None that I've noticed. Just seems to be a quirk of the battery design. If there are multiple batteries with the same quirk, I'd chalk it up to a BMS design flaw.
I haven't noticed any problems. As the charge drops the gap get narrower so it doesn't seem to affect range. I have driven the car down to as low as 5% indicated charge without any problem although I usually don't drive it with less then 25% charge just because it's a 20 mile round trip just...
I also have one cell that is low at full charge but get better as the battery discharges. It's off by 70-75mv at full charge but by the time I get down to 30% charge the difference is only 25-30mv. It's been this way for the entire time I've owned the car even when it was brand new. Nothing...
Solid state batteries have been promised for years now. Until I actually see one in a production vehicle, it's just vaporware and FUD. If I had a dollar for every battery "breakthrough" I've read about, I'd be rich by now. Most of those breakthroughs either don't scale well or are too...
PG&E TOU rates for charging are higher than you think. The lowest rate is $.34/KWH. Assuming a 35KWH charge the cost is $11.90, for a 50KWH charge it's $17.00. Still cheaper than filling the Prius but not by much ($.10/mi vs $.12/mi). You need PV and batteries to really save money.
Even at $.54/KWH an Aptera would cost about half as much to operate as a Prius plus you get free charging if you can park it in the sun. Much lower maintenance costs (no oil changes or tune ups) as well. Aptera appears to priced similarly to most hybrids. Since Aptera will use NACS...
I've got a reservation in but to be honest, it doesn't seem like that great a deal anymore. Without an EV incentive, at $33K it's a hard sell. For not much more there are a lot of EV's with 4-5 seats and a larger trunk. Of course there's a 400 mile range and solar charging to think about but...
There's a small external screen which attaches to the windshield. It has a solar cell to keep the monitor charged up. Look on Amazon for TPMS System. The monitor shows the pressure for each tire. It's an independent system so it won't sync to the dash light.
For about $30 you can get an external TPMS with pressure sensing caps that screw on to the tire stems. The batteries in the sensors do need to be replaced periodically but that's easy to do. Much cheaper than the $70 each for OEM sensors. I use them on my truck which only had a warning light...
Nope. Nissan has never denied warranty claims based on lack of inspections to the best of my knowledge. The inspection requirement seems to be a sop to the maintenance dept. Leafs require so little maintenance that the service dept. would starve.
Leaf battery materials were sourced from Japan with final assembly in the US. More to the point is that the assembly plant in Tennessee is being retooled for Ariya production. It might be possible to source enough material in the US to qualify but the Ariya uses a different style of battery...