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> For batteries, 80% of the initial capacity is referred to as the point The publication cites sources from 15 years ago for this "fact" [0]. That's ancient history in the context of EVs (even before the first reliable mass production EV - Tesla's Model S - was initially released). As a practical matter, the article points out that most EV manufacturers (Tesla included) warranty their batteries for at least 70% capacity at timespans near a decade, which would bankrupt them all if EV batteries just up and died at 80%. 0)
[35] O. Erdinc, B. Vural, and M. Uzunoglu, ‘‘A dynamic lithium-ion battery
model considering the effects of temperature and capacity fading,’’ in Proc.
Int. Conf. Clean Electr. Power, Jun. 2009, pp. 383–386. [36] K. Smith, T. Markel, G.-H. Kim, and A. Pesaran, ‘‘Design of electric drive
vehicle batteries for long life and low cost,’’ in Proc. Accelerated Stress
Test. Rel. (ASTR), IEE Workshop, 2010, pp. 6–8. |
To the practical matter - yes, EV manufacturers are very careful with warranty periods. Anecdotally, an acquaintance had a Tesla for 8 years. 6 months after the 8-year battery warranty expired the battery ceased working. The details were a little unclear (it was explained in broken English/Norwegian). That said, anecdata carries little weight. What we need is more peer-reviewed research to update our understanding of battery longevity. Until we have that we need to rely on the existing published knowledge... otherwise anyone can assert anything and we learn nothing.
[1]: https://web.archive.org/web/20250530000446/https://afdc.ener...