I think phone proximity have something to do with it. I noticed that when I was in the EU for three weeks, the car drained 1% a day. When I’m home, it drains about 4% a day. The key fob was in the same place, so that wasn’t a factor.
It’s hard to have it both ways: You want the car to wake up when you approach it with your phone but you don’t want it to wake up and consume battery power. If only the Lucid had software sophisticated enough to know what I was thinking. I’m sure that’ll be in the next OTA.![]()
My fob is clearly far enough away
It would be nice to have it both ways. Other companies have figured it out. It’s almost certainly a software and battery management issue. It should be fixed in the future.
If it’s not then perhaps Lucid made a deal with the devil to get their range. That battery pack has to stay cool somehow.
Idle batteries heat up? AC can be turned off, i.e. there are these pesky things called light switches.
Actually, all I want is for it to keep it's range when it's plugged in. I have a Tesla Model S #895 from 2012 and that's exactly what it does.
ditto...
Funny(maybe not so funny) is that there is less drain unplugged than plugged in. Also important to keep the keys away and phones away. Like we calculated in another thread, you can get 0.6% drain a day under ideal conditions (garaged weather less than 80 higher than 60).
I have not set up my phone as a mobile key, have drain
How many of you guys having issues with vampire drain are using the mobile key? I'd suggest using the fob exclusively for a week and see the difference.
Having drain without