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Truly no idea. Something I picked up at Costco several years ago.Which one do you have?
I haven't had to replace mine yet, but this is the one I will get when I do https://www.oreillyauto.com/detail/...inum-battery-group-size-51r/ssbq/51rplt?pos=0What are most people using as aftermarket replacements?
The 12v battery isn't being maintained 24/7. The car goes to sleep and disconnects the high voltage battery, so at that point the 12v battery is on it's own fire a while until the car wakes up again to top it off. This is why the majority of 12v battery failures are encountered after the car had been parked a while and the owner tries to open the door. The 12v battery is too weak to power up the high voltage system that maintains it. If the battery is weak or has a shorted cell, it may seem fine as long as the car is awake and powering the 12v system through the high voltage battery and DC to DC converter. As soon as the car goes to sleep and that lifeline disconnects, that's when you encounter issues. Tesla has updated their charging and monitoring algorithms to try and detect weak batteries before they leave you stranded and to keep the car awake if they determine the chances are high of the 12 battery not being able to wake the car again. But their algorithms are not perfect and cannot be. So sometimes people will be left with a car that won't wake up until they get it jump started or the 12v replaced.Very interesting and informative series of posts. Couple of thoughts:
If the 12v battery is kept up to full charge with the motive battery pack how the heck does the 12v go flat? Age? Sitting outside when it's cold with a low SoC maybe?
Would it not be prudent to do a "preemptive strike" and replace the 12v on our Teslas every three years or so?
Rich
More likely the person has parked somewhere and is unable to start the car. Once the car is started, the main battery powers the system through a DC-DC converter, and it should stay alive until the car is shut down. That said, I wouldn't make a habit of jumping the car for fear of damaging the electronics.If you have to flag down someone with jumper cables, that means your car died on the road while out driving it... so either your main battery is too dead to keep that 12v charged, or doing this will won't work. Wouldn't the car just die again soon once the other car is disconnected? After all, if it died while driving in the first place... I'd love to better understand this for emergency preparedness. (thanks to OP for starting this thread!)
I tried opening the frunk with my noco jumper and it didn’t work. Needs a true 12v source
Like dmurphy mentioned, the "reverse polarity protection" kept the NOCO jump starter from putting power onto the two wires because it doesn't detect any voltage on them (since they aren't connected directly to the 12v battery). It will still work but you have to push the bypass button on the NOCO to force it to output power (read the manual).I tried opening the frunk with my noco jumper and it didn’t work. Needs a true 12v source
Like dmurphy mentioned, the "reverse polarity protection" kept the NOCO jump starter from putting power onto the two wires because it doesn't detect any voltage on them (since they aren't connected directly to the 12v battery). It will still work but you have to push the bypass button on the NOCO to force it to output power (read the manual).
I don't think a closed in dark area with no sunlight access would get that hot. Car cabins get that hot because of the greenhouse effect, where the sun's energy is able to come in through the glass, get absorbed by materials inside, converted to heat, and then not escape, so it continues to build up without equalizing it to the outside air. I don't think a dark frunk with no windows will do that. It's basically shaded.says to store it at -4–140°F (-20–60°C). That seems likely to be exceeded in the frunk at times.
I'd say that would be true if you have a completely insulated medium between whatever the sun is shining on and the interior of the frunk. Let your car sit out in the sun for an hour or two. Pop the frunk and feel the inside of the hood. That heat is being transferred into the air inside the frunk. Heat energy is always going to try to stabilize between two different environments unless you put something, like a vacuum, in the way. At least that's my thoughts.I don't think a closed in dark area with no sunlight access would get that hot. Car cabins get that hot because of the greenhouse effect, where the sun's energy is able to come in through the glass, get absorbed by materials inside, converted to heat, and then not escape, so it continues to build up without equalizing it to the outside air. I don't think a dark frunk with no windows will do that. It's basically shaded.
"hotter", yes, probably. But I said not "that" hot, where it was suggesting 140 degrees Fahrenheit. That's what my car's cabin gets to in the summer, and the frunk area definitely isn't getting that hot.Simple experiment: put a digital thermometer inside the frunk and see what happens after an hour in the sun. I'd be very surprised if it's not hotter than the ambient temperature around the car.
Okay, experiment performed. My car faces north in my driveway. It's been sitting there all morning. Air temp was 92F as measured by my home weather station (roof mounted sensor). I opened the frunk and put the thermometer inside and closed the hood for 30 minutes. This is what it read when I opened it up:"hotter", yes, probably. But I said not "that" hot, where it was suggesting 140 degrees Fahrenheit. That's what my car's cabin gets to in the summer, and the frunk area definitely isn't getting that hot.