How To Do Tesla's Battery Test | Our battery degraded HOW MUCH after 60K miles?!?!? 🤯 🤯 🤯

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  • čas přidán 22. 12. 2023
  • Knowing the current health status of the battery on your Tesla is very important. Whether you've had your Tesla for years or you just bought a used one, here is a full tutorial on how to test the current health of your Tesla's battery and see your degradation.
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Komentáře • 135

  • @solarguy4850
    @solarguy4850 Před 4 měsíci +39

    My 2015 Model S is 9 years old, has 210,000 miles, and 90% battery. Keep your battery cool!

  • @ZesPak
    @ZesPak Před 2 měsíci +12

    Also remember that the initial loss is higher and degradation actually slows down.

  • @beachwood2306
    @beachwood2306 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Thanks for the step by step. My 2019 Model 3 long range all wheel drive at 94000 miles showed 85% in the test.

  • @kevinjohnston704
    @kevinjohnston704 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Great video!
    I have a 2021 and I’m going to do what you suggested 😁

  • @aware2action
    @aware2action Před 4 měsíci +9

    The issue with battery degradation with BEV's like Tesla is that, it varies a lot. Just do the same test on an off-rental vehicle, it will not be this good. In essence all NCM chemistry batteries have around 700 cycles, before a 50%? degradation. But in real life, it is much more, if you keep up to charging between 30-70% most of the time, avoid frequent super charging, topup to 90+ SOC only for long trips, avoid discharging to less than 10%, avoid using Sentry mode all the times etc. Also getting close to EPA numbers? need a lot of knowledge on EV energy consumption. So, the best case scenario, is to buy an EV with the biggest battery, while still observing some of the above mentioned charging discipline. Just some 💭

  • @Ralphsearsart
    @Ralphsearsart Před 19 dny +3

    I am definitely going to try this. I have been concerned that my mileage is too low. My Model 3 2019 long range AWD is getting 370km or 230 miles with 80% charge after only 37,000km or 23,000 miles. Will let you know. I super charged only once

  • @veedub447
    @veedub447 Před 2 měsíci +4

    For a 2015 Tesla, why not just compare your mileage range at 100% charge when new, which is 240 miles , to a 100% charge now?

  • @ikarrangu
    @ikarrangu Před 4 měsíci +10

    Absolutely going to try this...when my Y gets out of the shop. This stationary brightly painted yellow barrier post came out of no where and swiped my car 😂😢

  • @Anthony__420
    @Anthony__420 Před 4 měsíci +21

    My 2018 long range model 3 has 66k miles on it and I’m getting 299 miles at 100%

    • @jstar1000
      @jstar1000 Před měsícem +1

      That is nuts I have a 2019 LR and never get that many its more like 285 on the max side but I think its calculated based on how you drive not so much the battery health. Well both actually but you can have a healthy battery and not get a good range estimate cause you heavy footed.

    • @Dinkwadd
      @Dinkwadd Před měsícem +1

      You need to click the 24 hour test if the fans don’t run for 24 hours then you didn’t do it right when you first come to the screen it says 100% every time you need to do it exactly how this guy says

  • @HarryBrielmann
    @HarryBrielmann Před měsícem

    thanks that is the most trustworthy indicator of battery health I have seen, and compares very well to my case. I just bought my first tesla a week ago 2020 model 3 long range with 48000 miles. Assuming your results are similar to mine since the car is similar, I can expect to lose 10 percent at 50K miles which is about where I am, which means I will lose 32 miles from my original 322 mile range, which is 290 miles. It is in my garage now at 85 percent charge and indicating 254 miles of range. The missing 15% is equal to another 38 miles, which predicts 292 miles which is an excellent match predicting my battery degradation is 10%. Its 40 degrees out so I will not get that in real life, but its good to know. Thanks.

  • @Birdfeeder795
    @Birdfeeder795 Před 25 dny

    Did the health check last night and finished this morning. It’s a 2022 Model Y delivered in march-22 and it has 41092 miles on it. The battery shows 97%. Better than I thought.

