Was there any mention by PIWIS of which specific values were improbable? Their names, expected range vs. what was observed?A brief update from today's diagnostic session at my Porsche Centre:
So now its looking like its not a AC or DC thing – but more a high current thing (which obv implies DC).
- We tried a 20 kW DC charger (that was in the workshop) and the error wasn't triggered in 20 mins of charging.
- We tried a 50 kW DC charger (also in the workshop) and similarly the error wasn't triggered.
- We then tried the 350 kW DC charger (the Porsche branded ones) and the error triggered within 4 mins – typical of what I've seen out on public high-speed chargers.
- There is no obvious error showing in PIWIS other then a vague "Charger: improbable values" log entry – which hinted at the DC chargers itself – but having it now happen on 5 different units from various manufactures – nobody thinks thats the case.
- None of the various OBC units are showing any signs of an issue or logging a fault.
- Ticket and available logging now with Porsche AG in Germany to recommend next steps.
There is a "hunch" that maybe the 400V booster is somehow involved – but really thats not based on any observable data yet.
Unfortunately not. Just that string. Quite cryptic and unhelpful.Was there any mention by PIWIS of which specific values were improbable? Their names, expected range vs. what was observed?
I’m sure someone at Porsche will say “oh, it’s this line of code right here..”Unfortunately not. Just that string. Quite cryptic and unhelpful.
My current hunch is that it is a hardware failure but a subtle one. That something that measures a value – like perhaps incoming current – is returning incorrect values once the current is above 50 kW and that is causing the software to throw an exception and go down an unexpected code path.I’m sure someone at Porsche will say “oh, it’s this line of code right here..”
On the bright, if speculative, side, it rather sounds like a software bug as opposed to failed/failing hardware. Doesn’t mean the fix will be quick, though ? - good luck and hope you get it sorted (well) before the trip.
Tend to agree, it's hardware. May even be something silly like a pin on a connector that is getting too warm and getting pulled.My current hunch is that it is a hardware failure but a subtle one. That something that measures a value – like perhaps incoming current – is returning incorrect values once the current is above 50 kW and that is causing the software to throw an exception and go down an unexpected code path.
Yep, found it:I’m sure someone at Porsche will say “oh, it’s this line of code right here..”![]()
It might be a software bug, but somehow it manifests itself only on this one car, so something is still different about @tigerbalm's car. If only the error message would have included some useful information (like maybe the port heats up and reports itself as closed ?On the bright, if speculative, side, it rather sounds like a software bug as opposed to failed/failing hardware. Doesn’t mean the fix will be quick, though ? - good luck and hope you get it sorted (well) before the trip.
Aye, that’s the one!Yep, found it:
for(x=0; x<100; x++)
if(VALUE[x]>MAX_EXPECTED_VALUE[x] || VALUE[x]<MIN_EXPECTED_VALUE[x]){ReportError(" Charger: improbable values ");break;}Clear as mud, no?
It might be a software bug, but somehow it manifests itself only on this one car, so something is still different about @tigerbalm's car. If only the error message would have included some useful information (like maybe the port heats up and reports itself as closed ?).
"improbable" to me seemed like a translation of some word implying "invalid/out of bounds", as in "battery is showing -270C", unlikely/improbable unless someone launched the Taycan in pursuit of Starman's Roadster.“improbable” implies a mere discrepancy between actual and expected (e.g.: expected to have ingested 5kWh and charger reported 10) and not an invalid/out of bounds value. But if it was “unmoeglich” in original, that may well denote an impossible (unsupported) value - for whatever that is.
Me too!I’m really curious about the outcome.
Oups, I forgot to add a comment in the code above. Original post edited.This does fit the pattern, though: “you have an update/notification/error.” <click on additional info> “you have no updates/notifications/errors”.)
I think this is true in almost any country. Even high end based on same platforms - similarly optioned Taycan Turbo S vs. Audi GT RS, $218K vs. $166K retail - Audi has much higher manufacturer incentives too. I had a loaner Cayenne recently which was priced similarly (a bit higher IIRC) more than a top end Q8 etron - similar sized but etron is electric and had a bunch of features which were all optional (and missing in the loaner) on the Cayenne. Porsche definitely charges a premium for the brand.This RWD spec retails at €112,000 here in Ireland. That does seem rather expensive given the light options and features available on the car. You'd get a lot more car for that money in Audi, BMW or Mercedes here in this country.