Consumer Reports shares insights about electric vehicles (EVs) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) from its latest reliability survey, including the most reliable electric car.
Quite funny that the 2020 ID.3 which got destroyed for it’s software and 12v battery issues is actually the most reliable vehicle in that statistic. Only 0.2 out of every 1000 vehicles registered. Good outlook for the other MEB cars which will get included in next years statistic.
I believe ADAC doesn’t count most software related problems reported because they are either fixable without a visit to a dealer or often end-user fault.
Consumer reports on the other hand take any reported issue, user errors included, to count toward their “reliability” scores.
That is one of the reasons Tesla has been rated so low forever. They count a software update to fix something as a reliability issue even if it doesn’t require any service visit or action on the customer’s part.
Yes, this ADAC study only counts events where “road assistance” was necessary.
Running out of fuel/electricity is also removed from the statistic (User error).
Satisfaction is scored separately and taken into the Overall Score that a car gets. Reliability score is skewered towards drivetrain over other parts of the car.
They provide details on how they score their reliability rankings. I’ll let you look it up since I’m not Google. But they state they factor in “Owner Satisfaction”, which is self-reported from vehicle owners for literally anything they have had problems with and are not limited to actual mechanical issues requiring service.
ADAC only counts reliability (i.e. how often cars actually broke down and needed to be rescued by someone else). Software problems usually don’t lead to the car being undrivable.
Quite funny that the 2020 ID.3 which got destroyed for it’s software and 12v battery issues is actually the most reliable vehicle in that statistic. Only 0.2 out of every 1000 vehicles registered. Good outlook for the other MEB cars which will get included in next years statistic.
I believe ADAC doesn’t count most software related problems reported because they are either fixable without a visit to a dealer or often end-user fault.
Consumer reports on the other hand take any reported issue, user errors included, to count toward their “reliability” scores.
That is one of the reasons Tesla has been rated so low forever. They count a software update to fix something as a reliability issue even if it doesn’t require any service visit or action on the customer’s part.
Yes, this ADAC study only counts events where “road assistance” was necessary.
Running out of fuel/electricity is also removed from the statistic (User error).
Do you have source for the claim that they count the software update as reliability issue?
https://www.consumerreports.org/cars/car-reliability-owner-satisfaction/consumer-reports-car-reliability-faq-a1099917197/
Satisfaction is scored separately and taken into the Overall Score that a car gets. Reliability score is skewered towards drivetrain over other parts of the car.
Yes, Consumer Reports.
They provide details on how they score their reliability rankings. I’ll let you look it up since I’m not Google. But they state they factor in “Owner Satisfaction”, which is self-reported from vehicle owners for literally anything they have had problems with and are not limited to actual mechanical issues requiring service.
ADAC only counts reliability (i.e. how often cars actually broke down and needed to be rescued by someone else). Software problems usually don’t lead to the car being undrivable.