Kenny1678
Member
That's pretty painful... I'm going to get the most out of the current pack and try getting it replaced on warranty. Once a new pack is in, take extreme care to keep the battery health up to par. I.e. only charging to ~75% and discharging down to at most 30%, maintaining lower SOC whenever the car is sitting, making sure the battery doesn't sit at high temperatures, etc.Ignoring how many bars are shown, I have actually logged the real miles traveled, rather than what the guess-o-meter shows. We are under 15 miles of actual range, which is significantly less than the 20-22 miles actual range we had when new. We only have 23K miles on our odometer, but are down to 15 miles or less of actual range, which is well below what should be expected after this plow number of miles driven.
I know there's a buffer, but realistically this battery pack should be a LiFEPo or since it's Li-ion there should be more software to prevent rapid degradation. It always sucks when there's such a preventable issue like this and if forces you to work a lot harder than you should to maintain the battery health...
But this is the eternal problem with PHEVs, lots of owners want to drive it full EV around town with the option of ICE for long range. The small battery means you're fully cycling it significantly more than you would be even on a small BEV like an old Leaf. Plus, plenty of owners don't even plug the car in, so it sits at 0% charge forever, and bye bye battery life. Basically, the concept of a PHEV invites typical owners to use the battery in the worst way possible in terms of maintaining battery life.
I think with proper management I should be able to get a decent life out of this car, but I think it'll just have to be a stopgap until newer PHEVs with improved lifetimes come down to a reasonable price. It's a real shame, I want a hatchback/wagon style PHEV but there's so few... Maybe eventually I'll get a V60 Polestar engineered, despite how much I dislike the infotainment and general user interface.