snstevens
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Sam
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2020
- Threads
- 31
- Messages
- 1,345
- Reaction score
- 1,749
- Location
- Kirkland, WA United States
- Vehicles
- Taycan 4S
One small addition to your suggested protocol. I would suggest taking pictures of the dash every time you get in the car when the red circle of death has happened. You want to be able to show with a timestamped series of photos how long this event is lasting.My GTS was bricked by the red circle of death a few weeks ago. I had driven the car the previous evening and it had about 150miles of range left in the battery. The battery was still showing the same range after the "Electrical system error" came up on the main display the next morning.
Unfortunately it was a full six days before my car was actually inspected by a Porsch technician:
- I waited a day in the hope the car would reset itself and clear the fault condition overnight (it didn't)
- The tow itself took an extra day as my car had to first be extricated on tow dollies from the sixth floor of my apartment's limited-headroom garage
- By the time it got to the dealership it was midday on a Friday and there was a long queue of other Porsche's already waiting for scheduled maintenance and mine had to wait in line
- The techs only got their first look the following Tuesday
By that time the fault condition had cleared itself so there was nothing to diagnose (Sod's Law ?) and apparently there was no history info available on the electrical system failure that had bricked the car (really ??).
My dealership tested the car over the next two weeks and were not able to find any faults in the electrical system and told me they were ready to return the car to me. Even though they were not able to find any issues with the electrical system and have given it a clean bill of health, they also can't explain why my was bricked for several days (there's no way to know when the fault condition actually cleared itself but it lasted at least 3 days). I have no confidence that this was a one-off glitch and am dreading the red circle of death reappearing at a less convenient time and location. This time it was in my own garage; the next time it might be at a rest stop on a long distance drive.
When I return from travel and pick up the car this coming week, the conversation I plan to have with the dealership is about the service protocol to employ should my car need to be towed in again with the same issue, so they can have the best shot of retrieving detailed diagnostic information while the vehicle is still in a fault condition.
For example if they assigned a technician to immediately examine my car as soon at it arrives at the dealership, that would mean jumping the queue ahead of other vehicles already in for scheduled maintenance, but without this immediate examination there is every possibility that the fault condition will reset (as it did this time) before the tech has a chance to diagnose the fault. Once fault/diagnostic info has been retrieved and an initial diagnosis completed, the car can go back to the queue and wait for an available slot for the actual repair or remediation work to be done, and the tech can get back to their planned work on other vehicles ahead in the queue.
Given the sporadic and intermittent nature of EV system faults, and the critical need to retrieve error information from the faulty EV's system, perhaps this “rapid diagnostic” protocol should be standard operating practice at all dealerships.
This is a great user community and I've learned a lot over the past couple of years, so I'd appreciate any thoughts, advice and suggestions you all might have.
Thanks ...
And of course you could get one of those obd system monitors and record its result.
Perhaps you already are doing these things.
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