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by georgerobinson
2619 days ago
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I don't have any data to back this up but I would think that most cars going into the dealership network for maintenance are still under warranty; are less than 5 years old and not going in for expensive or time consuming engine work such as replacing head gaskets, belts, bearings, etc. Instead, I would think most cars going into the dealership network are either: 1. Having a part replaced under warranty because it is faulty or there is a recall 2. Having a service under a service pack or because the car is still in warranty 3. Having some kind of interior defect fixed (rattling in the cabin, infotainment issue, etc) and that these issues are still common enough in EVs that I don't expect the dealership network to change much. |
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I'm not sure if oil changes are the biggest source of profit, but they probably are the highest volume service. And those get customers in the shop for generally unnecessary upsells (like pumping cleaner into the climate control system to "flush" it? that is a scam, right?).
Marketplace's analysis: https://www.marketplace.org/2017/08/24/sustainability/whats-...
If anything, proprietary software will keep standard updates at the dealer. (Though I expect the schedule will drop way down.)