DesertEV
Well-known member
- First Name
- Matthew
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2024
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 209
- Reaction score
- 257
- Location
- El Paso, TX
- Vehicles
- Ford F-150 Lightning
Thank you for sharing…you totally blew my mind with the activist plug at the end lolRe: battery problems
Just after we bought our new 2021 Chevrolet Bolt EV we became aware there were problems with Bolt batteries. A number of Bolts had caught fire. There wasn't a huge number of fires, but owners became concerned, especially as Chevrolet initially tried to deny the problem.
The problem was said to develop when two rare manufacturing faults were present in a single module. Batteries with this fairly rare combo of faults would, sooner or later, ignite and destroy the car.
All Bolt owners were issued a warning not to park their vehicles near anything they didn't want burned to the ground, like their house. Chevrolet felt forced to offer a buy back program supposedly for all Bolts produced to that point. Since the fires were very uncommon, Chevrolet also offered any Bolt owners who could live with the idea their car could self destruct at any moment that Chevrolet would install a brand new battery in their Bolt once they ironed out the manufacturing process to eliminate this hazard, and once they managed to make and install enough batteries so that they would get around to a particular owner.
The battery failures were more common in Bolts older than our 2021. I love this little EV, and I decided that I'd keep our Bolt rather than have Chevrolet buy it back, because of the promise of a brand new battery at some point down the road. I believe we were warned not to exceed a 90% charge, or to discharge below 10%. I had already decided not to routinely charge more than 80% or to discharge lower than 20%.
Years go by. Chevrolet reneged on their promise to install a new battery in our car. They recalled the car and installed software that limited the charging and discharging that could be done with the battery, I believe to the 90%/10% figures. This software was said to be capable of determining, after a certain number of miles like more than 10,000, if the battery contained the deadly defects.
So we never got the advertised range. Our car has not burned up, but the software has not pronounced that the battery will not do this.
Chevrolet offered everyone in our position $1400 only if we would sign a document that contained a release - we could never be compensated more than that $1400 for this. I didn't accept the $1400. What if our house was destroyed by this car in the rare event the battery self destructed prior to Chevrolet software declaring the battery could not do this? There is a class action suit in the works. What if a court orders Chevrolet to compensate owners for selling them a car they were warned afterwards they should not park near anything an owner valued, or if a court ordered Chevrolet to replace all the batteries it promised to replace?
I haven't looked into it. I have no idea what the chances of the class action suit are. I have little faith in the courts, car manufacturers, or car dealers.
I remain very happy with the car.
Why tell this story? I am seriously considering buying an F-150 Flash. However, I don't like the sound of this battery problem Ford seems to have. My plan to buy the Flash is on hold.
Mass production and sale of EVs is just getting started. We are "early adopters". This is the kind of thing that happens.
Even though I spent a few decades as a climate activist starting in 1988, I had been burning fossil fuel for transport up until I bought the Bolt. I would like to see civilization stabilize the composition of the atmosphere. Transport emissions are a significant factor that must be dealt with.
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