SreyaColvard
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- Thread starter
- #31
Very good considerations you point out. And we did check reviews of Volvo EX90 and some say service experience is a nightmare cos the dealer has no clue how to fix the issue.Just another data point - a friend has a 2018 tesla MX that he had multiple issues in the first two years of ownership - mostly software and had it in the shop perhaps a dozen times. However, my general experience is that Tesla software seems to be a bit more mature and bullet proof compared to Rivian. But then again R1 is more complex than the my early tesla's (2016 MX, 2018 M3)
This forum has had a few other R1's lemoned but as the poster mentioned all of the bad issues get posted with little positive experiences. This doesn't help you any but would be an interesting software engineering study to understand why a small percentage of complex vehicles get so many issues.
Your requirements for volume, utiliity, range, capability, cost, etc will be hard to find at the moment but I believe you will be taking a bit of risk with any other recent new model of EV even from legecy manufactures. Wtih any vehicle it is always good practice to wait a year or so before buying a new model - but in this day of SW defined stuff one or more SW updates help on fixing issues - assuming a solid hardware architecture integrated tightly with SW.
Interesting that VW group is paying Rivian 5.8B for their SW.
Also, as you point out, I would love to understand why a small percentage of vehicles have a serious problems. I'd also like to know what % of Rivian have such issues as that may help assess our risk on the replacement option. What happens if the replacement is as bad or worse? Can we buy back again? We're going through a lot of unanswered questions but plan to ask during buy back.
I saw the other post about the person who's wife wants him to Lemon the Rivian. He lives in cold weather region unlike us and we have not had to face some of the cold weather impacts on EV living in California. His problems are severe and some overlap with us. The 12V battery failure happened twice for us. Because we knew about this on the forum the first thing we did was open one of the doors before the restart so we wouldn't get trapped. The second time they said it was a 12v recall and we never got the notification before the car died. We've also had that door not locking issue. It was quite strange. When we got the new car the maps froze (sales showed how to restart and it was fine) at the time of pickup but being new Rivian and EV owners we didn't pickup the issue until a few days later and right before our planned drive to Santa Barbara. The maps was the first issue and the software reset broke the camera software and it just never came back to normal. The cameras stopped working, maps stopped working, and the software would loop in self restart. Our new Rivian specifically had issues when parked at home and connected to our phone and WiFi..it would keep hooting and unlocking.
They fixed this by replacing the entire computer module. This issue was a hardware problem the software resets couldn't fix. Then the first issue with the 12V battery was when we were parked with the whole dog crew and about to head back from SF, the brake was hard and we called support and the reset caused the batter to die completely even though we had 149 miles prior to restart on our 400 mile range. The service guy said they also replaced the computer module (again) and sometimes the software updates break things in some of the Rivians.
My observations are that the software handles the profiles of my husband and myself very poorly. Sometimes it doesn't switch if I'm in the driver's seat. Sometimes it's very slow to wake even in warm weather and I act get my bookmarked locations to open quickly to head out. Unlock doesn't always work at home so I use the key card instead of the app.and that works right away. The app in particular has problems handling the two profiles simultaneously and even charging if both our phones are on the charging pad. The majority of our problems have stemmed from us both being in the car or in the range of the car at the same time and both our mobile apps active. Our driveway is very close to the house and it's where the charger is. Given the history of our issues I suspect this is a contributing factor for issues faced at home.
We plan to test drive Kia EV9 today. But you are right it doesn't compare with the capabilities Rivian offers and the dealer near has a stock of exactly 2 cars right now. It's pretty new so they don't know a lot about it. I doubt we will go back to Volvo at this point. Other options suggested to others who are about to Lemon such as Cadillac Escalade IQ and equivalent such as Hummer are too wide will not fit our current driveway where the charger is and we don't need that big of a car. Rivian is the perfect size and we could go a tad smaller to the EV9 size if it turns out a good option but it's pretty new and I don't know what it's going to be like. I appreciate your insights. Thank you!
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