- Joined
- Apr 19, 2023
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 91
- Reaction score
- 26
- Location
- California
- Vehicles
- 2013 Model S x 2
- Banned
- #1,021
You COMPLETELY missed my point. My POINT was that cars can have significant fire risks even if they are NOT EVs.Actually it isn't because I have the hybrid from Japan. There was some recall for the gas only versions due to some improper battery issue. Gas version has a completely different engine and source of parts. This car has only 2 recalls, neither has anything to do with the car function and it has the AGM battery.
The third article you quoted says
"The NHTSA investigation of battery fires in Toyota’s RAV4 has nothing to do with EVs, hybrids, or lithium-ion batteries."
And it said
"Improper battery installation or prior front end collision repair was a factor in the EWR Field Reports"
Which meant it had to do with a repair or change of the battery done elsewhere.
The linked NHTSA report says
"The 12V battery B+ terminal shorts to the battery hold down frame which may result in the sudden loss of electrical power, vehicle stalling, and/or a fire originating in the engine compartment."
I have an AGM battery not located in the engine compartment. So it doesn't apply, and I already read all these previously.
Also based on the IIHS insurance data from over a dozen insurance companies, my hybrid is in the mid to lower percentile for probability of non collision fire insurance claims.
In fact, EVs are the least likely to have fires (Tesla's included) of the 3 categories, hybrids being the highest of the group (makes sense, they are the most complicated, mechanically and electrically).
https://insideevs.com/news/561549/study-evs-smallest-fire-risk/
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