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by brokenmachine
3577 days ago
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You can usually choose different maps with aftermarket ECUs, there's no reason you couldn't load one that passes emissions tests. I've flashed my own car's stock ECU with a tuned map, but it's easy to load the original one back on. Anyway, this is a stupid argument, I hardly think that emissions tests will be a reason you can't put an aftermarket ECU into an electric car! |
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Will it look exactly like the factory ECU? Most emissions tests now consist of plugging in a device into the OBD-II jack and ensuring the factory emissions equipment has not been tampered with. An aftermarket ECU would fail this; it's "tampering" by definition. Emissions laws generally do no allow any deviation from factory spec or factory equipment. They don't just test the actual emissions levels, and they don't test the levels at all in many places.
>Anyway, this is a stupid argument, I hardly think that emissions tests will be a reason you can't put an aftermarket ECU into an electric car!
It is stupid, because that's not what I claimed at all. One poster claimed that EVs would be too expensive to fix because of non-standard, "only-for-this-car" electronics. I pointed out that this is already true for gasoline cars, with ECUs being an example. Then someone else jumped in and claimed that aftermarket ECUs exist, when in reality they're horribly expensive and only racecars use them, so that claim was irrelevant, and then they admitted that you can just buy a junkyard ECU cheap. I pointed out that this would also be true of EVs, which was just ignored, even though it completely invalidates the argument about EVs being expensive to fix.
Face it: every car has specialized parts, especially electronics. You can't just take an ABS module from a Nissan and slap it into a Ford. You can't take a wheel bearing from an H2 and slap it into a Prius. Parts for mass-market cars have always been available from different places: dealerships for OEM parts at high prices, aftermarket parts for popular models from parts stores, junkyard parts for everything if you can find them and are OK with them being used. This will be no different for EVs; it's stupid to think it would be. And it's also stupid that several different people jumped in here with completely incoherent arguments, all so they could bash EVs.