TLDR: the procedure starts on post nr 2
Hello everyone!
I’ve had some battery degradation on my phev lately. The battery state of health stayed religiously over 72% until the end of the battery warranty, but then started to go down faster and faster. Last week it went down by 1.5Ah overnight, down to 64.8%, so I decided it was time to do a DBCAM. I have a Thinkcar OBD scanner and discovered recently that it can actually do a DBCAM, so I thought I’d have a try and share my results. I was successful! I got my yellow card in PHEVWatchdog:
I gained back 7%, which is really not bad, but I’m a bit disappointed the battery is in this state now. I thought I took better care of it, but 7% is still better than nothing.
If you want to do it yourself, first you need to determine if your OBD device (or the one you want to buy) can actually do it. On the Thinkcar website they have a coverage enquiry page. Select “Online retailers” and your product, then choose Mitsubishi in the list. Then in the selection boxes, find “Outlander-PHEV” in the first one, the model year in the second one, BMU in the third one, and “Special Function” in the fourth one. What we are looking for in the list is “Battery Auto Capacity Measured”. If you see it, then you should be able to do the procedure with the selected OBD tool.
I used the Mitsubishi service bulletins MSB-17EXL54-501 and MSB-14EXML00_54-001, finding the correspondance with the options available in the Thinkdiag app.
There are still two points I’m not sure about, and I’d appreciate if anyone has some answers:
Hello everyone!
I’ve had some battery degradation on my phev lately. The battery state of health stayed religiously over 72% until the end of the battery warranty, but then started to go down faster and faster. Last week it went down by 1.5Ah overnight, down to 64.8%, so I decided it was time to do a DBCAM. I have a Thinkcar OBD scanner and discovered recently that it can actually do a DBCAM, so I thought I’d have a try and share my results. I was successful! I got my yellow card in PHEVWatchdog:
I gained back 7%, which is really not bad, but I’m a bit disappointed the battery is in this state now. I thought I took better care of it, but 7% is still better than nothing.
If you want to do it yourself, first you need to determine if your OBD device (or the one you want to buy) can actually do it. On the Thinkcar website they have a coverage enquiry page. Select “Online retailers” and your product, then choose Mitsubishi in the list. Then in the selection boxes, find “Outlander-PHEV” in the first one, the model year in the second one, BMU in the third one, and “Special Function” in the fourth one. What we are looking for in the list is “Battery Auto Capacity Measured”. If you see it, then you should be able to do the procedure with the selected OBD tool.
I used the Mitsubishi service bulletins MSB-17EXL54-501 and MSB-14EXML00_54-001, finding the correspondance with the options available in the Thinkdiag app.
There are still two points I’m not sure about, and I’d appreciate if anyone has some answers:
- The service bulletins talk about the electric power switch. When they say to turn the electric power switch on, do they mean to turn the high voltage on, and therefore to put the car in ready mode? This is what I assumed here
- I didn’t find the procedure to write back the battery manufacture date in the BMU after a reset. I can’t find anything in the Thinkdiag app either
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