02-24-2021, 01:45 AM | #1 |
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Hv batt S box
So, after having the drivetrain fault come a few times after car sitting for 10 days, put a 12v battery in it. Was ok for a while then drivetrain fault again.... tilt tray to dealer and they replaced the ac water heater and its cable . get the car back and it faulted out again
Took it back and they want to check hv battery, ok still has warranty for hv batt. So they take it out and decide the S box in the battery is the problem. By the way, this is in Thailand and the car us Uk import So now the s box component of the hv battery is not covered by the hv battery warranty....WTF We're having a bit of an ongoimg conversation regarding bullshit but i think uk law protects me from their misinterpretation of the warranty. Anyone had this crap pulled on them before ? Its only a couple of thousand to fix and really just want the car back but u suspect it will fault out again when it does. |
03-02-2021, 06:50 AM | #3 | |
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Yes, the SME module is not covered by the high voltage battery warranty. My friend evapors on YouTube had his car towed to the dealer because his parking brake module failed. When it got there, they saw a check engine light (that was not on when he sent it to BMW) and they found the SME module inside the high voltage battery enclosure failed, so they dropped the enclosure and replaced it. They couldn't get it programmed, so BMW in Germany remotely connected to their dealership and they couldn't get it programmed to the car, either. So, they tried a 2nd module. Still failed. So they told him they needed to replace all the battery wiring. That didn't fix the problem, either. So they tested each battery module and decided maybe the HV battery was the issue. Those modules were replaced under warranty. The cost to him for the other parts and labor was $5,000 USD. The car was at the dealer for 20 weeks. He sold it a couple weeks after he got it back because he doesn't trust that another component on the car will set him back even more money and time.
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03-02-2021, 08:14 PM | #4 | |
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The most consistent thing i see is 12v hattery down to 11.9 when faults are present and pops back to 14.3 when cleared... Now AG says all to be covered by hv batt warranrty, yay. It would seem they know they would run foul of uk consumer law so now everything inside hv batt housing is covered |
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03-27-2021, 07:11 PM | #5 |
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I've had similar experience in that when the error occurs the voltage is 12.7 but when the error is not there it is 14.3 ..like yours. I somehow assume this is because the error shuts off the HV battery from charging the the 12v.
When you say 'AG says all to be covered.." who is AG? I would have liked it if my local dealer in Trinidad would even look at the car.. but they refuse! since they haven't brought in any electrics as yet. I'm still hoping to change a cell supervising circuit and see if this works.. but I know pulling down this battery train will not be easy.. particularly with those cooling lines! |
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03-30-2021, 08:44 AM | #7 | |
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03-30-2021, 09:00 AM | #8 | |
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how many miles on cars with this issue? And age, please.
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we should start a sticky thread for this issue, so people can chime in as it escalates--or does not escalate--and figure out if its a lemon problem, or a certainty that all i8s will face, down the road. for example: With the HPFP (high pressure fuel pump) issue on the E66 760Li, we at first thought it was miles, only, since the the cars were newer. People with 10 year old cars that started to crest 100-130k miles or more, suddenly popped up with the issue--and they all eventually developed it. Then, as they got older, I bought a 2004 with 59k miles in 2018. It had the issue the moment I got it home. So, it was also age that caused a cheap diaphragm in the $2500 pump (there are two pumps + labor) to go bad and split or get a hole in it and leak gas into your throttle body. The pump is special and only made for the 760Li (V12 motor only) and the Rolls Royce. why is this important? because it would brick the cars and make people want to sell them. Just like this issue is starting to do. I'm not saying we can DIY this problem, but on my first HPFP failure, I sent a used pump to a DI fuel pump expert in Canada, who tore it down and figured out it was in perfect shape--except for a diaphragm that Bosch would NOT sell us. So I set about figuring out how to replace the diaphragm with used parts from Audi and VW Bosch Diesel TDI pumps from Europe, since there was nothing like it in the U.S. Now, we have board members making inexpensive replacement diaphragms out of material they can get from Continental. And dozens of copy-cat videos (of my original video) of how to repair the pumps. by the time I bought the low-miles 760li, I had confidence I could contact my forum pal, buy some diaphragms, and get the car back on the road for $100. It might be possible to encourage a 3rd party company to help figure this out. Like Gruber. any pathology information we can gather is very important, please. Last edited by mws; 03-30-2021 at 10:16 AM.. |
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