So count me in for the 12 volt discharged battery problem

erikatl

Novice Member
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Jun 2, 2023
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Location
Sollentuna, Sweden
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MG4
I have been an almost perfectly happy MG4 owner since December 2022. A wonderful car. Returning from a two week flight to the Mediterranean, the 12 volt battery was dead and the car was towed away to our service centre. No cost for the towing (because of having a 3 year service agreement), but I was charged for fault search and a replacement 12 volt battery, a total of 2861 SEK (£222). So much for the promised 7 year warranty I guess...
/Still a happy MG4 owner
 
Well, I guessed so as well. What I would like to have known is the fact that you can't leave the car for two weeks unattended. No ICE car would need that kind of attention... Still learning...
 
Well, I guessed so as well. What I would like to have known is the fact that you can't leave the car for two weeks unattended. No ICE car would need that kind of attention... Still learning...
Any modern ICE car with the same tech would probably be the same with a 3 year old 12v on it.
 
4 years with my mg5, just recently came back after 15 days away, it started up fine.

I did buy a battery jump booster just in case, it's never been used so far.

Meanwhile when I watch youtube and there are exotic cars in it, they can't go a week without a trickle charger plugged in.
 
EV's and hybrids have very low capacity 12v batteries, they don't hold a charge for long if there's any sort of parasitic drain. All they're intended for is suppling current to monitoring/unlocking systems and starting up the electrical systems then the cars use the traction battery to run things. ICE's have much larger batteries to support the starter motor. I had this same problem with my Prius many moons ago. If I didn't use it for a couple of weeks I'd have a totally flat 12v battery.
Having said that, the MG should be able to connect the traction battery in order to maintain a charge on the 12v battery. There's obviously a limit to how long that can continue - I don't know what SoC the MG stops trying to charge the 12v battery.
Personally I'd aim to store the car with at least 50-80% SoC to give it as much time as possible. Too little and it won't keep charging the 12v battery for long.
 
EV's and hybrids have very low capacity 12v batteries, they don't hold a charge for long if there's any sort of parasitic drain. All they're intended for is suppling current to monitoring/unlocking systems and starting up the electrical systems then the cars use the traction battery to run things. ICE's have much larger batteries to support the starter motor. I had this same problem with my Prius many moons ago. If I didn't use it for a couple of weeks I'd have a totally flat 12v battery.
Having said that, the MG should be able to connect the traction battery in order to maintain a charge on the 12v battery. There's obviously a limit to how long that can continue - I don't know what SoC the MG stops trying to charge the 12v battery.
Personally I'd aim to store the car with at least 50-80% SoC to give it as much time as possible. Too little and it won't keep charging the 12v battery for long.
I forgot to say that I left the car with 54% SoC in the main battery. I assumed that the "system" would see to keeping the 12 V battery at a reasonable charge. I was obviously wrong there...
 

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