I think you may be giving Mitsubishi more credit than they seem to deserve. They have got the car right, but there are many examples where little to no attention has been paid to the details. I would expect the wi-fi to consume a decent amount of power. Certainly not milliamps. Otherwise why make the car charge each day when not used?maby said:ian4x4 said:A bit of further investigation.
PHEV 12v Aux battery is rated at 36Ah.
A typical domestic WiFi router is rated at 6 watts.
That means it draws 1/2 amp, so IF I am right the aux 12v battery is flat in 72 hours, if not automatically charged.
Is there a clue here?
A domestic wifi router is a very different beast - it contains a lot more electronics than is necessary in the case of the Outlander wifi interface. The outlander wifi is just a simple wifi receiver and when it's not active, I would expect that it is programmed to wake up every 10 or 20 seconds to see if any device is trying to connect to it. That is just standard "Wake on LAN" functionality which I'm sure Mitsubishi are clever enough to implement. Coupled with low power microcontrollers and a low power real-time clock, it should be possible to get the average current drain down to a few tens of milliamps or lower. Obviously, when a device connects or a timed event occurs, then the whole system will wake up and current drain will increase.
Kind regards,
Mark