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[return to "BMW PHEV: Safety fuse replacement is extremely expensive"]
1. JSR_FD+07[view] [source] 2025-12-05 02:06:16
>>mikela+(OP)
This is exactly why I’m so uninterested in driving en EV. I usually word it as “I don’t want to drive a computer”, but the reality is that I don’t want to be on the wrong end of the power imbalance that comes from this amount of complexity.
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2. aether+3g[view] [source] 2025-12-05 03:38:07
>>JSR_FD+07
Teslas are dead simple, to the point where people are putting Tesla anything in virtually anything you can think of - classic cars, random sedans, you name it.

There’s also that guy on YouTube who updated the electricals in his original Model S with electricals from a 10 years later Model 3 Highland just by buying spare parts, and it was pretty doable with fairly basic and limited tools/public information.

So the complexity in this article is just a BMW/PHEV thing, not an EV thing.

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3. rconti+Hj[view] [source] 2025-12-05 04:28:18
>>aether+3g
As they point out, the Tesla pyro fuse (at least on a Model S) is a cheap part. However, in some model years it's on top of the pack, which means you have to drop the pack to get to it. And, from memory, it's a 10 year lifespan part. However, on other Model S cars, it's easily accessible from the bottom.

I wonder how we can make automakers make more repairable cars. Obviously, right-to-repair and allowing access to documentation and tools for independent shops is a a necessary but not sufficient step.

I shudder to think at some of the other possibilities -- heavy-handed attempts to regulate how much specific repairs can cost.

Maybe mandating the sale of manufacturer-provided extended warranties for no more than x% the cost of the vehicle purchase price would be an incentive to keep repair cost in check?

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4. uticus+Xd2[view] [source] 2025-12-05 17:13:03
>>rconti+Hj
> I wonder how we can make automakers make more repairable cars...Maybe mandating...

No, mandating / regulations are not the answer, unless you're looking to artificially enforce something that the consumer doesn't want.

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