2048Megabytes
Active member
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2014
- Messages
- 31
Has anyone heard what the replacement cost of the 30 kilowatt battery is in the 2016 Nissan Leaf? Is it the same $6,000 as the 2015 Nissan Leaf 24 kilowatt batteries?
2048Megabytes said:Has anyone heard what the replacement cost of the 30 kilowatt battery is in the 2016 Nissan Leaf? Is it the same $6,000 as the 2015 Nissan Leaf 24 kilowatt batteries?
No, we don't know the price yet.2048Megabytes said:Has anyone heard what the replacement cost of the 30 kilowatt battery is in the 2016 Nissan Leaf? Is it the same $6,000 as the 2015 Nissan Leaf 24 kilowatt batteries?
Actually, IIRC, the capacity warranty on the 30kwh Leafs is 8yr/100k!forummm said:Given that it's under warranty for 5/60k, hopefully you won't have to find out what a replacement costs for quite some time. But I would anticipate that the pricing for one today would be similar on a $/kWh basis as the 24kWh. Although, but the time you actually need to buy one, I would expect that price to come down by a lot. Maybe even 50% or more.
2048Megabytes said:So is the new guarantee on the 2016 Nissan Leaf lithium ion battery to not go below 70% capacity for up to 8 years or 100,000 miles?
On another subject I am hoping the next year 2017 Nissan Leaf battery is increased to 36 kilowatts per hour capacity for a range of around 103 to 125 miles on a single charge.
2048Megabytes said:On another subject I am hoping the next year 2017 Nissan Leaf battery is increased to 36 kilowatts per hour capacity.
No. For 2016 Leafs per the warranty booklet:2048Megabytes said:So is the new guarantee on the 2016 Nissan Leaf lithium ion battery to not go below 70% capacity for up to 8 years or 100,000 miles?
The '16 SV and SL have 30 kWh batteries while the S still has 24 kWh. You can download a copy at https://owners.nissanusa.com/nowners/navigation/manualsGuide.In addition to the lithium-ion Battery Coverage for
defects in materials or workmanship, the lithiumion
battery is also warranted against capacity loss
below nine bars of capacity as shown on the
vehicle’s battery capacity level gauge for a period
of 60 months or 60,000 miles, for vehicles
equipped with the 24 kWh battery or 96 months or
100,000 miles for vehicles equipped with the 30
kWh battery, whichever comes first.
No! It is NOT kilowatts per hour. It is merely kilowatt hours or kilowatt-hours. See https://solarpowerrocks.com/solar-technology/what-the-hell-is-the-difference-between-a-kilowatt-kw-and-a-kilowatt-hour-kwh/ or search http://www.energylens.com/articles/kw-and-kwh for per hour. Notice the usages above don't involve slashes (/ === per).2048Megabytes said:On another subject I am hoping the next year 2017 Nissan Leaf battery is increased to 36 kilowatts per hour capacity for a range of around 103 to 125 miles on a single charge.
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