  • @judeghazaleh3457
    @judeghazaleh3457 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Does the key have to stay in the car during the test?

  • @RB-lt8kt
    @RB-lt8kt Před 4 měsíci +5

    It would be good to see a test on a car with same miles but the battery 5 tears old and a car 1 year old with similar miles.

  • @deficator750
    @deficator750 Před 3 měsíci

    mine just stopped at 10% cause i had scheduled charging on. at 1am i just hopped in and tried to hit the test button it said its initiated but nothing happened. my app shows its parked and no longer in the service mode. Im gonna leave it and try again when i wake up. I hope leaving it at 10% does'nt damage anything

  • @jeffufcfanaticrosenberg
    @jeffufcfanaticrosenberg Před 2 měsíci

    Seeing your trip Watt/hr go up tells you your battery is screwing up right ? so if you Watt/hr are high thats a bad sign ! whats is your nomral trip watt/hr ?

  • @HDBnB1
    @HDBnB1 Před měsícem +5

    instead of running the test could you just do the math of what your current max milage is vs how much you should have? So in your case 288/326= 88%
    Seems like a quick and easy way to get a close estimate

    • @jstar1000
      @jstar1000 Před měsícem +1

      No because it calculates your range based on health and how you drive so its not that accurate more then likely.

    • @Jenna_
      @Jenna_ Před 26 dny

      This calculation would be inaccurate to determine real world range, and isn't exactly the purpose of a degradation test. Tesla, unlike other EV manufacturers, continues to opt-out of a voluntary reduction in range, and uses the more efficient of the two EPA calculations they have to choose from to come up with that 326mi range figure. The range that a Tesla displays on the dashboard is just that, the EPA equation with the current state of charge taken into account. You could determine a theoretical maximum based on reported battery health, but none of these calculations take into account a persons driving style and/or the environment in which the vehicle is driving around in. Remember, the EPA driving cycle is 55% city, 45% highway, that highway portion is completed at 48mph, and EVs excel in low-speed environments. The degradation test is more to show how the battery has worn given the conditions its been driven in, and gives the current owner and/or prospective buyer an idea of how long that pack will last until its in need of service or replacement. In most modern EVs, degradation tends to slow as time goes on, because the pack allots a more of its nominal (total) capacity for critical vehicle systems and degradation, to minimize the impact it would otherwise have on range. Tesla chose to apportion more of their battery pack to useable capacity for increased range, at the expense of more noticeable degradation as the pack ages.

  • @darrylnix2582
    @darrylnix2582 Před 4 měsíci +5

    My 2018 LRRWD is getting 298 at full SOC currently at 79935 miles.

  • @AndrewBurtonS-group
    @AndrewBurtonS-group Před 16 dny

    Wow this is a great thing to do before the warranty is up if you have an older car or high mileage.

  • @blubandedbandit
    @blubandedbandit Před 3 měsíci +1

    I have a 2018 75S with the newest software. The "Health Test" box does not show up on that HV System page. Please advise

    • @bardz0sz
      @bardz0sz Před 3 měsíci

      It’s a subscription based Tesla software, quite expensive too

  • @ryanbumgardner7821
    @ryanbumgardner7821 Před 2 měsíci

    I tried this test last night and it cycled and drained the battery then charged back up to 100 but doesn’t show a range and says last test was more than 30 days ago still hmm

  • @gregholliday7012
    @gregholliday7012 Před 4 měsíci +5

    What did you do to you battery? I had a 2020 model 3 sr+ charged to 90% daily for 4 years. (Just recently totaled in an accident). With only 10% degradation.

  • @kalboJeff
    @kalboJeff Před 2 měsíci

    Would this be the same test that a Tesla service station would do to test our batteries?

  • @TigerInTheWoods
    @TigerInTheWoods Před 2 měsíci

    Good to know! I have to do it w/ my 3 Tesla - 2 MY LR (2022) and M3(2021). Things to do for me...

    • @jstar1000
      @jstar1000 Před měsícem

      I can't mine to get out of the locked mode to run the test for some strange reason.

