OrientExpress
Well-known member
LeftieBiker said:This isn't heat. It's just you misrepresenting the truth, which is that a lot of people are less than happy with Nissan's battery packs and, especially, with their lack of active thermal management. If you can't even bring yourself to admit that much, your credibility is going to be on its last leg.
Actually this pathetic ranting just goes to show how far off of the mark this whole thermal management discussion is. Technology does not stand still, and the reality of the situation is that the LEAF with passive thermal management have been and are the best selling BEVs in the world today. There are more LEAFs in the world by a factor of two than the assumed best seller the Model 3, and worldwide the LEAF continues to sell more than enough vehicles to maintain that lead.
The main objection to the LEAF today is that its quick charging is perceived to be slow, but on closer examination it turns out that that slowness isn't all that slow, and in a typical worst-case daily multi-charge scenario (which is three quick charges) at most the charging is only 17 minutes slower than if all of the quick charges were completed at the charge rate of the first charge of the day.
Notice that the whole degradation issue has completely collapsed? Sure it was an issue with the early batteries, but that was simply part of the learning curve with the first of a completely new technology. But the learning from those early issues has resulted in stronger, more powerful, more resilient and more durable batteries. Sure there are always going to be edge cases, but in looking at the bigger picture, there are remedies in place that address and mitigate those edge cases.
Things improve over time, and it's time to admit that. Intelligent people don't get insulted when they get called out, they learn and update their knowledge of the subject.
That's what's the facts are, like it or not.
Here is a perfect example of how old information doesn't match up with the present:
Different issues now, but the conversation could very well turn back to capacity loss in hot climates, unless these new batteries are much more heat tolerant despite no active thermal management.
To answer this, yes, today's LEAF batteries are radically different from those in cars sold from 2011 to 2017. They have a different design, different chemistry, different architecture, and are much more powerful, and are able to work reliably in a much wider range of temperatures.