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12 Volt Battery Compendium

History and Use

The earliest Tesla roadsters didn’t include a 12v battery but used a portion of the main lithium-ion pack to supply 12v for accessories and lights.  This was not ideal, and in 2010 Tesla switched to a separate 12V battery in the Roadster 2.0. All Tesla vehicles since that time also include a separate 12v battery.

Roadster battery
2010 Roadster 2.0 12v Battery Location

The reason for a separate 12v battery is to power critical systems in the event of a high-voltage battery disconnect. This keeps key systems operational such as emergency blinkers, airbags, seatbelt pre-tensioners, brake booster, and a host of other systems. The high-voltage battery might be disconnected due to several rare events – such as a high-impact crash, internal main battery pack problems such as some types of cell failures, a contactor failure, and a few other unlikely situations.

Many parts of the Tesla vehicles today are powered by the 12v system, including:

  • All lights, such as headlights, turn lights, fog lights, taillights, backup lights, license plate, and interior lights
  • LCD Display –Instrument Cluster (S/X) and the main display
  • The MCU and many modules with processors
  • Non-traction motors, such as windows, liftgate (S/X), wipers, washer fluid, seat motors, side mirror adjusts, sunroof (if equipped) charge port door, steering assist, fans, coolant valves, and coolant pumps
  • The audio system including tuners, antenna amplifiers, and audio amplifiers
  • Safety systems, such as airbags, brake booster, and seat belt per-tensioners
  • Autopilot systems including cameras, sensors, and radar (if equipped)
  • Heated items, if equipped such as seats, steering wheel, washer nozzle, side mirrors, rear defrost, and camera heaters.
  • Other items like the alarm, mirror dimmers, USB ports, horn, HomeLink, air suspension (if equipped), and various latches (doors, trunk, frunk, glovebox)
  • High-voltage battery pack contactors

Only a few items are directly powered by the high-voltage battery pack. This includes the traction motor(s), the a/c heat pump, and the DC to DC converter for 12v power and charging the 12v battery.

Tesla ran into a major snag with the introduction of the Model S in 2012.  The 12v battery was sourced from an American firm, who unbeknownst to Tesla, outsourced the battery to China, and the Chinese company outsourced it to Vietnam! The quality was sub-standard and rarely lasted more than a year. Tesla switched vendors in 2013 and replaced all the marginal batteries in early build cars with a far more reliable battery under warranty.

Battery Types

The latest 2022 Model S/X/3/Y use a small Lithium-Ion battery pack, designed for supporting a wide temperature range and long life.  This CATL supplied battery pack includes 4 prismatic NMC 3.7v cells, charging and monitoring electronics, and a LIN bus connection to communicate with the vehicle.  This pack is 6.9 Ah, with 99 Wh of energy, and typically outputs about 15.7v when fully charged.

12v lithium-ion battery

The older Model S uses a 33 or 35 Ah sealed AGM (Absorbed Glass Mat) deep-cycle lead-acid battery. One early supplier for the pre-refresh Model S was the C&D Technologies DCS-33IT, now discontinued.  For these older cars, Tesla now recommends the C&D DCS33-UNCR.  For the refreshed Model S (2016-2020), Tesla now uses the Hankook AtlasBX U1 a 35 Ah AGM battery.

C & D Battery

The Model X uses a 40 Ah AGM battery. The primary battery used is the Hankook AtlasBX with the model 60B19RS.

The Model 3 and Model Y uses a 45 Ah,  Flooded Battery. One supplier is the Hankook AtlasBX with the model 85B24LS that was designed specifically for Tesla EVs.

Model 3 Atlasbx battery

AGM and Flooded batteries provide more power for size and weight than traditional lead-acid batteries. Deep cycle versions, like those used in Tesla vehicles, are designed to be repetitively charged and discharged. If you were to use a typical lead-acid battery in this application, it may only last a few months! 

Battery Longevity

In the 2022+ Model 3/Y and Feb-2021+ Model S/X, the 12V lithium-ion battery should last 10-15 years. The rest of this section deals with vehicles with the  non-lithium battery, which lasts about 3-4 years for most owners. Paradoxically, if you put a few miles on the car, it may last as little as 1-2 years. The difference is how many discharge/charge cycles the battery goes through and how deeply the battery is discharged. When driving cars, the DC-DC converter powers the 12v system, and fewer charge cycles occur. A car left sitting, will need more charge cycles, and will age the 12v battery faster.  Some Model S owners still have the original battery after 4 years and over 170,000 miles of use!  

AGM life cycle

Your Tesla maintains power for some key computer systems all the time, so you can disarm the alarm, unlock the car with your FOB or phone, and when you enter the car, everything starts up without any pause. In addition, the cellular connection for remote access needs power. All these systems require power even when the car is not in use. This is often called the car’s vampire drain. Tesla, via software, has significantly reduced the vampire drain of all cars over the years, but it can’t be eliminated.

The newest cars use modules that take a bit less power when the car is parked, so that helps. Even the oldest cars should easily get 2-3 years of 12v battery life, although there can be rare exceptions. Just like ICE cars, sometimes the battery fails prematurely.

What is Different About How Tesla Uses the Battery?

Often an ICE car goes 3 to 5 years before replacement.  The way the 12v battery is used in ICE cars is quite different than that used in an EV. When the motor is running, normally the alternator powers all the 12v items in the car and charges the battery. The primary use of the 12v ICE battery is to start the car, which takes 2-3 seconds with very high currents.  After starting the car, the battery is not really used. When the car is off, very little power is used, otherwise the battery would die in short order.

