Carautonomy — car parts and warning lights explained
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Electric Vehicles

What is an EV Traction Battery?

The huge high-voltage battery pack that actually powers the car.

EV TRACTION BATTERY — CELLS, MODULES & BMSHIGH-VOLTAGE PACK (~400V)module 1module 2module 3module 4liquid coolingBMSmonitors cellsMto motorState of charge

Simplified animation — not to scale.

In plain English

The traction battery is the giant lithium-ion battery pack — usually mounted in the floor — that stores the energy used to drive an electric car. It typically runs at 400V or 800V (far higher than a normal car battery) and holds anywhere from about 40 kWh in a small EV to 100 kWh+ in a long-range one. It is by far the most expensive component in the vehicle.

A simple analogy

"Think of it as a giant rechargeable phone battery the size of a mattress, bolted under the floor of the car. Look after the temperature and don't keep it at 100% or 0% all the time, and it'll last for many years."

How it works

The pack is built from thousands of small lithium-ion cells grouped into modules. A battery management system (BMS) monitors each cell's voltage and temperature, balances them, and protects against over-charge, over-discharge and overheating. Liquid coolant runs through the pack to keep it in its happy temperature window. When you accelerate, DC power flows out to the inverter; when you regen-brake or plug in, power flows back in.

Signs of trouble

  • Sudden drop in real-world range
  • "Reduced power" warning or limp mode
  • Slow charging speeds even on a rapid charger
  • State-of-charge jumping around erratically
  • Battery warning light or amber traction-battery icon
Rough UK cost

£5,500 – £22,000

Parts: £5,000 – £20,000+ (full pack)
Labour: £500 – £1,500

Always get a written quote. Prices vary by car, region, and parts brand.

Heads up: Carautonomy is for general guidance only. If your car is showing warning lights or behaving oddly, get it looked at by a qualified mechanic.

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