  • @tonymunoz7400
    @tonymunoz7400 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I charge at home never use the super charger and my battery health is 100%. I guess it helps I just bought the car 2 weeks again 😂😂😂😂

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před měsícem +1

      Lol

    • @oj9886
      @oj9886 Před měsícem

      How much range are you getting on your mode y at 100 percent , I get 302

  • @ronniea.4830
    @ronniea.4830 Před 2 měsíci

    My 2021 Y battery degraded so much, I charge it to 80% it went down from 275 to 232, I have 56,000 miles on it and I charge it mostly at my home Tesla charger.

    • @jstar1000
      @jstar1000 Před měsícem

      That number has very little to do with battery health and almost everything to do with how you drive. It calculates your range based on how you drive. Check your batteries health and I bet you will be surprised.

  • @Oppinnindi
    @Oppinnindi Před 25 dny

    I mean wouldn’t it make sense for the car to turn all these settings off when you run the test to avoid all this hassle?

  • @berthogendoorn2133
    @berthogendoorn2133 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Also check your account and charging, what is your percentage of supercharger versus level 2 charging, would be nice to know!

  • @Ace987Ace
    @Ace987Ace Před 4 měsíci +2

    That seems like a strange way to test battery capacity.
    The way I’ve been taught is by charging the batteries to 100% then putting it on a load until the batteries discharge to a certain level. The load and level is published by the manufacturer. When done on a string (multiple battery cells in series) of batteries we measure each cell and the overall voltage. On a Tesla or any other EV, there is no way they are going to measure every battery cell, there are just too many.
    For example, I’ll be testing a 24V string consisting of 12 batteries each providing 2V . We’ll say the manufacturer tolerance is that the batteries will be at or above 1.75V per cell by the end of the test. This calculates to 21V for the string. Let’s say the manufacturer rates it at 50 amps for 10 hours. If we put a 50 amp load of the string, each cell should read at or above 1.75V and the string at or above 21V. Once the string falls before 21V you stop testing and record the time. If it lasted 9 hours the battery system capacity is 90%.
    Not sure how the Tesla can truly calculate battery capacity when it starts below 50% charge. Battery voltage is not linear as it discharges. Also, the rate of discharge varies. In the example I gave, a battery lasting 10 hours at 50 amps will not last 5 hours at 100 amps. It will be closer to 4.5 hours. The inverse is true as well, if only providing 25 amps, it will last closer to 24 hours.
    My guess is that they tested a bunch of batteries, averaged them out, then plug in those battery voltages to represent your batteries. That’s probably the best way to test the battery capacity without knowing exactly how your batteries operate, but that is still not a true test or your batteries.

  • @rarebarney5681
    @rarebarney5681 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Hey I'm a new tesla owner. I see you have the tire pressure monitoring system fault. Do you know what that means?

    • @archemity
      @archemity Před 2 měsíci

      possibly has aftermarket wheels installed without TPMS installed. I do that to a a lot my cars, I just do a quick visual check of my tires each morning.

  • @miketaivalmaa1530
    @miketaivalmaa1530 Před 21 dnem +2

    2018 m3 AWD 150,000 83% health

    • @alijahan8813
      @alijahan8813 Před 10 dny

      I am also at 140k miles
      How is your helding up any major electrical or mechanical issues so far
      Original batteries and motors ?

  • @Georgex42
    @Georgex42 Před 22 dny

    My 2022 lfp m3 is at 95% with 65790 miles

  • @3030hp
    @3030hp Před měsícem +1

    288 divided by 326 = 88%

  • @tmorcos21
    @tmorcos21 Před 4 měsíci +12

    Just a FYI. In California, all battery-operated vehicles are warranted for 10 years and 150000 miles. Good informational video as usual

    • @keithferguson6422
      @keithferguson6422 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Is this true ? Never heard of it....

    • @tmorcos21
      @tmorcos21 Před 4 měsíci +4

      @keithferguson6422 Yes. You can Google battery-operated cars in California

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci +6

      There are actually several states with this law but it doesn’t apply to Tesla and their battery packs. This is for 12V and PHEV’s.

