tycanmt
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2025
- Threads
- 2
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- 72
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- Location
- Montana, USA
- Vehicles
- 2021 Tycan 4S
- Thread starter
- #1
2021 4S : sitting in the garage for 3 weeks with main battery at 50% SoC.
Tonight I receive two phone calls (which I ignore because...telemarketers) that turn out to be from Porsche (actually Vodafone), saying that they think my Taycan might have been stolen or "sabotaged". We live in the middle of nowhere a mile up a snow covered track so if anyone stole the Taycan they're very good thieves. And of course it's sitting in the garage. But...can't unlock it. So the penny dropped: it stopped talking to the mothership which led them to believe someone had stolen it and disconnected the 12V battery. Sidebar: if they can call me when they detect it stops talking, why can't it send a "hey my 12V battery is low" message to ME yesterday!?!?!
Ok so I get on youtube and go through the resurrection process. Car is booted back up 20min later.
The section below is mainly aimed at Porsche/VAG engineers, assuming they are reading, but anyone else with some thoughts feel free to chime in.
But I'm wondering what exactly is the correct process to keep a Taycan alive longer than three weeks? Reading the doc, it implies (contrary to popular belief) that the 12V battery is absolutely not charged by the HV battery when the vehicle is parked. It says you need to charge it every 8 weeks. But then it says you need a charger that supplies 80A @ 14V. I may have such a charger, but I doubt many people have. But it also says to leave the vehicle plugged into a Level 2 charger when stored, with a 50% charge limit. Does that mean that the battery controller will charge the 12V battery even if the main battery is already charged to 50%?
This contradicts the advice to charge the 12V battery separately using the magic 80A charger. <confused> Also the doc says specifically NOT to use battery tenders, contrary to almost every single post on the internet. Right now I have it plugged in to my Level 2 charger, but how do I know when the 12V battery is fully charged?
I don't really want to just charge the HV battery to 80% because then I will need to drive the car (see above: snow) to run it back down to 50%.
For background: I do not have a dealer within 400 miles of me so I can't just roll in there and have them confuse me further then sell me a new 12V battery for $2000.
Tonight I receive two phone calls (which I ignore because...telemarketers) that turn out to be from Porsche (actually Vodafone), saying that they think my Taycan might have been stolen or "sabotaged". We live in the middle of nowhere a mile up a snow covered track so if anyone stole the Taycan they're very good thieves. And of course it's sitting in the garage. But...can't unlock it. So the penny dropped: it stopped talking to the mothership which led them to believe someone had stolen it and disconnected the 12V battery. Sidebar: if they can call me when they detect it stops talking, why can't it send a "hey my 12V battery is low" message to ME yesterday!?!?!
Ok so I get on youtube and go through the resurrection process. Car is booted back up 20min later.
The section below is mainly aimed at Porsche/VAG engineers, assuming they are reading, but anyone else with some thoughts feel free to chime in.
But I'm wondering what exactly is the correct process to keep a Taycan alive longer than three weeks? Reading the doc, it implies (contrary to popular belief) that the 12V battery is absolutely not charged by the HV battery when the vehicle is parked. It says you need to charge it every 8 weeks. But then it says you need a charger that supplies 80A @ 14V. I may have such a charger, but I doubt many people have. But it also says to leave the vehicle plugged into a Level 2 charger when stored, with a 50% charge limit. Does that mean that the battery controller will charge the 12V battery even if the main battery is already charged to 50%?
This contradicts the advice to charge the 12V battery separately using the magic 80A charger. <confused> Also the doc says specifically NOT to use battery tenders, contrary to almost every single post on the internet. Right now I have it plugged in to my Level 2 charger, but how do I know when the 12V battery is fully charged?
I don't really want to just charge the HV battery to 80% because then I will need to drive the car (see above: snow) to run it back down to 50%.
For background: I do not have a dealer within 400 miles of me so I can't just roll in there and have them confuse me further then sell me a new 12V battery for $2000.
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