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How Many kWh in a Full Charge?

Discussion in 'Gen 1 Prius Plug-in 2012-2015' started by bilofsky, Jan 2, 2013.

  1. bilofsky

    bilofsky Privolting Member

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    My PiP has been taking about 2.85 kWh for a full charge, measured by my Watts Up Pro at the 110v outlet. Is that a bit low?

    I'm charging at 2 am when the temperatures here in Northern California have been in the 40's lately.

    At a Chargepoint station during the day, it took 2.56 kWh but there were 0.6 EV miles left when plugged in.

    (Apologies if this duplicates other threads. I looked but couldn't find any. If there are, please post links.)
     
  2. priuskitty

    priuskitty PIP FAN

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  3. 3PriusMike

    3PriusMike Prius owner since 2000, Tesla M3 2018

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    During the summer I found that charging at home (120v) a full charge from 0.0 miles remaining would take 3.0 kwh (KAW). At work with ChargePoint (220v) it was 2.88 - 2.95 kwh. In the last 2 weeks I've seen only 2.78 kwh from the ChargePoint (3 times almost exact same results), including today when the temp was ~45F.

    Some possible explanations for the change:
    1. battery has less capacity now (unlikely after such a short time...only 6 months with a 10 year expected life))
    2. more efficient to charge when the outside temp is lower
    3. programmed behaviour based on outside air temp

    Mike
     
  4. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    how does all this relate to the 15% charging losses people talk about?
     
  5. bilofsky

    bilofsky Privolting Member

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    Yeah, I have been trying to decide between 1 and 3. I'm not thinking 2 because I am also seeing a decrease in EV range. But the kWh/charge is a more objective measure so let's not start another EV range discussion. :cautious:

    Will just wait for warmer temperatures, and keep better records.

    Has your kWh/charge dropped at home too?
     
  6. John H

    John H Senior Member

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    another possibility is that in the cooler temps the battery is not discharged as low before the vehicle switches out of EV mode. I suspect that at the lower temperatures the KW flow is reduced due to slower chemical reactions so the computer recognizes the lower KW output and switches out of EV.

    the more I think about this, the less I think it is the case though. you should still be able to draw down the HV battery under lower loads.
     
  7. priuskitty

    priuskitty PIP FAN

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    my vehicle switches out of EV at 18% SOC
     
  8. John H

    John H Senior Member

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    the SOC is not like measuring the fuel level in the gas tank. there are competing algorithms and methods for estimating the SOC of a battery like the PiPs. I think temperature affects the accuracy depending on the method. If the switch to EV is always at the "18% mark" regardless of the energy actually available, that could explain the range of kWh needed for recharges.
     
  9. priuskitty

    priuskitty PIP FAN

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    I'll have to set up my testing equipment when my EV range is at .9 miles or lower to compare results to my summer data. I'll get back to you.:D
     
  10. priuskitty

    priuskitty PIP FAN

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    I have noticed the charging went from 2 hours and 34 minutes last summer to 2 hours and 42 minutes the other night.
     
  11. John H

    John H Senior Member

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    same voltage as the summer? I remember you had some low line voltages in the summer.
     
  12. priuskitty

    priuskitty PIP FAN

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    my data logger was about 6 volts off. I used my Battery Back up readout and a Fluke Multimeter to calibrate the logger. I did a reading with the data logger and posted it at Attention Kill A Watt Nerds thread.
     
  13. eveinmb

    eveinmb New Member

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    I'm curious about this too. I charge my car at work. The charging system keeps an online record of how many kWh are going into my car each time I use the charger. I bought the car in June 2012 and started using the charger in July 2012. In July 2012, a full charge (according to data from this charging system) was around 3.4kWh. It's been decreasing slowly and steadily since then so that now it's around 3.1kWh.
     
  14. 3PriusMike

    3PriusMike Prius owner since 2000, Tesla M3 2018

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    Is this 110v or 220v. ChargePoint, Blink, or ??

    3.4 kwh is a lot.

    Mike
     
  15. 3PriusMike

    3PriusMike Prius owner since 2000, Tesla M3 2018

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    I don't know where the 15% number comes from. (i.e. actually measured or from some white paper). It is related, only in that one of my made up possible reasons for the decrease in kwh to do a full charge is that, maybe, the charging losses are less when the outside air temp is cooler.

    For example, with 220v from Charepoint I would normally see 2.9-2.95 kwh to do a full charge. And if you accept the 2.7 kwh published by Toyota as the useful range of the battery, this would mean about 6.8%-8.4% is lost (0.2/2.9 and .25/2.95). Now I am seeing (last 3 charges) about 2.8 kwh to charge. So the losses would be .1/2.8 or 3.6%. This seems way too good. Thus my question on why the change. Maybe the battery accepts a lesser charge when it is colder, by design. Maybe the measurement isn't as accurate when it is colder.

    I'm not going to heat the Chargepoint station outdoors to find out. And it seems unlikely that they would accept a watt meter design that is off by 3-4%. Certainly home utility meters must be at least within 1% at all expected temperatures...right?

    Mike
     
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  16. John H

    John H Senior Member

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    The chargepoint measurement should be fairly accurate. The charging losses are in the vehicle, at the onboard charger, not at the chargepoint station. the losses are generated heat so at cooler temperatures you would expect some lower losses in the charging circuits but other limits in the ability of the battery to absorb the charge are probably kicking in at those lower temperatures as well. the battery warms up some during charging. some of the increased kWh consumption during summer charging may also be to run cooling fans on the charging circuit that don't need to run in the cooler temperatures.
     
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  17. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    15% is just what i've heard others throw around. i've been assuming 3.15 kwh/charge for the spread sheet. i.e. i've been multilying the cars reported kwh used times 1.15.
     
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  18. bilofsky

    bilofsky Privolting Member

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    Yes, that seems like a lot. How many EV miles do you show after a full charge? As the kWh decreased, did that go down too?

    I wonder whether some of these differences are due to variance in battery pack capacity.
     
  19. eveinmb

    eveinmb New Member

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    110V. The charging system is not chargepoint, blink, etc. I work at a university. The charging system belongs to the mechanical engineering department (which makes me think their measurements are accurate). They are studying EV infrastructure and I charge my car on their system. I get free charging and they get to further their research, so it's a win-win!
     
  20. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    The battery has a lowered ability to hold a charge in cold temperatures so you see a reduction in usable range while driving. Because less battery power is available and used during driving, there is less charge required to recharge an empty battery (and it just can't hold as much because it is cold).