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On Wed, 11 Sep 2024 12:23:31 +0200, Rolf MantelRolfs comment was not about the tools used. It was about tool and parts availability.
<news@hartig-mantel.de> wrote:
Insurance rates are set for separately for each individual vehicle type.Higher insurance rates might not be totally due to dealer network
On reading carefully, you mostly find "Insurance for Tesla" went up
catastrophically because
1) Tesla had a bad spare parts logistics (meaning insurance have to pay
hire car for longer until a repiar can be done)
2) Few mechanics being trained to repair Tesla (meaning insurance have
to pay hire car for longer until a repair can be done and while the
repair is done, often the mechanic takes a lot longer than expected
because they first have to learn about the particulars)
problems. The drivers might also be at fault. See any of these
videos for what drivers do to their vehicles:
<https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=just+rolled+in>
<https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=just+rolled+in+Tesla>
You might find similar stories in the next few years for the new ChineseToday's cars are designed to be diagnosed by a computer, not a trained
makes but very unlikely for EV of standard makes with an established
dealer network.
or independent mechanic. The vehicle is plugged into a computer,
which is connected via the internet to a computer operated by the
manufacturer. The diagnostics are run and the results are printed.
The mechanic just follows the instructions and replaces parts until
the problem is fixed. Little wonder repair costs have dramatically
increased. I suspect all new EV's are repaired in this manner.
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