Jim Lewis
Well-known member
- First Name
- Jim
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2023
- Threads
- 42
- Messages
- 830
- Reaction score
- 705
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Vehicles
- Honda Accord 2017; 2023 Lariat ER
- Occupation
- Retired
I might be that "one owner." An OTA update similarly bricked my truck, and I got the SYNC screen advisory to call Ford Roadside Assistance and have my truck towed to a dealer. But my truck was bricked in my home garage on a hill with a very tight >90° turn and a danger of rolling into a nearby neighbor's house. My dealer said it would take at least 24 to 48 hours to even look at the truck, and four other San Antonio dealers said it would take at least seven to ten days, during which time my truck might be sitting out in an asphalt parking lot that might reach 130° to 140° F in San Antonio summertime.However, due to the fact that FDRS now has a requirement where an NFTSA password is needed for non-dealer users to update the BCM (which is the module responsible for putting a vehicle in inhibit mode for an OTA and releasing it when's done), it seems like even with FDRS, non-dealers FDRS users are screwed if this happens to them. The sample size for this is very small......that I know of, only one owner (who is on this forum) had his truck bricked and was not able to get it out of inhibit mode with FDRS.
I think what's going on with the dealer wait times is nicely explained in the following post:
https://www.f150lightningforum.com/...riat-powertrain-service-now.20509/post-407539
My dealer's CSA basically told me the same thing: they had a long waiting list of people and only one EV tech who could not do mobile service calls because he was so busy. It wouldn't be right to bump me ahead of the waiting list.
So, I refused to have my truck potentially bake on a dealer's lot for an indefinite amount of time. I got a Mongoose Plus Ford2 cable and a Clore PL6100 power supply on Amazon (roughly a $1K purchase), but I hit the NFTSA password requirement for non-dealers that rugedraw mentioned.
With help from expert forum members, I located someone with the necessary credentials to use FDRS to unlock Inhibit Mode on my truck, and just like rugedraw said, it took ~5 minutes, and my truck never had to leave my garage. IIRC, the APIM module had to be reset, too, as although the truck would turn on and off normally after the Inhibit Mode reset, as judged by the dash screen, the SYNC screen was non-functional until that module was reset.
Too many unknown factors, I guess, but it seems like the BEV wizards at FMC (or the dealer's tech) should be able to unlock a truck over-the-air if a customer is willing to sign off on the responsibility for having the right equipment and the liability if anything goes wrong.
It's crazy to have to have your truck towed, sit for an indefinite time in the broiling sun of the American Southwest for something that only takes a few minutes to fix without moving the truck an inch. The other thing would be to have a more foolproof OTA update procedure that's capable of fully rolling back a failed update.
It's crazy to have such an inefficient rescue plan that wastes the customer's, the dealer's, and FMC's time and resources. No wonder Ford Motor Company has a big money-losing operation in electric vehicles. They're making that loss happen with their software and inefficient operational policies...
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