We went to Trader Joe’s yesterday. It’s about 100 miles from my house. I was thinking today I’m going to start tracking my longer trips and the places I go and if the BEV would work. Typically when I go up towards Chicago I get gas either halfway there or halfway back. I decided not to get gas yesterday. I started with 300 miles. I am down to 84 left. Now I need to go get gas, but if that was the BEV I could just plug in. Lots to consider.
Just to make sure I have this right, you charge to 80% when at a charging station, but you can charge to 100% on your home charger?
Thanks for answering all my pesky questions!
Storage of a battery at 100% is not great. Maybe. But that's storage for months, not hours or days, and at very high temperatures. That said, an EV battery will never reach 100%. Every modern EV battery manufacturer programs its battery management modules to keep the battery below 100% charge. My battery has 143 kWh maximum capacity, but can never charge past 131 kWh (91.6%) capacity. When the UI reads 100%, it's at 91.6% actual. When it reads 80%, it's 73% of actual.
I don't worry about charging to 100%, but usually keep the home charge set to around 85-90% and tell the vehicle to go to 100% shortly before a long road trip. In the winter, I'll do this such that the battery is slightly warmed before the trip. In the summer it doesn't really matter so I'll charge to 100% whenever I remember to do so before the trip.
There are two reasons I don't usually charge to 100% at home: 1) I live where the temperatures fluctuate enough that I like the battery to be able to thermally respond without any possible issues. This is a holdover from my experience with batteries in space where fluctuations matter a lot. Extreme temperatures in space aren't what we see on Earth, but it's difficult to let go of this even though it's not a huge issue; 2) because it's slightly more efficient to drive with less than 100% charge. Regeneration doesn't work as well when the battery is at 100%---you can't pour more than 100% into a container.
I will charge to 100% before a long trip. The slight improvement in efficiency isn't as important because I'm on a highway and don't expect a lot of regeneration for most of the drive. Also, while on a long trip, I usually use the DC chargers to get just enough to make it to the primary and a secondary charging station. I like to drive about 2.5-3 hours at a time, which gets me 180-220 miles, and uses up to about 70% of a charge. So I usually plan legs of about 150-200 miles. I don't like to sit for more than about 2.5-3 hours at a time.
Most vehicles reduce DC Fast Charging rate when the battery reaches 80% or so. The Lightning, for example, will go from about 150-175 kW to about 80 kW when it gets to 80%. It drops again after about 85% to 50 kW. So, DCFC charging above 80% is about half as fast as charging below 80%, and charging above 85% is about 2/3 as fast. So, if your next charging stop is within a few minutes off your route, you can save time by stopping charging at 80% to 85% and moving on.
Regarding battery health:
The major control on battery health is age.
The next, much lower down on the impact scale is long-term storage at a combination of high state of charge (90%+) and high temperature (50+ ºC). Pretty much nobody does this.
The next is how much of a charge happens how quickly. It's best to always be plugged in at home so that you get short charges. That is, plug in after your 40 mile commute to recharge 11%; that's better than waiting until the end of the week to recharge 50-60%. You can't avoid large charges when you're traveling. But don't worry about it, the evidence is that batteries are going to outlast the rest of the vehicle.