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adrian678 t1_iw6bmd3 wrote

Long term reputation, cost, which is taken into account by potential buyers. Sooner than later people will be able to check which battery techs are more reliable than others and choose the car based on that.

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BabySinister t1_iwc8vms wrote

But in the end all batteries fail and getting it replaced is incredibly expensive to the point that by then the resale value hurts the viability of replacing the battery.

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adrian678 t1_iwc9wxy wrote

That's partially true, it really depends. If customers and governments allow car manufacturers to abuse the market then this will happen. If governments create incentives and a legal ground for manufacturers to behave, it won't happen.

Cars could have much longer lifespans since they don't have too many moving parts and battery is the single most important point of failure that matters long term.

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BabySinister t1_iwcg2tk wrote

Right now globally most car manufacturers already succeeded in making repairs to their product a franchise deal, with proprietary connectors and software that locks the car down over minor issues. I don't have any faith that consumers will be able to hold back the obvious issues we're going to see in a couple of years when EV's are no longer mostly leased and batteries run out.

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