A few BMW ICE models, and perhaps other makers, use a far larger battery and intermittently use the alternator. This reduces gas use with less alternator drag on the motor. The downside is the far more charge/discharge cycles mean the battery is replaced about once a year, a $700 hit in the BMW!

Improving Longevity (pre-Lithium-Ion 12v)

On older cars, you can improve the battery longevity by turning off various items that cause vampire drain when the car is not in use.  This includes Sentry Mode, special climate modes, and others.  See our detailed article on Vampire Drain for more details.

For most owners, the battery replacement cost is a negligible part of the ownership costs. Having advanced features like Sentry mode may be worth more to you. than a slightly shorter 12v battery life.

Charging the 12v Battery

The 12v battery is always charged via a DC-DC converter from the main battery pack. This takes the pack’s high voltage and converts it to low voltage to charge the 12v battery. It’s a bit more complex, as the voltage to charge the AGM battery is tightly regulated and is compensated due to temperature.  The latest Lithium-Ion 12v battery has charging circuitry inside the battery.

Supercharging

Even when you are charging the car, only the main pack is connected to external power.  While quite rare, if the DC-DC converter fails, the 12v battery can no longer be charged.

The Gen 2 DC-DC converter in the refreshed Model S (2016-2020) accepts 220 to 430 VDC at 15 amps and outputs 9 to 16 VDC. When outputting 12 VDC, it can deliver about 200 amps. 

DC-DC inverter (Model S, Gen 2)

The Model 3/Y and the S/X manufactured after Feburary-2021 integrate the charger and the DC-DC converter into a single package, the PCS (Power Conversion System).

Battery Failure Warning

Tesla included additional hardware in the battery to help detect when the battery is nearing its end of life. Should the battery get within 3-4 weeks of the end, Tesla warns you with a clear message that the 12v battery needs replacement. This is dramatically better than most ICE cars, where the battery dies without much if any, warning.

Warning message

Part of the reason ICE car batteries often die unexpectedly is the type of battery used. A standard lead-acid battery will degrade over time, but the lead sheds during use and can short out plates at some point, causing immediate cell death. The batteries Tesla uses should never fail this way.

Battery Locations

In all Tesla, the 12v battery is located under the hood. Over the years and models, it has moved around somewhat. The classic Model S RWD had the battery deep on the passenger side in front of the firewall. This location is tricky to get access too, but a trained Tesla tech can often replace this battery in less than 20 minutes. For someone not familiar with the process, it will take quite a bit longer.

Starting with the AWD Model S, the battery was relocated to be easier to access and replace – on par with most ICE cars. The location remains about the same for the S, X, 3, and Y today. There are several easy to remove plastic panels to gain access to the battery. No tools are required to gain access.

Battery Location

What Kills a Battery?

Over time the ability to charge and discharge effectively slows due to sulfation. Lead sulfate accumulates on the negative and positive parts within the battery during discharge. Over many charge/discharge cycles this process reduces the amount of energy that can be stored and extracted.  At some point, the battery is considered bad, even though it continues to work at some level. With proper instrumentation, such as done in the Tesla, a degraded battery can be detected well before the useful end of life.

Fully discharging a non Lithium-Ion battery is bad, but not normally fatal. Fully discharging the battery does reduce the battery’s longevity. Normally this never occurs in a Tesla, but if a vehicle is not connected to a charger, and the main battery is drained to 0% SOC (which has a hidden remaining charge), the 12v battery will stop being charged to protect the main battery. Within a few days, the 12v battery will be drained.

Dead battery

One rare failure mode is open contact between two cells.  This is usually caused by improper manufacture of the battery or an external short.  The battery voltage goes from normal to zero as soon as the open occurs, usually early in the life of the battery.

Heat is also bad for an battery, but the heat conditions encountered in a Tesla are fine. Only Lead-acid batteries are suitable in an ICE engine compartment that exceed the maximum charging temperature of 140°F (60°C).

Lithium-Iron Phosphate 12v Battery Option for Older Cars

These batteries use different chemistry that is promoted as offering superior life over the standard AGM battery. There are quite a few downsides that we feel should be considered before switching from an AGM battery to an Lithium-Iron Phosphate battery.

Downsides:

  • Dramatically higher cost – typically 5x over the battery sold by Tesla
  • Poor noise filtering, especially when the 12v battery is fully charged – this can even damage the PCS
  • No charging coordination with the vehicle
  • The 12v battery may be damaged if charged in freezing weather
  • You may get strange alerts like “Battery disconnected” when the 12v battery is fully charged

Here are several manufacturers:

  • Ohmmu makes a 12v battery replacement specifically for Teslas. They include a 4-year warranty.
  • LithiumMoto makes a 12v battery replacement specifically for Teslas. They include a 4-year warranty.

Using Tesla's Lithium 16v Battery in Older Cars

Using a 16v battery in older cars is not viable.  The new 16v Lithium-Ion battery works with a dramatically re-engineered vehicle.  New vehicles include a new PCS that is designed to provide most of the power most of the time, unlike older vehicles.  In addition, the 16v battery has a built in BMS (Battery Management System) that communicates with the vehicle.  This communication channel and related system software doesn’t exist in cars designed with the AGM battery. 

The power available with the 16v battery, 6.9Ah, is only about 20% of the capacity that an older vehicle expects with an AGM battery.  So don’t even try to attempt such a change. You will quickly end up with a dead battery!

It’s also unclear all of the many modules throughout the car will handle the higher voltages.  This is less likely of an issue, as most modules are designed for high voltage spikes, but it is possible it could damage some modules. LED modules could also be stressed and die over time using higher voltages.