Newtype311
Member
- First Name
- Aaron
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2023
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 19
- Reaction score
- 29
- Location
- Leander TX
- Vehicles
- 23 MME GT, 24 Kia EV9
- Thread starter
- #1
I just got my 23 GT back from a week at the dealer for a number of center console issues (freezing, crashes, buttons not working, etc.). I've always gotten my OTA updates no problem, but 19 different modules were out of date with 1-4 missing updates each. After those were updated the car worked normally again.
First off, through this process I learned that the car needed additional updates that were not OTA and that the vehicle can get into a state where version mismatches lead to critical instability. I'm clearly late to the party, but here I am.
Secondly, there were multiple Mach E's at the dealership that needed the same sort of update work and the technician hinted that at least one of them was out of warranty (over 50k miles) and the owner needed to decide if they wanted to spend the $2500 to get the updates. This is my concern.
Will there always be software updates that require dealership service that could potentially cost thousands of dollars? There was nothing "wrong" with the car, it just needed the latest updates essentially. This seems like the sort of thing that should only cost the service technician's hourly labor rate, at best. I can't think of another instance at the consumer level where you'd have to pay for software/firmware updates for an existing license. If this is the case, then I guess I need to start studying that FDRS DIY guide...
First off, through this process I learned that the car needed additional updates that were not OTA and that the vehicle can get into a state where version mismatches lead to critical instability. I'm clearly late to the party, but here I am.
Secondly, there were multiple Mach E's at the dealership that needed the same sort of update work and the technician hinted that at least one of them was out of warranty (over 50k miles) and the owner needed to decide if they wanted to spend the $2500 to get the updates. This is my concern.
Will there always be software updates that require dealership service that could potentially cost thousands of dollars? There was nothing "wrong" with the car, it just needed the latest updates essentially. This seems like the sort of thing that should only cost the service technician's hourly labor rate, at best. I can't think of another instance at the consumer level where you'd have to pay for software/firmware updates for an existing license. If this is the case, then I guess I need to start studying that FDRS DIY guide...
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