wiper fluid. No oil changes, no gas station stops, just plug in at home and in the morning I have a full battery. I'm looking forward to bidirectional charging. It will be big

    • @vandenbossm539
      @vandenbossm539 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @marcelmetcalfe6900 Do you own one or have you ever driven one or are you just saying that? Seems to be pretty common to just spew regurgitated information that you have read somewhere online but have never even driven one...

    • @marcelmetcalfe6900
      @marcelmetcalfe6900 Před 4 měsíci

      I had one and gotten rid of it.@@vandenbossm539

  • @harrybaulz666
    @harrybaulz666 Před 3 měsíci

    Dont think so.....and so do the majority

  • @ralpheisenbath103
    @ralpheisenbath103 Před 3 měsíci

    SOUNDS LIKE A FORD COMMERCIAL. A FOOL AND HIS MONEY SOON PART !!!!!

  • @ShutUpAndListenYouIdiot

    Trusting Ford to get all this technology right is foolish.