daveo4EV
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- David
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2019
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- 192
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- 7,006
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- Location
- Santa Cruz
- Vehicles
- Cayenne Hybrid, 911(s) GT3/Convertable
there is no reason to believe this problem does not affect the entire fleet world wide - the fix will ultimately be software based - or software along with hardware changes (if it’s the case that some piece of hardware is causing the software to be confused).
it’s plain and simple a software fault where the vehicle will run and drain the 12V battery as it remains powered while a software system is running erroniously - the problem has occured with both PMCC and non-PMCC AC chargers in both europe and the US.
a “different” Taycan will not resolve this issue, and to date porsche has no concrete fix identified
they are however determining there are a number of circumstances that can trip up their charging software causing the vehicle’s 12V to die - there is no “ONE” cause, and there is no “ONE” fix - rather the picture emerging from my perspective is that there are a number of conditions under which the vehicle will become confused while charging and draing the 12V battery…
the problem here is that this a whack-a-mole problem in that there is probably a countably infinite number of combinations of circumstances underwhich this problem can occur or not occur…
the fact that we keep hearing about “future updates” with unclear dates means Porsche has no more idea what is going on here than we do…
kudo’s to porsche for the August fix which address some but not all cases of 12V battery drain - we now have two more conditions that we know a fix for:
#2 explains problems when charging via Porsche hardware but does not explain why/how the car dies when using a non-Porsche charger…
until Porsche has a comprehensize software fix - someting that may not be possible - it is very likely that the entire fleet will continue to be subject to random and unexplained 12V deaths as noted by multiple owners…
the most illuminating aspect of this situation is it is _NOT_ mechanical in nature - it’s a software systems design fault - something Porsche is not historically known for their competence in this space - and something for which their 100’s of years of experience provides no value…
The Taycan is being undone by a lack of experience with software systems and power management. Porsche lenghty response to this problem and their inability to articulate a coherent response show just how far behind they are in understanding the new world of EV’s - the mechanicals where never a quesiton for the taycan, but people questioned their abilty to compete in the software/cloud arena of modern vehicles - the porsche connect app, electrify america apps, the navigation systems charging integration and the 12V battery power management problems demonstrate Porsche is in over it’s head in this space...mechanically the Taycan is world class - the same can not be said of their software systems - the 12V problems are just one very visible manifestation of the problems the auto-industry will face as they come to realize they do not own/control the entire ”stack” of software in their vehicles - this will increasingly become a liability and all the future win’s will be accomplished by controlling software form the cloud to the temperature sensor and everything in between - something Porsche does not do today…
I would not be surprised if porsche never has a fix for this issue - as it may require them to control to software embedded in systems that can not be changed…
time will tell - but this problem is unlike problems car manufacturers have handled in the past - and we are witnessing their lack of skill and ability to deal with complex software systems - with foreseeably laughable results.
Porsche has no idea how to completely resolve this problem - and will continue to thrash while they continue to find new ways in which their charger software can become confused…it’s no one thing that is causing this…
a fix will be interesting.
it’s plain and simple a software fault where the vehicle will run and drain the 12V battery as it remains powered while a software system is running erroniously - the problem has occured with both PMCC and non-PMCC AC chargers in both europe and the US.
a “different” Taycan will not resolve this issue, and to date porsche has no concrete fix identified
they are however determining there are a number of circumstances that can trip up their charging software causing the vehicle’s 12V to die - there is no “ONE” cause, and there is no “ONE” fix - rather the picture emerging from my perspective is that there are a number of conditions under which the vehicle will become confused while charging and draing the 12V battery…
the problem here is that this a whack-a-mole problem in that there is probably a countably infinite number of combinations of circumstances underwhich this problem can occur or not occur…
the fact that we keep hearing about “future updates” with unclear dates means Porsche has no more idea what is going on here than we do…
kudo’s to porsche for the August fix which address some but not all cases of 12V battery drain - we now have two more conditions that we know a fix for:
- 6 amp charge rate is too little and will cause 12V drain
- there is some Porsche power management via PLC settings that can also cause problems
#2 explains problems when charging via Porsche hardware but does not explain why/how the car dies when using a non-Porsche charger…
until Porsche has a comprehensize software fix - someting that may not be possible - it is very likely that the entire fleet will continue to be subject to random and unexplained 12V deaths as noted by multiple owners…
the most illuminating aspect of this situation is it is _NOT_ mechanical in nature - it’s a software systems design fault - something Porsche is not historically known for their competence in this space - and something for which their 100’s of years of experience provides no value…
The Taycan is being undone by a lack of experience with software systems and power management. Porsche lenghty response to this problem and their inability to articulate a coherent response show just how far behind they are in understanding the new world of EV’s - the mechanicals where never a quesiton for the taycan, but people questioned their abilty to compete in the software/cloud arena of modern vehicles - the porsche connect app, electrify america apps, the navigation systems charging integration and the 12V battery power management problems demonstrate Porsche is in over it’s head in this space...mechanically the Taycan is world class - the same can not be said of their software systems - the 12V problems are just one very visible manifestation of the problems the auto-industry will face as they come to realize they do not own/control the entire ”stack” of software in their vehicles - this will increasingly become a liability and all the future win’s will be accomplished by controlling software form the cloud to the temperature sensor and everything in between - something Porsche does not do today…
I would not be surprised if porsche never has a fix for this issue - as it may require them to control to software embedded in systems that can not be changed…
time will tell - but this problem is unlike problems car manufacturers have handled in the past - and we are witnessing their lack of skill and ability to deal with complex software systems - with foreseeably laughable results.
Porsche has no idea how to completely resolve this problem - and will continue to thrash while they continue to find new ways in which their charger software can become confused…it’s no one thing that is causing this…
a fix will be interesting.
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