BoltGeneral Info

Why do electric vehicles have a 12V battery?

The question comes up quite often – in a car with a massive high tech electric battery, why do we need a ~50 year old design 12V battery at all? Furthermore, if the 12V battery is dead, why can the car not still start up?

There are a few reasons for this, but first let’s take a look at our needs:

How much 12V system power is potentially needed?

Headlights 100-200W
Power windows 500W (max, all 4)
Various Pumps 200W
Radiator Fan 150W
Cabin Fan 250W
Seats and Steering Wheel 150W
Rear Defroster 200W
Power Steering 600W
Power Brakes 200W
Wipers 300W (max, all 3)
Various lights 100W
Computers and displays 200W
Radio max 200W

So there’s ~3200W of potential power draw.

Where does our 12V power come from?

In the Chevy Bolt we have what is called an Accessory Power Module (APM) which runs off the High Voltage (HV) traction battery and converts directly from the HV DC to 12V DC. It can output a total of 130A at around 15.6V maximum, or about 1600W in total – only half the total possible power draw. This is what runs the 12V systems while the car is turned on, provided that the total power draw is not more than 1600W. If it is, the battery will serve to fill in the excess temporarily. This saves cost by allowing a smaller APM than the total power needs are.

This system also charges the 12V battery, and is woken up every few hours when the car is plugged in, and every few days otherwise to keep the 12V battery charged.

Incidentally if you wish to run an inverter off of your car, you’ll want a pure sine wave inverter that can sustain about 2000W maximum continuous, and try not to draw about 1400W of AC power out of it on average. You’ll need to have the car on all the time as well to keep it fully powered.

By why do this at all?

Well all existing components that are available to automakers already run off of 12V. Although there are some 24V and 48V systems available, they are not nearly as cheap and prevalent. It’s simply cheaper to build a car with all of the other components being 12V.

So why does a dead 12V battery prevent us from starting the car?

When the car is off, the high voltage (HV) battery is disconnected internally so that there is no high voltage present anywhere else in the car. There are a myriad of checks that are done to ensure that the system is safe before activating the HV battery. Since the HV battery isn’t available at the time, it cannot be used as a power source to run the checks.

Now some systems could be designed to use a tiny amount of power directly from cells internally, or perhaps from a small external lithium ion battery (very little power is needed to run the checks). But that adds complexity, and since we need a 12V system anyway, it’s simply cheaper and easier to stick with a tried and true system of maintaining 12V power while the car is off.

Why does the 12V battery die?

Well, when the car isn’t plugged in, for some reason the car only checks the 12V battery every few days. If something is draining the battery, or if the battery is weak for some reason, it can die in between checks.

Why does it only check every few days?

So you need to understand how difficult a task it is to check the 12V battery voltage. It’s basically an act of Congress. A little robot electron swarm has to shimmy through the wires (John McClain style) all the way from the battery control module to the 12V battery. If you think of how big an electron is, that’s the equivalent of crawling on your hands and knees across the Atlantic ocean!

So you can understand why they only check the 12V battery voltage every 3 days.

I mean it’s not like it’s a critical system that is required to power on the car or anything!

7 thoughts on “Why do electric vehicles have a 12V battery?

  • You forgot the biggest reason lead acid is used: cold weather performance.

    At 0F/-17C which is reasonable for EV operation, you need energy available to power up the 12V Computer and systems to be able to Operate the HV drivetrain.

    Lithium Ion cannot provide enough energy at cold temps so they still use lead acid.

    Reply
  • Dr L D Lissiak

    Hi,
    Although I understand your total power requirement as being a max value, realistically, for example a car should not be able to have the headlight ability to be on at start up, I neve do Since i realize that that does exactly as you stated, however not many of us switch the headlights on before an engine start up saving saving 100 to 200 w
    Power steering another………………………………..600w
    Power windows……………………………………………500w
    Radiator fan only after engine warmed up……150w
    Radio……………………………………………………………..? W
    Well you get the idea……..

    Reply
  • Interesting and useful article thanks but may I ask two follow-up questions please. If I know I’m going to have a long period of not driving my EV (pandemic lockdown, spell in hospital, long holiday etc.) what is my best way to avoid a flat 12V? Is it as simple as keeping my EV plugged in at home and the car’s sensors and the APM will keep the 12V topped up? Secondly, if the worst has happened and the 12V on my EV is flat, can I safely jump start from another 12V battery (which is in either an ICE, an EV, or free-standing)?

    Reply
    • Less than a month I wouldn’t worry about it – leave your car plugged in. More than a month or two, drive to 30-40% and then park the car and disconnect the 12V from the -ve terminal. You can jump from another car but it’s harsh on the battery to do that.

      Reply
  • My first thought is why would electric cars not use LED headlights? This would greatly reduce the required amperage. Secondly, 200 watts for headlights? If there are four lights in the headlights systems that would be 4.2 amps per light. Seems excessive.

    Reply
    • Yeah the headlights are HID … I have no idea why they didn’t use LED. Cost?

      What’s even worse is that HID lights have highbeams on ALL THE TIME, and block half of the light (wasting it entirely) when you don’t have the high beams on. Idiotic.

      Reply

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