My wife just received the following from a Mitsubishi email address. Are there any actual lithium battery experts on the forum that can comment on it?
"Don’t leave your PHEV plugged in longer than necessary. While you’re not driving it, aim to keep the charge at around the 30% mark and leave it unplugged."
As there is frustratingly no numeric indicators on a 2018 Outlander PHEV, it's difficult to judge 30% by eyeball. Or maybe they mean the 30% the car retains when the electric gauge is zero.
Some of the other information on this forum appears to be wrong about memory effect for lithium batteries. NiCads have a pronounced memory effect but two generations on, lithium ion degradation is due to crystal growth within the batteries, there is little memory effect. In fact if there was, the advice above would make it worse.
Does anyone know the facts, or is the information from Mitsubishi's marketing department unreliable. (I know they put out something a while ago that was in fact not how the vehicle works, so I'm going to unplug my car for now, but don't know what to trust. )
"Don’t leave your PHEV plugged in longer than necessary. While you’re not driving it, aim to keep the charge at around the 30% mark and leave it unplugged."
As there is frustratingly no numeric indicators on a 2018 Outlander PHEV, it's difficult to judge 30% by eyeball. Or maybe they mean the 30% the car retains when the electric gauge is zero.
Some of the other information on this forum appears to be wrong about memory effect for lithium batteries. NiCads have a pronounced memory effect but two generations on, lithium ion degradation is due to crystal growth within the batteries, there is little memory effect. In fact if there was, the advice above would make it worse.
Does anyone know the facts, or is the information from Mitsubishi's marketing department unreliable. (I know they put out something a while ago that was in fact not how the vehicle works, so I'm going to unplug my car for now, but don't know what to trust. )