Bricking a Tesla

This car is systematic, hyyydromatic...why it's greased lightning!
Post Reply
User avatar
Executioner
Life Member
Posts: 10354
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 11:34 am
Location: Woodland, CA USA

Bricking a Tesla

Post by Executioner »

User avatar
b-man1
Posts: 5201
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 10:23 am

Post by b-man1 »

well that sucks. that could happen to me too...i leave my non-winter car parked for extended periods sometimes. hopefully they can get around the problem and not set back the technology progress being made.
User avatar
normalicy
Posts: 9514
Joined: Sat Nov 25, 2000 4:04 am
Location: St. Louis, MO USA
Contact:

Post by normalicy »

I think it'll be another decade before electric cars have had the major bugs worked out.
User avatar
EvilHorace
Life Member
Posts: 6611
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 7:14 am
Location: Greenfield, WI

Post by EvilHorace »

Wow, that will probably be the death of Tesla unless they come up with a better solution. No one reading that would ever buy one now.
<img src="http://www.pcabusers.org/images/evil2.gif">
User avatar
renovation
Posts: 13859
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 8:24 am
Location: on a lake in michigan
Contact:

Post by renovation »

EvilHorace wrote:Wow, that will probably be the death of Tesla unless they come up with a better solution. No one reading that would ever buy one now.
i agree fully ! I think Jay leno owns one. im guessing he having his mechanics checking it to make sure it start ! :help
the Last time I was Talking to myself . I got into such a heated argument . that is why I swore I never talk to that guy again. you know what it worked now no buddy talking to me. :help
User avatar
EvilHorace
Life Member
Posts: 6611
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 7:14 am
Location: Greenfield, WI

Post by EvilHorace »

that could happen to me too...i leave my non-winter car parked for extended periods sometimes
No (unless you own a Tesla), all you'd ever need is a simple 12V battery if it went dead, froze solid in winter. For cars that aren't used for long periods of time, get a battery tender (or "maintainer"). They're inexpensive and keep the battery fully charged. I keep one on my Mustang as it sits all winter and come spring, it starts right up.
<img src="http://www.pcabusers.org/images/evil2.gif">
User avatar
b-man1
Posts: 5201
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 10:23 am

Post by b-man1 »

EH...that's what i meant...it could happen to me if i had a Tesla. of course, same idea though, just plug the thing in if it's at home.
User avatar
DaMaN
Posts: 4726
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 5:49 pm
Location: New Jersey

Post by DaMaN »

Damn, now I can't buy one..... :bull :bull
User avatar
FlyingPenguin
Flightless Bird
Posts: 33161
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 11:13 am
Location: Central Florida
Contact:

Post by FlyingPenguin »

Actually this is a known issue with ALL Lithium Ion batteries. You never want to run a Lion battery completely dead. There is a minimum threshold beyond which the battery won't recover.

Early Lion batteries has a lot of issues with this. People would run down their laptop batteries and brick them.

Modern laptops, phones, etc get around this with advanced battery management. There's a LOT of electronics in the battery itself and the phone to individually manage each cell in the pack to prevent overcharging, over heating, shorts and complete discharge. This is why laptop batteries nowadays have such complex connectors. The laptop's battery management needs to communicate with each individual cell in the pack (and a pack may have 6 or 9 cells).

I suspect the problem with the Tesla is that their battery management sometimes fails to deal with a total discharge because the discharge rate is so high AND the batteries they use are off-the shelf laptop batteries.

Other electric vehicles use batteries specially designed for electric car use, and probably are less prone to this problem because of that.
---
“The Government of Spain will not applaud those who set the world on fire just because they show up with a bucket.” - Prime Minister of Spain, Pedro Sánchez

Image
User avatar
EvilHorace
Life Member
Posts: 6611
Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2000 7:14 am
Location: Greenfield, WI

Post by EvilHorace »

Privately though, Tesla has gone to great lengths to prevent this potentially brand-destroying incident from happening more often, including possibly engaging in GPS tracking of a vehicle without the owner's knowledge.
I wonder what the thinking is on that, like will they then call the owner and tell him to do something if the car's been parked in one spot too long?

I was discussing this with a co-worker who has a relative who bought a Hybrid Lexus RX 400H a while ago. That vehicle is often parked in the basement of a condo unit in Florida for weeks, months and there's no electrical outlets (no options) and the owner isn't there for months (has 2 homes) so yes, costly Hybrid batteries (like $5K) could fail BUT it being Toyota/Lexus, they'd warranty it.
<img src="http://www.pcabusers.org/images/evil2.gif">
Post Reply