Bought the OBD2 harness and Dongle and bought Scanmytesla and as others have already suspected, it appears that all current production MY LR AWD appear to come with 82.1 kwh pack with 78.9kwh availavle and 3.5% buffer
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Where did you purchase the dongle & harness?
I have an OBD2 dongle that I used for my Hyundai Kona Electric which worked with the Torque Pro app.. Torque PRO is a pretty good app but not easy to set up..I just ordered the items from Amazon earlier this morning to confirm. I figure I'll probably use this for something else at some point. I've always had the ability to scan my VW's and Audi's and it's come in really handy from time to time.
EPA includes charging losses in their efficiency calculationI think the energy buffer SMT is reporting is at the bottom:
3.5kWh bottom buffer, so when you're charged to 79kWh you have 75.5kWh actual. With a max capacity limited to 79kWh there's also a ~3kWh buffer at the top.
That means that 0-100% in the car corresponds to 4-96% of the full 82kWh capacity.
I am very confused by one thing:
The EPA range for the 2021 MYLR is 326 miles, 27kWh/100 miles (or 270Wh/mile).
I must be misunderstanding something about the EPA estimate...
- 75kWh/326 miles = 230Wh/mile
- 82kWh/326 miles = 252Wh/mile
- 88kWh = 270Wh/mile * 326 miles
That makes sense, thanks for the clarification!EPA includes charging losses in their efficiency calculation
Don't forget that Tesla heats the pack for fast charging and then, towards the end, it uses power to cool down the pack again.. All that consumes a lot of power..That makes sense, thanks for the clarification!
"It took 87.868 kWh to add 77.702 kWh to the battery of the Long Range" - 77.702 / 87.868 = 88.4% charging efficiency... what charging equipment were they using? Most 240v sources seem to charge at >= 90% efficiency, 88.4% seems like a 120V charger but that would be an annoyance during testing. I guess that doesn't matter too much in this context.
From the EPA document they link, 77.7kWh were discharged in the range cycle, resulting in an EPA rating of 330 miles - 326 is/was a voluntary de-rating. That might explain why we're seeing MYs showing 330 miles when charged to 100%.
Also, they list a battery capacity of 165 Wh/kg * 480kg = 79.2kWh. That's very close to the "nominal full pack," 78.9kWh.
I'm betting that Tesla has decided to keep that top 3.5% as a buffer against capacity drop, plus it means the LR could keep its EPA rated capacity for a few hundred 80-20% discharge cycles.
Congrats on the larger battery pack. I got mine close to when you did and was wondering about your ~VIN. Mine is 1844XX.Bought the OBD2 harness and Dongle and bought Scanmytesla and as others have already suspected, it appears that all current production MY LR AWD appear to come with 82.1 kwh pack with 78.9kwh availavle and 3.5% buffer
View attachment 679008
1868xxCongrats on the larger battery pack. I got mine close to when you did and was wondering about your ~VIN. Mine is 1844XX.
Take Care
Great news...I love free stuff1868xx
I'm certain that you also have the larger pack. Based on some youtube videos, all MY made after February 7 have the 82 kwh pack
2021 Model Y’s Produced after Feb 7 Reportedly Contain 82 kWh Battery Packs
There is a new update on the Tesla Model Y battery pack and you should take this with a grain of salt. According to this news, all Tesla Model Y vehicles pro...youtube.com
Thanks for the info and congrats. Looks more and more like I should also have it. 184XXX.I just confirmed my April 2021 build also has the 82.1kWh pack. VIN 183xxx
I would certainly assume so..Are the 82kwh batteries being used in the 2021 performance Y’s too?