    • @practicalguy973
      @practicalguy973 Před 4 měsíci +2

      There are also many ways an EV battery warranty is voided. Water ingress, cooling system and physical damage warranty might not apply. Also when warranty does apply with Tesla you get a re-manufactured battery with similar degradation. The resale value will not be good as these cars age. I think if I owned one I'd be selling and upgrading when the battery still has a couple years of warranty left on it to maximize my financial losses.

    • @choongta
      @choongta Před 4 měsíci +2

      @@tmorcos21 In Tesla app | Specs & Warranty | Warranty tab | Battery Limited Warranty for Model Y, it says 8 years or 120,000 miles, whichever comes first. Never mind Google. Never mind California.

  • @D.i.n.i.c.h.t.h.y.s
    @D.i.n.i.c.h.t.h.y.s Před 4 měsíci +6

    isn't this below the expected health? I think there was some huge report lately that showed the average above 90% for 150 or 200k miles cars? did you supercharge a lot?

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Our charge stats show about 20% supercharge which I don't feel like is that much but maybe it is.

    • @D.i.n.i.c.h.t.h.y.s
      @D.i.n.i.c.h.t.h.y.s Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@LockettTech this should be perfectly fine I guess

    • @allenbaylus3378
      @allenbaylus3378 Před 2 měsíci +1

      12% loss on a 2-year-old car seems slightly higher than what I would expect. But I am not an expert on this.

    • @MikesProjectsandHobbies
      @MikesProjectsandHobbies Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@allenbaylus3378Would be interesting to see how much of the degradation occurred during the first year which is where the most degradation seems to occur.

    • @positivityplace
      @positivityplace Před měsícem

      I have 94% and my car has 82,000 miles

  • @peperised
    @peperised Před 4 měsíci +6

    Thanks for this. Seems this approximates the manual calculation of 288miles/326miles=88%.

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci

      It seems it’s about 3.26 miles for every 1% SOC is the estimate they are using.

  • @bobtruck1594
    @bobtruck1594 Před 14 dny

    Seems high!

  • @keithmcdonnell4485
    @keithmcdonnell4485 Před 4 měsíci +5

    88% not bad.

    • @erictuffelmire6826
      @erictuffelmire6826 Před 24 dny

      That's horrible... 80% is considered the life of a lithium ion cell because they're basically impossible to balance beyond that. At this rate he needs a new pack by 100k miles.

  • @kabisayago
    @kabisayago Před 2 měsíci +1

    I bought it aug 2023 (272mi) , Feb 2024 (265mi). 7mi lost,... odo 11k miles

  • @DG-zj9ej
    @DG-zj9ej Před 4 měsíci +2

    Do you have to be in level 2?

  • @JonathanRootD
    @JonathanRootD Před 4 měsíci +2

    My 2021 Model Y with 61k miles is still showing 312 miles at 100%. Originally had 326 miles. Dropped to 318 in the first 10k miles. Dropping very slow since.

    • @JohnD0129
      @JohnD0129 Před 3 měsíci

      Any notes you can give us. Do you Supercharge ? SOC % etc. 😎

  • @Speedsterawesome
    @Speedsterawesome Před 2 měsíci +1

    I have a 2022 model 3 Long Range with 102,000 miles on it and the battery health is 82% I get 311 miles on a full charge.

    • @primefilmmakers5596
      @primefilmmakers5596 Před 2 měsíci

      That quick already? Do you do superfast charging all the time?

    • @Speedsterawesome
      @Speedsterawesome Před 2 měsíci

      @@primefilmmakers5596 it was a Hertz rental so I’m sure it got supercharged constantly. But I have gotten a solid 280 miles on a charge.

  • @kabisayago
    @kabisayago Před 2 měsíci +1

    Will it really make noise if doing a battery test?

