Of course Mitsubishi bungled the marketing of I-MiEV and blew the potential of Outlander PHEV in the US market, but at least the vehicle reliability and durability has been superb. Other corporations with lesser designs are compounding their shortcomings with poor handling of warranty and recall issues. GM’s initial response to the Bolt fires, Chrysler’s stop-sale only one week after launching the Pacifica Hybrid, and Ford’s failing Mach-E contactors come to mind, but my current source of amusement is KIA.
I bought a used SOUL EV betting on being able to exercise the battery warranty, due to their selection of a LiPo battery and allowing DCFC at very high amps all the way up to 94%. So, after 83k miles, my SOUL SOH was only 65% and I turned it in for battery replacement, getting an Enterprise rental in return. KIA refused to lend me a new EV6 (of course), and wouldn’t EVen attempt to line up another used SOUL EV, so they’re paying Enterprise $57/day for my use of a Grand Cherokee, probably for at least 6 months! Now that I’m finishing up a 2300 mile family road trip, I’ll see if they’re willing to pay, say $45/day to let me find my own solution, as I’ll mainly park this 23 mpg hostage until the SOUL is restored in another 6-8 months. A fellow SOUL EV owner finally got his battery after a nearly 9 month wait, and the rental bill to KIA was over $11k!!
The initial response to letting me find my own substitute vehicle was that I could submit receipts and apply for reimbursement after I get the SOUL back, but no guarantees!!
I bought a used SOUL EV betting on being able to exercise the battery warranty, due to their selection of a LiPo battery and allowing DCFC at very high amps all the way up to 94%. So, after 83k miles, my SOUL SOH was only 65% and I turned it in for battery replacement, getting an Enterprise rental in return. KIA refused to lend me a new EV6 (of course), and wouldn’t EVen attempt to line up another used SOUL EV, so they’re paying Enterprise $57/day for my use of a Grand Cherokee, probably for at least 6 months! Now that I’m finishing up a 2300 mile family road trip, I’ll see if they’re willing to pay, say $45/day to let me find my own solution, as I’ll mainly park this 23 mpg hostage until the SOUL is restored in another 6-8 months. A fellow SOUL EV owner finally got his battery after a nearly 9 month wait, and the rental bill to KIA was over $11k!!
The initial response to letting me find my own substitute vehicle was that I could submit receipts and apply for reimbursement after I get the SOUL back, but no guarantees!!