Gino
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Gino
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2024
- Threads
- 29
- Messages
- 891
- Reaction score
- 447
- Location
- Orange County, CA
- Vehicles
- 2000 Boxster & 2021 Taycan
- Thread starter
- #1
I am in the semiconductor industry and there is a big push to make every chip manufactured with it's own unique code to be authenticated to the system it's in to insure the configuration is correct and nothing has been swapped out which could corrupt the overall system.
This is now being extended in Europe to an EV battery passport system which will allow every battery cell to be tracked from when it's manufactured to when it is taken out of service.
I recently came across a loss prevention manager at AVIS in Orange County, CA who told me about rampant theft from rental cars. Everything from wheels/tires to engines get swapped out and AVIS usually doesn't find out until they realize there is a problem with the part (like an engine) which requires service and they realize too late after multiple rentals from when it was taken that it is not the same engine that was in the vehicle when it was delivered to them.
He said thieves know what parts are the same on multiple years so they can simply rent the car with the correct part and then swap their high mileage part which is failing with a low mileage part on the newer model rental.
They can't go after the customer because they have no way of pinpointing when the part was taken during which rental.
He told me their highest losses were on their fleet of Teslas. I asked what do they steal. He said "everything" PC boards, sensors, modules, wheels, tires, etc. Tesla saves a lot of money using many of the same parts for all model years so a 5 year old Tesla has basically many of the same parts as the current model. When a thief steals a part off a Tesla at AVIS and they can't determine which renter stole the part then AVIS has to repair/replace the part at their cost.
I wonder if anyone knows if Porsche has serial numbers on every battery cell pack in every module that is tied to the VIN so they would know if someone had swapped out a cell pack or an entire module.
I don't know of anyone that rents Taycan's but VW/Audi is one of the worlds largest auto makers which also sells for affordable EVs to the masses. I'd bet they use the same LB battery cell packs and possibly even some of the same battery modules and charging electronics which would be prime targets for midnight auto shops.
I'm currently working with the DOC & NIST to develop standards to prevent these thefts and the first step is to give and track every part's identity so it must be authenticated to work in the intended platform such as a car, plane, server, PC, etc.
I hoping Porsche already tracks every one of their batteries but not sure if a DIY'r could swap a battery themselves and the vehicle would still operate as normal. Hopefully if the vehicle were to be inspected by Porsche during service they would see the battery module was changed.
Sorry for the long post... appreciate any thoughts...
This is now being extended in Europe to an EV battery passport system which will allow every battery cell to be tracked from when it's manufactured to when it is taken out of service.
I recently came across a loss prevention manager at AVIS in Orange County, CA who told me about rampant theft from rental cars. Everything from wheels/tires to engines get swapped out and AVIS usually doesn't find out until they realize there is a problem with the part (like an engine) which requires service and they realize too late after multiple rentals from when it was taken that it is not the same engine that was in the vehicle when it was delivered to them.
He said thieves know what parts are the same on multiple years so they can simply rent the car with the correct part and then swap their high mileage part which is failing with a low mileage part on the newer model rental.
They can't go after the customer because they have no way of pinpointing when the part was taken during which rental.
He told me their highest losses were on their fleet of Teslas. I asked what do they steal. He said "everything" PC boards, sensors, modules, wheels, tires, etc. Tesla saves a lot of money using many of the same parts for all model years so a 5 year old Tesla has basically many of the same parts as the current model. When a thief steals a part off a Tesla at AVIS and they can't determine which renter stole the part then AVIS has to repair/replace the part at their cost.
I wonder if anyone knows if Porsche has serial numbers on every battery cell pack in every module that is tied to the VIN so they would know if someone had swapped out a cell pack or an entire module.
I don't know of anyone that rents Taycan's but VW/Audi is one of the worlds largest auto makers which also sells for affordable EVs to the masses. I'd bet they use the same LB battery cell packs and possibly even some of the same battery modules and charging electronics which would be prime targets for midnight auto shops.
I'm currently working with the DOC & NIST to develop standards to prevent these thefts and the first step is to give and track every part's identity so it must be authenticated to work in the intended platform such as a car, plane, server, PC, etc.
I hoping Porsche already tracks every one of their batteries but not sure if a DIY'r could swap a battery themselves and the vehicle would still operate as normal. Hopefully if the vehicle were to be inspected by Porsche during service they would see the battery module was changed.
Sorry for the long post... appreciate any thoughts...
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