  • @gregb1599
    @gregb1599 Před 4 měsíci

    Earlier Model S had 8 year unlimited mileage battery and drivetrain warranties. Probably changed that because of many battery and drivetrain replacements around that 160,000 mile point as seen in a famous high mileage Tesla Model S that I recall had 3 battery replacements as well as drivetrains with if I remember 400,000 miles

  • @robertyu7341
    @robertyu7341 Před 4 měsíci +2

    It seems like you got the same result off 288 mi on a full charge with just the battery indicator. So you’ve proved that going through the whole battery health diagnostic seems unnecessary.

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci

      Tesla mileage predictions are extremely unreliable so to just use that wouldn’t be an accurate prediction of your battery’s health. Percentage will give you the best idea and the test is the only way to see that.

    • @patrickshelley09
      @patrickshelley09 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@LockettTechYou're incorrect. The miles to empty shown on the screen calculates your available battery capacity and divides it by the car's EPA rated watt hours per mile.
      While it's not a good indicator of how far you can drive, because you're not going to drive the same as the EPA test, it is a fairly accurate way to gauge degradation. The battery health test is unnecessary.

  • @jeffufcfanaticrosenberg
    @jeffufcfanaticrosenberg Před 2 měsíci

    Tesla needs to get there SHT together and develop a Solid State battery then this whole excercise is MOOT

    • @bobtruck1594
      @bobtruck1594 Před 14 dny

      Yep! Wish we knew what Juniper has. I would wait... but the prices are very good right now!

  • @berthogendoorn2133
    @berthogendoorn2133 Před 4 měsíci +3

    I would do a real world test, charge to 100%, drive to 0%, then change display to metric, multiply the watt per km by the number of kilometers and that should give you a better state of health both in range and actual kwh capacity remaining.

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Maybe in a future vid. Not so sure about driving it to true 0% though. 🤣

    • @paulf3353
      @paulf3353 Před 4 měsíci

      Well, you can't say to Tesla, we did run our cycle degradation test and it showed x amount. They just not going to do anything if you have degradation problem, but if you use their own sw - they will.

    • @paulf3353
      @paulf3353 Před 4 měsíci

      Service mode test is also more accurate as you do not stress battery as much as you would during driving

  • @englandm17
    @englandm17 Před 2 měsíci

    Your hand is driving your autofocus crazy. Great shot of the back of your hand. Glad you read all that to us! LOL

  • @IainEtridge-ux6bv
    @IainEtridge-ux6bv Před 27 dny

    Took my car down to 1% , tried to start the test , only accepts state of charge between 15 and 90% ……. Going to be a long day , and resentful as I’m paying to charge it just to immediately have it discharge again

  • @JuanGarcia-gj5fz
    @JuanGarcia-gj5fz Před měsícem

    At 56,000 miles, my supercharger module stopped working but I can charge at home on a 120volt.

    • @jstar1000
      @jstar1000 Před měsícem +1

      Is that not covered under warranty?

  • @PECKERWOOD249
    @PECKERWOOD249 Před měsícem

    Tesla probably does the same thing apple does to your phone with every update🤣

  • @henrikbazsant
    @henrikbazsant Před 4 měsíci +2

    Warranty is for capacity, not for SOH. Also SOH is not equal capacity. "8 years or 150,000 miles, whichever comes first, with minimum 70% retention of Battery capacity over the warranty period."

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci +2

      Right, meaning a max degradation of 30%.

    • @henrikbazsant
      @henrikbazsant Před 4 měsíci +3

      Yes, this is the meaning, but you measured SOH and not the degradation or capacity.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_of_health#:~:text=Typically%2C%20a%20battery%27s%20SoH%20will,will%20be%20less%20than%20100%25.

    • @dagame81790
      @dagame81790 Před 4 měsíci

      @@henrikbazsant Is there a way to measure capacity other than to drive it from 100% down to zero?

  • @360vroomers
    @360vroomers Před měsícem +2

    My question is why do you believe the Tesla health test? If the health test shows less than 70% health then the warranty is triggered. So tesla has an incentive to make its health test more optimistic.

  • @JAM_2024
    @JAM_2024 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Battery health is 88%

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci +2

      How many miles on your Tesla?

