Phantom drain question




My sedan has started a phantom drain problem, as of about a week or two ago. It has been pretty cold, and the 12V battery has shown itself to be "partially discharged" in a couple of cases. However, I'm losing 1-2% per day, which is very different than the average 0% per day I normally see. I can't find a particular rhyme or reason for it, though I do wonder if something is running/not turning off properly. It's around a 50W constant drain, based on percentage. Anyone else have the same? My dad, who passed away 2 weeks ago, has an X294 and it has sat for 2 months with just a 2% drain over that period of time. Our X294 doesn't seem to be doing this either. Thoughts?
Last edited by bytemaster0; Feb 21, 2025 at 03:06 PM.




Also, all three of our EQEs are here in Louisville and are equally cold. One of them has only seen 2% battery level drop in 2 months, my sedan 2% in one day.
Last edited by bytemaster0; Feb 21, 2025 at 07:10 PM.








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If it's not the 12v battery that's causing this, my next guess would be that one (or or more) of the Lithium cells in the HV battery has collapsed/shorted. The whole battery charge level goes down gradually because the BMS is constantly using the good cells to try to balance the failed cell that will not hold a charge.
If this is the case, then the failed cell is likely overheating and can present a fire risk.
I would prioritize getting the car to the dealer -- even leaving it there early, if you have to wait several days for an appointment.
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From the EQE Operators Manual page 65
the SmartKey if you do not use the vehicle or a SmartKey for an extended period of time.




If it's not the 12v battery that's causing this, my next guess would be that one (or or more) of the Lithium cells in the HV battery has collapsed/shorted. The whole battery charge level goes down gradually because the BMS is constantly using the good cells to try to balance the failed cell that will not hold a charge.
As for a shorted cell, the thought had crossed my mind. However, I think we have pouch cells in our battery modules, which means it's relatively simple to add per-cell monitoring to the BMS. I'm very certain that a shorted cell would immediately trigger a dire warning on the display - no way the car would try to charge it, and it'd basically brick itself. However, I'm wary enough of the two reported EQE fires that I'm more concerned about it than if it were a typical EV battery, if only because fires have occurred in the past, though extremely rare. I'm definitely not going to sit around on it.
The one timing thing that does coincide very much is when Tesla chargers started showing up. I know that the display of supercharger sites is dependent on the Mercedes Me profile option for J3400 adapter. The car itself knows nothing about the adapter. So, maybe it's constantly being updated/checking to see the list of updated sites in the background? I'm going to disable adapter support to see if that has any effect. Should be an easy test. I'm also not unconvinced that our SUV is having a bit of a drain too in these colder temps, will verify that by leaving it plugged in also. We have a Sense Solar energy monitor installed, and in addition to the MB app notifications, it's very easy to tell when the car starts and stops charging in the power history graph.
I'd agree with this, but I've had the car for almost 2 years, and this just started happening within the last month. I'll try that out as well, after I disable the J3400 adapter option.
Took it to the dealer to have it diagnosed and they told me this is normal. The service advisor called his "EQS guy" and that person said 4% drop in 12 hours is completely normal. This is my 4th EV and my first MB EV so please, those of you who've had your EQE/S for a few years, tell me just how crazy it sounds to expect that any vehicle would drain that much in such a short time when it's parked.




Took it to the dealer to have it diagnosed and they told me this is normal. The service advisor called his "EQS guy" and that person said 4% drop in 12 hours is completely normal. This is my 4th EV and my first MB EV so please, those of you who've had your EQE/S for a few years, tell me just how crazy it sounds to expect that any vehicle would drain that much in such a short time when it's parked.
While at the dealer, I also mentioned the possibility of an issue with the 12v battery and the service advisor brushed me off stating, "That car has a ton of sensors in it--if there was a problem with the battery, it would tell you."
I have disabled the NACS adapter so that Tesla chargers aren't available in MBUX and I've disable both of our keys. I'll report back in the morning.
While at the dealer, I also mentioned the possibility of an issue with the 12v battery and the service advisor brushed me off stating, "That car has a ton of sensors in it--if there was a problem with the battery, it would tell you."
I have disabled the NACS adapter so that Tesla chargers aren't available in MBUX and I've disable both of our keys. I'll report back in the morning.
After all this the SOC is still 62% and the range has gone up slightly to 212km.
So losing anything like a few percent drops overnight indicates something abnormal, whether it be with an older car or a new car. Maybe a battery calibration should be performed (leave the car overnight with SOC below 20%), and then charge to 80% to rule out a calibration problem. If the issue continues take it back to the dealer. Do not take a "this is normal" explanation for their incompetence as it is not normal.




After all this the SOC is still 62% and the range has gone up slightly to 212km.
So losing anything like a few percent drops overnight indicates something abnormal, whether it be with an older car or a new car. Maybe a battery calibration should be performed (leave the car overnight with SOC below 20%), and then charge to 80% to rule out a calibration problem. If the issue continues take it back to the dealer. Do not take a "this is normal" explanation for their incompetence as it is not normal.




I took my vehicle to another MB dealer and explained the situation. The service advisor called the technician who came up to the check-in counter to chat with me about what I've been experiencing. After hearing the details, the tech stated that while this isn't anything he'd encountered before, it sounded like an interesting problem, and that he would check for fault codes and perform a battery test. No fault codes were found but the battery failed the test. He replaced the battery under warranty and all has returned to normal. Navigation in the HUD and the Traffic Light View are behaving normally (can't recall if I had mentioned that they were not working correctly) and, most importantly, the SOC remained the same from the time the car was parked until I drove it this morning, a time period of ~20 hours.
Thank you to ScottC2 who suggested that my issue could be related to the 12v battery and to everyone who provided suggestions and feedback on their experiences with their vehicles. I'm really impressed with this community of EV owners.
It's surprising a failed 12v battery doesn't log some fault codes, in my opinion!
The 12v battery is so very important to so many systems in the EQ vehicles. Because of this, I'm astounded that the monitoring system for the so-called "health" of the 12v battery is not more sophisticated than it apparently is. :-)








