Wednesday, October 17, 2012

281


281 is the GID count of a "seeable" capacity on a Nissan LEAF traction battery pack. Each GID is supposed to represent 80 Watt/hours. There is a total of 300 GIDs to make the 24 Kwh battery pack. Now the LEAF actually drops the connection to the traction pack at around 2% leaving about 22 Kwh or about 91.6% of the true pack capacity.  Now because a battery charge is a chemical reaction whose properties can change with temperature like any chemical reaction; actually charging to that top target of 93.6 % is an approximation that can be affected by hot Summer time temperatures. the LEAF's BMS may throttle back the charge slightly to prevent any possibility of overcharging and the resultant permanent capacity loss so the top end is typically in the 90-91% range for me.

Now the accepted charging efficiency from wall to battery is about 85% and if each GID was 80 watt/hours then it should take about  94 watt/hours to get the GID there but that is the rub.

I purposefully ran the pack to near VLB (very low battery) which happens about 8.5 % or 24 GID (i was actually at 27 GID)  but only took just under 20 kwh to recharge.  (no pix of starting point on meter other than it was a "hair past 3750")



Now, I was at 281 GID and it was a bit of a surprise (was 275 yesterday) so I went and got my phone to snap a pix. two minutes later I returned and it was 280 (should have turned off the radio!)


So despite the SOC meter saying i gained 254 GID, if using the 80 watt hour parameter and the 85% charging efficiency number i come up with 213 GIDs put back in the pack. Now that would make sense since I drove 64.8 miles @ 4 miles/kwh. with 27 GID left that would take me about 6 miles for total of 70-71 miles of range in last nights near freezing conditions. The remainder of the power could be attributed to occasional defrost used to clear the windows.

Now, before the weather turned cold, my GID count ran from 268-272  with an occasional bump to 275 during most of the past Summer representing a 2-3% loss.  If we compare the LEAF's performance to last winter, it does appear to have lost a bit of range but not really too much, maybe only a few miles.  With the SOC meter, it does lower the range anxiety a bit since we know that Turtle happens about 7 GID so there was still 20 GID "left in the tank"

Either way; the LEAF is headed to Centrailia again this morning.  will report back tomorrow and the recharge amount!

4 comments:

  1. Dave, it looks like you lobbed off too much. There are only 5 Gids out of the 281 you cannot use, and the 0.95% factor is erroneous. It would only apply if you could charge the battery to its full capacity (24 kWh or 300 Gid). I'm getting about 22 kWh stored energy, and if you deduct roundtrip battery losses, this drops to about 21 kWh usable.

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    1. oh ok. u right that makes it worse for me because I am not accessing anywhere near that much power. No matter what the GID count, I am only recharging 20 Kwh and if at 85% then that is only about 17 Kwh that is usable to me. add to that the 27 GID already in the battery which is another 2160 GID but cant access the last 2% of that so that is 1.68 GID so I have just under 19 GID which is the same as I determined (the much harder way) 2 winters ago...

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  2. Post edited. Thanks SS for pointing out the error of my ways!!

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  3. this morning GID count; 274 recharged from 68 GID so 206 regained at just under 17 Kwh. garage temp nearly the same at 11.4 C (.4 c warmer) but drive home was a few degrees warmer and shorter at 63.9 miles. difference was lower humidity which meant less defrost to clear the windows and plenty of range left over.

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