    • @seanstewart4221
      @seanstewart4221 Před 4 měsíci +2

      We have 59,000 miles on our 21 Model Y bought in March also. I think I'll just go with your test and assume its about the same lol.
      @@LockettTech

  • @billnipp2309
    @billnipp2309 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Doesn't look like your hood was sitting flush. No?

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci +2

      No. We have a gap in our hood. Was always a panel gap plus an issue with an old, now replaced, frunk opening kit made it worse.

    • @billnipp2309
      @billnipp2309 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@LockettTech damn.

  • @MetalVII
    @MetalVII Před měsícem

    My 2018 MS90D has almost 90,000 miles and has 9% degradation.

  • @igbatious
    @igbatious Před 4 měsíci +1

    Da gra da shun

    • @health4430
      @health4430 Před 2 měsíci

      bok tagh zhog dang tagh tagh

  • @PlayBetterSlots
    @PlayBetterSlots Před 11 dny

    Should’ve edited out the first 12 minutes of this video with multiple fails. What a waste of time. It’s a miracle anyone made it thru. This could’ve been a 2 min video with 100x more views but I can literally hear 99.999% of the viewers just turning it off after the first 12 min of fails.

  • @health4430
    @health4430 Před 2 měsíci

    this is why stick with prius still best

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 2 měsíci +2

      The Prius is something…that’s for sure.

    • @health4430
      @health4430 Před 2 měsíci

      @@LockettTech prius is much better when it comes to reliability

  • @jeffufcfanaticrosenberg
    @jeffufcfanaticrosenberg Před 2 měsíci

    cant wait for Solid State BATTERIES to get HERE !!! this is BS

  • @latitudeash
    @latitudeash Před 18 dny

    To me that’s a poor result. You reached 12 degradation for a EV that’s 8years old

  • @BigEightiesNewWave
    @BigEightiesNewWave Před 4 měsíci

    At my 2002 Ford Focus ZX3 miles, that would have 1/2 a battery left, probably a lot less due to age. That car that "saved the planet" would be in a landfill at least a decade before mine, so no, they don't save the planet. IF the battery is recycled, very little is recovered and makes tons of CO2 in energy use to do so.
    Yes, I researched it. Lithium also uses 1000 gallons of precious water to make enough for a BEV battery.
    The break even on CO2 with similar-sized ICE car is YEARS down the road. There is no free lunch.

    • @andrewjoy7044
      @andrewjoy7044 Před 4 měsíci +8

      I think you need to do your research again. Batteries are fully recyclable. The biggest problem for firms recycling batteries is they don't have enough batteries as EV batteries in general are lasting much longer than predicted.
      Lithium does use 1000 gallons of water to produce an EV battery. Once produced they don't use any water. Did you know that in the USA, 3 to 6 gallons of water are needed to produce one gallon of gas. An average American uses 656 gallons of gas per year so that is 1312 to 2624 gallons of water every year. After 10 years that is 13120 to 26240 gallons of water. So as for water usage which is better. Oh, one more thing, a lot of the water used in oil production becomes contaminated.
      The life span of modern electric cars is unknow to a large extent because they have not been around long enough. There are still Nissan Leafs from 2010 driving around on their original battery packs (Not far I admit). Same with the original Model S' from 2012 after the original battery packs were all replaced due to a fault in the original ones. There are many who believe that modern EVs could last as long as 1 000 000 miles, but since this is 50 years of drivinh for the average American motorist we will have a long wait to find out.

  • @mattstanbridge
    @mattstanbridge Před měsícem

    So much waffle.

  • @bludika
    @bludika Před 29 dny

    god....id be furious if my battery degrades after just 4-5 years. I have nothing against EV's but the battery health is what i just don't feel good about

  • @bigdougscommentary5719
    @bigdougscommentary5719 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Click bait

    • @LockettTech
      @LockettTech  Před 4 měsíci +3

      ????

    • @weswoods7571
      @weswoods7571 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@LockettTechI feel this was solid info and prepared me for battery testing quite well. Including things that’s would interrupt the test. Definitely not click bait no way

  • @Nastja3000
    @Nastja3000 Před 12 dny

    Why is he wearing a dog leash ?