Phantom drain question




This brings me to an uncomfortable thought, which @ScottC2 has already raised, that it could be an issue internal to the HV battery. Specifically, a cell that is failing or not staying up to pack voltage, that the BMS is trying to balance over and over. In addition to the annoyance of losing a lot of charge, it raises significant safety concerns. There were two EQE fires, after all, and it's entirely possible this is a reason for it. Perhaps the affected cell(s) aren't really that below spec, but losing 1.5 kWh in a balancing attempt every day is far too much. I'm going to escalate this now with my dealership, and will bring them the information showing them that the 12V battery is totally fine and not part of the equation. Hopefully it's just something silly that's not shutting off and is currently sapping power from the HV battery, but I am very concerned it's loss due to balancing, which isn't a good place to be in. I'll update once I've had a chance to talk to the shop foreman, who is 100% on the ball here in Louisville.




I think performing the last experiment you suggested, if convenient, would be worthwhile doing before bringing the car to the dealer. It will give them fewer possible excuses to throw in your face to make you go away without doing anything.




It turns out the clicking doesn't stop even when the screens are off. This corresponds perfectly to an around 60W power drain. Something is causing the brake pedal to constantly reset itself every 23 seconds. I'm going to go back to the garage, but I'm almost certain this is it.
False alarm. The pedal stops clicking after another minute or two of the car being locked. Not the braking system. Also doesn't make sense to power brakes from the HV battery, as otherwise you'd have no brakes if the contactors opened. Back to square 0.
Last edited by bytemaster0; Mar 10, 2025 at 03:09 PM.








I think performing the last experiment you suggested, if convenient, would be worthwhile doing before bringing the car to the dealer. It will give them fewer possible excuses to throw in your face to make you go away without doing anything.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
















I was very surprised because my Model S's lost that much or more every day.
I think a healthy EQ has no detectable vampire drain.




I was very surprised because my Model S's lost that much or more every day.
I think a healthy EQ has no detectable vampire drain.








The reason the battery percentage drops immediately after pushing the start button is because that's when the contactors close. Until then, MBUX has no idea what your state of charge is.
More updates from me: after the calibration run, the problem still remains at 80%. No "drain" at 51% or 17%, so this to me implies a weak cell that won't keep voltage. But after being parked 8-9 hours overnight at 80% SoC, it dropped to 79% as soon as the contactors closed. So, I'm going to pursue this vigorously with MB Service.












Either way, will still move forward with the plan of bringing it in to check for voltage imbalance later in the day one day this week. Will post back after I find out more!




The sad part about all of this is that we shouldn't have to be engineers in order to be able to operate our EQ cars :-(
I guess it's just one of the many costs of being an early adopter.
My conclusions having had nearly 2 years of ownership is this is a bit of chicken and egg situation. This requires lots of EV sales for dealerships to invest in training service technicians and then getting goods hands on experience from problems like this. Right now all the service departments have to contact Germany to escalate any unsolvable technical issues, and that must be a bottleneck leading to delays. This will get better, but it will take time. Yes, this is the price we pay for being early adopters.




EQE uses a 90s4p battery arrangement. 90 cells in series, 4 in parallel per series step. EQE has 10 total module packs, EQS has 12. Voltage range of a lithium ion battery is 4.2V (max) to say, 3.1V, maybe 3.0 (min). Assuming a top buffer of 2.5% (might be larger in reality), that means our operating voltage range is roughly 4.17V to 3.1V, (not 4.1 to 3.1 that I had said earlier) range.
90s means that pack voltage is at maximum (removing some for the top buffer of around 2.5%) 375V or so (4.17V * 90). At 80%, we are talking a nominal pack voltage of 300V or so.
Total cell count is 360 cells, likely pouch cells. 90.6kWh (usable) means roughly 250Wh per cell (again, usable, bulk is higher).
If I'm losing 2%, and we isolate it, as an exercise, to one or more of the individual 90s4p cell packs, that means that the expected voltage differential would actually be significant - much more than 0.02V that I described earlier. In each parallel 4p cell group, if only one drops voltage, they all drop voltage. So, dividing 300V at 80% by 90 cell groups means that a 2% loss in capacity (I'm directly translating to voltage and ignoring Ah capacity, as the BMS will do the same) means a voltage drop in total of 6V over the entire pack. That's pretty significant, and leads me to believe that I may have several weak cells, not just one. So, it's likely a group of cells that are imbalanced or low, and it should show up in a printed report pretty noticeably. At least, that's my theory. We'll see tomorrow afternoon!



