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Interesting video on the Tesla battery and owner data. I wonder if the Alta battery will do as well over time?
Things that damage Li-Ion batteries:
Heat (that's why consumer electronic batteries die so quickly) Once the battery hits 40C it starts degrading. Good thermal control is critical to long life.
Time spent at 100% charge or 0% charge (accelerates calendar degradation - best to store at 50%). It is absolutely no problem to charge to 100% or run down to 0% as long as you minimize the time spent at either extreme (with time spent at 0% being worse than 100%).
Our 2012 Tesla Model S with 75k miles is down ~10% in range. Our 2010 Tesla Roadster with 64k miles is down ~16% in range. The Roadster is using older tech batteries than the S and its thermal control is not as good (struggles to keep the battery below 40C in the summer).
I call super BS on the math in the video as batteries do not degrade in a linear fashion. Further, a battery pack is only as strong as its weakest cell. If a few cells across the battery pack degrade more quickly then the capacity of the entire pack must be reduced. Once the weak cell hits the low voltage cut-off the BMS (Battery Mgmt System) shuts off the vehicle even if the other cells have capacity as overdischarging will cause even degradation. Same thing happens during charging. The weak cell will fill up more quickly and the BMS must halt charging to avoid overcharging even if the other cells still have capacity to hold more energy.
The good news is that the 18650 cells we are using have been produced for a long time. Manufacturing tolerances are very good so cells tend to be pretty even capacity-wise.