JeffRay said:
Turp, glad we could help.
BC, never knew that. Sounds different than setting the climate control on remotely via the app. Will this work for me as I park overnight on the street unplugged? If it warms battery, it will use juice but presumably less than driving on a cold battery, correct?
Update: I looked this morning and it seems to be related to the climate control as it was set for same time, i.e. 7:15 a.m. departure. Also, do I need to push the button in control area to activate, the one that looks like heat emanating from a wave?
It's different from setting the climate control remotely, yes.
I suspect that this is one aspect of the difference in popular approach to internet security between here and the M-B product team "there."
You set the preconditioning departure time via the steering wheel buttons. I'm going by memory here, but here is what I think that I do:
Turn key to on
Use the left hand arrow buttons to select the Settings menu
Top entry in the Settings menu is E Cell - choose that
Top entry in the E Cell menu is Departure time "A," or which there are A, B, and C, and it will prompt you with "hit OK to change time."
hit OK to start setting the time for Departure time "A," which will be saved in memory in case you use that time again.
The departure time will be displayed when you check the app, I believe under charge profile, but you cannot edit the time from the app.
This will use some charge, yes, for example yesterday it consumed the charge from 62% down to 55%, but the total process of warming the battery and driving seems to be less impactful to remaining charge when performed sequentially instead of concurrently. From what I understand, through talking with owners of other brands of EVs, some cars simply delay the charging cycle in order to complete charging at your departure time, using only the warming that occurs as a result of the charging process. The fluid-regulated battery temperature control system is a more technologically sophisticated way to manage this. I've been trying to master a process of using both a delayed charge time and the preconditioning in order to result in a fully-charged and fully-preconditioned car at minimal draw through the charge port. That's just entertainment. The more important discovery for us was that the preconditioning was very important to cold temperature range.