Yes, you can "jump" the 12V in EVs. In the Tesla there are leads behind a panel in the front bumper to which you apply 12V and it powers up the computers so you can open the doors, frunk, etc plus (most importantly) close the High voltage contactors (fancy name for the big relay(s) the connect the high voltage (big) battery to the car). A small jump pack is plenty to do this. The only wrinkle being (at least with a Tesla) you can't open any part of the car without power because all of the openings are electrically operated so you will need to borrow a jump pack (or old school jumper cables and a friendly driver) to get into the car.Thank you all for the responses on my postIt's one of those questions that have been bugging me for a while and I couldn't really get decent answers from other forums.
Another question if I may ...
How do EVs handle day long driving and parking in sub-freezing temps (so sustained 10-30 degrees farhenheit)? Say we drive ~100 miles or so to go skiing, are we going to have enough juice to drive back in the evening?
On ICE vehicles the 12v battery is often the weak point in cold conditions, I would assume that would also be a weak point for EVs right? Can you jump start the 12v on an EV to get things going like you can on an ICE vehicle?
Once the contactors close the HV battery will charge the 12V. Also, the car will warn you when the 12V starts getting weak so you can replace it ahead of time. Tesla's used to eat 12V batteries but they have gotten much better. My wife's is 8 years old now and going fine. Mine is 4 years old but it is Li-Ion (Tesla decided to just make their own instead of buying 12V lead acid).
The car won't lose a ton of range sitting in that that 10-30F range, plus it will be warm for some time after you park it. So a day of skiing would probably be fine, especially because you are likely going downhill on the way home. That being said, batteries don't like to charge or discharge when cold. The car will have to use some charge to heat the batteries (and the cabin) so your initial draw (efficiency/range) will look terrifying until everything warms up. I'm sure that Scout will use a heat pump so once you get rolling and the motors and battery start generating their own heat it will be able to use that heat for the cabin and such.
Ideally you would plug in for the day but I know that chargers are pretty limited. Heck, if they kept all those 120V outlets for block heaters from back in the day that would help.