Battery Losing Range at Low SOC

My 2017 chevy Bolt does a better job
Cool. Enjoy it in good health.

My 2022 Air DE tracks the battery percentage just fine. At low SOC, any vehicle, including your Bolt, is estimating. Your Bolt just gives you a larger bottom buffer because they don't want you going to some chevy forum and complaining about the fact that an estimate is an estimate. :)

A battery's open-circuit voltage (OCV), which is often used to estimate SOC, is less reliable at low voltages. Additionally, the battery's discharge rate can change significantly as it approaches a "dead" state, making it difficult to predict remaining capacity. OCV is a measure of the voltage a battery has when no current is flowing. Another method for estimating SOC, coulomb counting (measuring the amount of charge flowing in and out), can also be affected by factors like self-discharge and cell imbalances, making it less reliable at low levels.

Basically, Lucid can either lie to you (like Chevy does), or admit that estimating at low SOCs is very difficult, and impossible to do accurately, due to, well, physics. Lucid chose to give you access to all (or most) of the battery, rather than artificially telling you you have less range than you actually do, but the caveat of this is that the real-time estimation means it may get it wrong.

The solution to all this is don't run your car to zero, because how much charge you have left on the way to zero is a moving target, in every single EV on the planet.
 
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I went from 5% to 1% overnight after a 7.5 hour drive. Was the conclusion from this thread that it should be brought up to customer service?

Considering it myself since this is the first time even at very low states of charge this has occurred.
 
I went from 5% to 1% overnight after a 7.5 hour drive. Was the conclusion from this thread that it should be brought up to customer service?

Considering it myself since this is the first time even at very low states of charge this has occurred.
It’s worth having service check battery diagnostics to make sure nothing is wrong. They can check that quickly.

If diagnostics show the battery is fine, this is likely due to the fact that low SOC estimations are immensely difficult to make accurately.
 
I went from 5% to 1% overnight after a 7.5 hour drive. Was the conclusion from this thread that it should be brought up to customer service?

Considering it myself since this is the first time even at very low states of charge this has occurred.
SOC estimation error accumulate as you drive and recharge. 7.5 hours is not that long of a drive but it depends on how you were driving and how many times you had to recharge. AS Borski says, ask service to take a look.

The SOC estimate is only accurate when the battery has been resting for several hours with no load and a constant temperature. In this situation, the SOC is determined by voltage and temperature. While very accurate, its still an estimate becasue the voltage and temperature will vary from cell to cell due to differences each cell's capacity and temperature will vary based on where in the module it is located. While driving, the battery is not a rest so the temperature corrected voltage is not very accurate. To overcome this, the BMS system tries to count Coulombs (current) into and out of the battery. This measurement has errors and those errors accumulate over time until the battery rests overnight. Repeated fast acceleration followed by high regeneration along with DC fast charging can increase the SOC error. My guess is that the 1% SOC in the morning was accurate and the 4% error accumulated over the 7.5 hr drive.
 
It is mind blowing to me that someone would run the car down so low so often. I'm not criticizing, it is your car to do what you want with it. But I would never run my ICE car down to the last 32oz of gas and expect an accurate reading from my "distance remaining" instrumentation. JMHO YMMV.
 
yea.... I understand @borski. I appreciate the detailed explanation.

Does losing 20 miles in 30 minutes when car is at idle constitute normal function?
 
It is mind blowing to me that someone would run the car down so low so often. I'm not criticizing, it is your car to do what you want with it. But I would never run my ICE car down to the last 32oz of gas and expect an accurate reading from my "distance remaining" instrumentation. JMHO YMMV.
No, not often. But when I get on a long drive, there are circumstances when I'd rather go eat than sit at another charger for 30-45 minutes.

This is when this happens. Getting back in my car with 11 miles to go, 35 miles stated range, and getting back in my car with 7 miles left. Unacceptable. Has also happened as picture show from going to get groceries and coming back outside to go charge and wallah 15 miles evaportate in 3.5 hours. That's approx 4kwh that just disappeared
 
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It’s worth having service check battery diagnostics to make sure nothing is wrong. They can check that quickly.

If diagnostics show the battery is fine, this is likely due to the fact that low SOC estimations are immensely difficult to make accurately.
Lucid looked at the cell balancing and determined either BMS/battery is faulty, so. Awaiting what steps come next.



You all can sit down now
 
Lucid looked at the cell balancing and determined either BMS/battery is faulty, so. Awaiting what steps come next.
Makes sense. Hope they fix it quickly for you.
 
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