I contacted the Montreal-area repair shop that prepared your car’s diagnosis, VE Mtl on 4th Avenue. According to Michael Tempone, director of the service department, the damage is a consequence of water infiltration that creates problems after seven or eight winters or 150,000 km. Tempone says that on the Model S, the location of the air conditioner drain allows condensation to drip onto the battery case, which is a contributing factor. The weakness is compounded by salt and slush on winter roads in eastern North America, creating ripe conditions for underbody corrosion.

The repair involves checking components, replacing or cleaning corroded parts, and protecting the battery case with a better-quality sealer. VE Mtl’s estimate to repair your vehicle is in the range of $4,000 to $5,000. If water damage has impacted modules inside the battery case, the cost can climb to $8,000.

Tempone recommends that Model S and X owners who intend to keep their vehicles for the long haul perform a complete battery reseal before the eight-year factory warranty on the batteries expires. The cost of the service is about $3,500, assuming internal parts have not sustained damage, and it should provide corrosion resistance for the remaining life of a vehicle operated in a high-corrosion environment.

Fixing a corroded Model S or X battery

Here are the steps an aftermarket repair shop specializing in battery repair takes to diagnose and fix the corrosion on a Tesla Model S or X battery pack:

  1. Disconnect the battery from the vehicle’s electrical system and remove the battery case from its mounting location.
  2. Inspect the battery case and modules to identify the areas of corrosion and determine the extent of the damage.
  3. Replace damaged components. This may involve sourcing parts like the umbrella valves, BMS motherboard and seals from a third-party supplier or a donor battery pack, or buying new replacement parts from Tesla.
  4. Remove corrosion from the battery case and restore the surface of the case using a specialized solution.
  5. Apply a protective coating to prevent future corrosion. Apply a sealant that is superior to the protection applied at the factory.
  6. Reinstall the battery pack and reconnect it to the electrical system.

Corroded EV battery packs: not just a Tesla problem

Tesla is not the only electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer experiencing issues with water infiltration or corrosion damage to battery modules or their circuitry. The Automobile Protection Association (APA) has received complaints on the Nissan Leaf as recently as the 2018 model year, and the Ford Focus EV, among others. And Toyota is currently the subject of a class action lawsuit over corrosion of the wiring connection to the rear motor on several of its hybrid models.

Side view of a Tesla Model S sedan on a driveway
The reader’s Tesla Model S

Currently, very few aftermarket shops are capable of providing the cheaper workarounds the manufacturers should have developed for their dealerships. Tempone says that the steps involved in repairing a corroded battery pack vary depending on the extent of the damage and the techniques used by the aftermarket shop.

To the APA’s knowledge, Tesla does not perform this sort of work, preferring to replace the entire battery pack after corrosion damage has degraded its performance or rendered the vehicle inoperable.

Your rights after the manufacturer’s warranty is over

In Quebec, the automaker does not have the last word on warranty coverage. The province’s Consumer Protection Act provides the following warranties, which are mandatory and cannot be limited by the automaker. These “legal warranties” apply automatically, whether or not they appear in the automaker’s documentation:

Section 37: Goods … must be fit for the purposes for which goods of that kind are ordinarily used. 

Section 38: Goods … must be durable in normal use for a reasonable length of time …

Section 53: A consumer who has entered into a contract with a merchant is entitled to exercise directly against the merchant or the manufacturer a recourse based on a latent defect in the goods forming the object of the contract, unless the consumer could have discovered the defect by an ordinary examination.

The same rule applies where there is a lack of instructions necessary for the protection of the user against a risk or danger of which he would otherwise be unaware.

The merchant or the manufacturer shall not plead that he was unaware of the defect or lack of instructions. The rights of action against the manufacturer may be exercised by any consumer who is a subsequent purchaser of the goods.

A “drip-drip-drip” water infiltration resulting from a poorly placed AC drain likely constitutes a hidden defect under the Consumer Protection Act.

George Iny

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