FYI, Since MMNA hides all email contacts on their website, I'm sending the following by snailmail.
Mitsubishi Motors N.A.
PO Box 689040
Franklin, TN 37068
Attn: Customer Relations
I have purchased a total of three Mitsubishi i-MiEVs, two of them brand new from your dealer in Auburn, WA. I bought them largely because of the obviously more durable battery design than the Nissan Leaf, which has been amply proven by now. However, I take exception to the following statement on your website.
Do electric car batteries need to be replaced?
Batteries in electric or hybrid vehicles are designed to last the lifespan of the vehicle, but battery capacity can be reduced over time, especially if they aren’t being properly charged or stored. Mitsubishi provides a 10-year/100,000-mile limited warranty for its Main Drive Lithium-ion battery.
This is patently false, as the battery on my first i-MiEV fell below 80% of initial capacity at 106,000 miles, when the rest of the car was in excellent condition. I expect a quality Japanese drivetrain to last at least 300.000 miles. However, ten years after release, during a span in which the cost of lithium batteries of all types has fallen by over 82%, the quoted price of a replacement 16 kwh battery hasn’t budged a penny, still at over $15,000. I’ve resorted to replacing the batteries myself from collision- salvage vehicles, and I am now doing so on the third car.
As there are still i-MiEV cars under warranty and Mitsubishi recently announced a production restart for the MiniCab MiEV that shares this battery, it makes no sense to price replacement batteries so prohibitively. If Mitsubishi were an innovative company that supports its early adopters, you would offer not just stock replacement batteries at a reasonable price, but also capacity upgrades, as the third-party aftermarket finally has in Australia. Until such time as Mitsubishi offers reasonably priced replacement parts, I will not purchase another Mitsubishi or any electric vehicle other than TESLA, as they are the only manufacturer offering capacity upgrades on out-of-warranty vehicles.
I would appreciate a response.