i3 HV Battery Upgrade

BMW i3 Forum

Help Support BMW i3 Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
I would be interested in any upgrade seeing as my warranty will expire in June of this year and I'm not below the 70% threshold for replacement.
 
Can I offer an alternate product suggestion?

The i3 platform has a reasonably large amount of space allocated for the REX engine/generator unit. On BEV i3s, that space is simply empty. The worst kind of empty too, because BMW didn't even let you use it for storage - it's just open space underneath the car.

If you could manufacture a supplementary battery that fits in that space, which works in conjunction with a factory battery to increase the range, you'd really be on to something. It'd be smaller, take fewer cells, and be more widely applicable than an entire main battery replacement.

An electrically different option could be a battery-based pseudo-REX - a drop-in replacement battery pack that pretends to be a REX to fool the computer. Then anyone who has a REX engine failure, or who just wants to change to a BEV, could remove the gas engine, install the new battery unit in its place, and enjoy a few extra miles of all-electric range. The car would just think it still has the REX, and switch it "on" when the main battery pack was low.
 
Does anyone know. This upgrade still averrable? I live in San Jose, CA, USA. Where I can install it?
 
$21.3K for 260 miles ... plus the cost of the i3 itself...how much is a Tesla Model 3 again? I think these upgrades would make sense if they were about 30% less costly. If an older i3 costs about $10k and it could have 260 miles of range for about $32k total, this makes good sense in my opinion.

Generally newer is better, so I would be surprised to see anyone buying an older car to upgrade its batteries for the same or greater expense...when they could just pick up a newer car and get the same range and the peace of mind knowing someone did not partly disassemble their car and reassemble it which on its own creates a risk for mechanical issues.

Also would an insurance company insure these packs...etc?
 
Here is my statement then I will follow up with my question. I am currently having a warranties battery swap done on my 2015 i3 and I anted to upgrade the battery pack for greater miles so this product interest me greatly. Please send details as far has how do I sign up!
Here is my question. The replacement required a reprogramming of the car and that reprogramming I am told removed the regeneration function from the car. So instead of one pedal driving the car will now coast. Does your programming for the upgrade solve this problem? What functions are added ir removed due to your reprogramming of the car?
 
Can you contact me about this, I would be interested in doing this to my car. ;)
AgentiMi said:
(This is a repost from the i3 Reddit page.)

I work for a stationary energy storage company and I need an excuse to develop i3 batteries.

I wanna know just how many of you would actually buy an upgraded battery.... they are pricy... almost as much as 2 used i3s.

Here's what you will get IF we make this product:

-10-year capacity warranty.

-Increased range.

-Increased power output of the pack for modified applications.

-Faster DC charging, from 40kW to 250kW peak.

-Battery condition on climatize.

-We'll offer installation and financing.

The modules are already developed for our large stationary storage systems (300kWh+) an example application is DCFC stations. We are playing with the idea to put these packs in classic cars and it hit me. Why not the i3? or any EV.

I've made a list of possible configurations below, please vote if you would actually buy one if it was offered.

Side note. You will also need different springs and dampers in some applications, good luck.

-------------------

Cost values are for the battery pack only.

Range values are estimates in COMFORT mode driving.

kWh values indicate total usable energy and do NOT include battery buffer.

We are not asking for money. This is just to show you how much a battery pack will cost.

**** may require a different battery tray, adding to the cost.

-------------------


Here are the possible configurations listed below.

~80 miles (129km) 19kWh $6K (50kW DCFC)

~120 miles (193km) 30kWh $9.8K (70kW DCFC)

~160 miles (257km) 40kWh $13K (100kW DCFC)

~260 miles (257km) 69kWh $21.3K (150kW DCFC)

****~320 miles (515km) 90kWh $24.5K (250kW DCFC)

--------------------

I'm happy to answer questions!

We're also hiring for more engineering positions soon. Maryland and remote. I'll post about it.
 
Are you still selling larger battery’s for the i3
I want to upgrade my 2015 loaded i3 Rex
Or do you know who will do it now .
Thanks
 
This is a fantastic idea, and I hope it happens. Unfortunately, the prices should be about half to be within mainstream range.

For reference, we just replaced our 2014 with a 2017, mostly for the extra range of the 94ah battery, and the cost of swapping cars was about $7,5K. Plus the 2017 newer model is fully loaded, while our original 2014 was the base version.

Also, I wonder if BMW itself is using larger batteries when they have to replace faulty ones for older cars. Perhaps refurbished 120ah batteries that don't get the full capacity, but are still above the threshold of what the earlier versions would provide. There is currently a series of articles on The Autopian about an i3 with a freshly replaced HV battery that is getting above expected range. And the i3 REx that we just got is also getting real world range of 120 miles, while it should be below 100. While it is a bit unclear from the Carfax, it looks like the HV battery might have been recently replaced.

But I insist, this would be a fantastic idea, especially to finally give the i3 the long range battery that BMW never provided.
 
(This is a repost from the i3 Reddit page.)

I work for a stationary energy storage company and I need an excuse to develop i3 batteries.

I wanna know just how many of you would actually buy an upgraded battery.... they are pricy... almost as much as 2 used i3s.

Here's what you will get IF we make this product:

-10-year capacity warranty.

-Increased range.

-Increased power output of the pack for modified applications.

-Faster DC charging, from 40kW to 250kW peak.

-Battery condition on climatize.

-We'll offer installation and financing.

The modules are already developed for our large stationary storage systems (300kWh+) an example application is DCFC stations. We are playing with the idea to put these packs in classic cars and it hit me. Why not the i3? or any EV.

I've made a list of possible configurations below, please vote if you would actually buy one if it was offered.

Side note. You will also need different springs and dampers in some applications, good luck.

-------------------

Cost values are for the battery pack only.

Range values are estimates in COMFORT mode driving.

kWh values indicate total usable energy and do NOT include battery buffer.

We are not asking for money. This is just to show you how much a battery pack will cost.

**** may require a different battery tray, adding to the cost.

-------------------


Here are the possible configurations listed below.

~80 miles (129km) 19kWh $6K (50kW DCFC)

~120 miles (193km) 30kWh $9.8K (70kW DCFC)

~160 miles (257km) 40kWh $13K (100kW DCFC)

~260 miles (257km) 69kWh $21.3K (150kW DCFC)

****~320 miles (515km) 90kWh $24.5K (250kW DCFC)

--------------------

I'm happy to answer questions!

We're also hiring for more engineering positions soon. Maryland and remote. I'll post about it.
I pick the 90kwh option
Please put my name on it
 
I don't understand how they would boost charge rate, regardless of battery, as my understanding is that it would require a completely different charger setup. But perhaps that is completely decoupled from the AC charge controller and strictly a function of the HV BMS when using DC.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top