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Looking at the Specs and warranty, the BYD is warranted for 10 years as is the Powerwall 2. But the Byd warranty is for 60% of original capacity whereas the Powerwall 2 is for 80%. That seems to tie in with the conditioning systems. The BYD is "natural cooling", passive air cooling, in other words. The Powerwall 2 has active liquid cooling. In other words the same as the Model S and Model 3 battery conditioning systems. It is maintained at the optimum temperature for charging. That is why the Model S, and by inference the PW2 have a much longer battery life than the Nissan Leaf, which has no active conditioning. My Model S has lost 3% in 4 years/50,000 miles and most of that was in the first few months, as is normal with lithium ion battery life. It's hardly changing at all now. I expect to get at least 15 years useful life from my Model S battery and probably much longer (I'll probably be dead or at least handed in my licence by that time!). I suspect the difference in warranty conditions is related to the conditioning systems. The PW2 can be expected to last a lot longer than the BYD. So it's like comparing apples and oranges.
Out of interest, here's a review of the PW2 and comparison with other batteries. It's from 2016 so a bit out of date but the cost per total warranted kW is shown to be lowest for the PW2 and highest for a BYD battery (not the L14.0)
Powerwall 2 Full Specs Reveal Cheap Storage And Limited Warranty |
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