ScooterAsheville
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Scooter
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2025
- Threads
- 14
- Messages
- 647
- Reaction score
- 1,453
- Location
- Asheville, NC
- Vehicles
- Maverick, Volvo
- Thread starter
- #1
This isn't trolling. I'm genuinely curious. You guys who are far better "wrenchers" than me, educate me please.
Some of you guys aggressively complain that nobody can fix anything in 2026. I get that. OEMs are increasingly locking us out of certain systems (especially software). Along with that complaint, you're saying that you willl be able to easily repair your Slate.
I contemplated this. I'm no mechanic, but over 50 years of owning automobiles I've done my share of work. My earliest memory is setting the timing on my VW Bus with a wire, a flashlight bulb, a screwdriver, and a very strange counterculture maintenance manual. But I keep coming back to a question I cannot answer - what will you be repairing on your Slate that you cannot repair on, say, a Ford UEV truck?
Thanks guys. I'm really curious. I've been struggling to understand these threads. Educate me please!
Some of you guys aggressively complain that nobody can fix anything in 2026. I get that. OEMs are increasingly locking us out of certain systems (especially software). Along with that complaint, you're saying that you willl be able to easily repair your Slate.
I contemplated this. I'm no mechanic, but over 50 years of owning automobiles I've done my share of work. My earliest memory is setting the timing on my VW Bus with a wire, a flashlight bulb, a screwdriver, and a very strange counterculture maintenance manual. But I keep coming back to a question I cannot answer - what will you be repairing on your Slate that you cannot repair on, say, a Ford UEV truck?
- Brakes? Well the narrative from the BEV world is that BEV brakers never need fixing. Because regenerative braking makes pads last forever.
- The battery system? I can't see a backyard mechanic maintaining a battery system. In fact, some modern battery packs are cell-to-pack, which means they are 100% not maintainable by anyone. Modular packs are maintainable, but wow - you are "da man" if you're going to disassemble and repair a high voltage automobile battery pack. OTOH, "Rich Rebuilds" does it.
- The high voltage electronics? Maybe? If you can access it and have significant experience in repairing high voltage circuit boards. Which I expect most backyard mechanics don't. Don't make a mistake, because those units can thousands of dollars.
- The battery cooling system? Yea, I could see that. It's usually just a water-glycol mix.
- The HVAC? I bet you could maintain that.
- The software? Here I know a bit, as a retired software engineer. It's a false narrative to say Slate has no software. It's filled with software. Almost every powered function on the vehicle involves software. The HVAC is software. If you get power windows, that's a module with software. ABS brakes are software. BMS is software. Stability control (one would hope Slate has it) is software. Signalling lights are software. And guys, most of that software is a black box owned by a supplier. Even Slate can't repair it. Slate just sees an API on the CAN bus.
- Wheels and tires? Yea, I bet you can maintain those.
- Bulbs and lights? Yea, I bet you can maintain those.
- Cabin air filters? I'm guessing Slate does not have one.
- Transmission? On a BEV it is a reduction gear. And they usually last the lifetime of the BEV.
- Suspension components? Yea, I could see fixing those in the garage.
- The Slate app? I suppose maybe if they open source it?
- mechanical things like roll up windows and manual door locks, hinges, etc? Yea, I can see that.
Thanks guys. I'm really curious. I've been struggling to understand these threads. Educate me please!