jimk
Active Member
- Thread starter
- #1
Longish story, but please bear with me ...
So I've got an 1st Gen R1T. Drove it from my home in Southern Vermont to Trudeau Airport in Montreal, QC on Saturday, parking it in the main parking garage at the airport. The garage has dozens of level 2 charging stations and normally I plug in there and leave it plugged in until I fly home (which the airport encourages). But there were no charging stations when I arrived, which is the first time that's happened to me there. I figured the 21% charge my car had when I parked on Saturday late afternoon would be sufficient for the one week when I would be away, even if it lost 1% per day. Lots of other chargers in the vicinity. I leave gear guard switched off but don't put it into shipping mode, which I should have done.
Anyway, Sunday morning I flew out of Montreal to Western Canada (which is where I am now). I checked the Rivian app Sunday evening and it had gone from 21% to 20% in 24 hours which seemed normal to me. But then yesterday I get a push alert from the app telling me my battery is low and I should plug in soon. I check the app and the charge level has gone from 20% to 14% in less than 24 hours.
I call Rivian support and get a bit of tsk-tsking from them for thinking I could leave the car for a week at 21%, which, ok, fair enough. But they agree that a 6% drop in 24 hours is abnormal. After confirming I have my fob with me, they urge me to delete the app from my phone, which I do. They say they can't remotely put it into shipping mode and that there's nothing they can do for me. They agreed that it is likely the truck will be bricked by the time I get back to Montreal on Saturday night. Assuming that's what happens, they said I will need to get it towed to Rivian Service Center in Montreal for replacement of the 12V battery, which will be at my expense. It also sounds like even if the abnormal draining is due to a 12v battery failure I'lll still be on the hook for the expense because the 12v battery is only under warranty for 36k mikes and my car has over 40k. Rivian rep also said that if the 12V died because i left it unplugged for an extended period, that's also considered customer responsibility. I did have the 12V replaced once already at around 25k at Rivian's initiative as part of a service campaign but I assume the 3k warranty date is from the day I bought the car, not the date of the most revent 12V replacement.
So I'm assuming my plan when I get back to Montreal will be - and this is where I'd love for you folks to tell me if I'm misunderstanding something or if there's something I haven't thought of ...
1. Try to unlock and start the truck with the fob and if it has any range at all, get it to the closest charging station I can as quickly as I can. If any of the charging stations in the garage are open, they are literally on the same level of the garage, so we are talking a couple hundred meters at most. Other closest options are within a mile away.
2. If I can't start or unlock with the fob, I'll get roadside assistance to try to jump the 12V. My understanding is that there is a chance that after a jump I will have enough range to get to a nearby charger. But it may just be that all the jump accomplishes is that the doors can be opened and the truck put in neutral for a tow.
3. If I can't put it into drive after the jump, I'll presumably need to have it to have it towed to the Montreal service center and they will have to replace both of the 12v batteries at a cost to me of US$700-1000. Does that sound correct?
Am I missing anything or getting anything wrong here? If you really need to tell me I'm an idiot and I should have parked it at a higher state of charge, get it out of your system if you must, but I am already aware and feeling plenty foolish as it is. Do I have any reason to hope the car will be drivable for a mile or so to a charger when I get back to Montreal?
Many thanks in advance for your advice ...
So I've got an 1st Gen R1T. Drove it from my home in Southern Vermont to Trudeau Airport in Montreal, QC on Saturday, parking it in the main parking garage at the airport. The garage has dozens of level 2 charging stations and normally I plug in there and leave it plugged in until I fly home (which the airport encourages). But there were no charging stations when I arrived, which is the first time that's happened to me there. I figured the 21% charge my car had when I parked on Saturday late afternoon would be sufficient for the one week when I would be away, even if it lost 1% per day. Lots of other chargers in the vicinity. I leave gear guard switched off but don't put it into shipping mode, which I should have done.
Anyway, Sunday morning I flew out of Montreal to Western Canada (which is where I am now). I checked the Rivian app Sunday evening and it had gone from 21% to 20% in 24 hours which seemed normal to me. But then yesterday I get a push alert from the app telling me my battery is low and I should plug in soon. I check the app and the charge level has gone from 20% to 14% in less than 24 hours.
I call Rivian support and get a bit of tsk-tsking from them for thinking I could leave the car for a week at 21%, which, ok, fair enough. But they agree that a 6% drop in 24 hours is abnormal. After confirming I have my fob with me, they urge me to delete the app from my phone, which I do. They say they can't remotely put it into shipping mode and that there's nothing they can do for me. They agreed that it is likely the truck will be bricked by the time I get back to Montreal on Saturday night. Assuming that's what happens, they said I will need to get it towed to Rivian Service Center in Montreal for replacement of the 12V battery, which will be at my expense. It also sounds like even if the abnormal draining is due to a 12v battery failure I'lll still be on the hook for the expense because the 12v battery is only under warranty for 36k mikes and my car has over 40k. Rivian rep also said that if the 12V died because i left it unplugged for an extended period, that's also considered customer responsibility. I did have the 12V replaced once already at around 25k at Rivian's initiative as part of a service campaign but I assume the 3k warranty date is from the day I bought the car, not the date of the most revent 12V replacement.
So I'm assuming my plan when I get back to Montreal will be - and this is where I'd love for you folks to tell me if I'm misunderstanding something or if there's something I haven't thought of ...
1. Try to unlock and start the truck with the fob and if it has any range at all, get it to the closest charging station I can as quickly as I can. If any of the charging stations in the garage are open, they are literally on the same level of the garage, so we are talking a couple hundred meters at most. Other closest options are within a mile away.
2. If I can't start or unlock with the fob, I'll get roadside assistance to try to jump the 12V. My understanding is that there is a chance that after a jump I will have enough range to get to a nearby charger. But it may just be that all the jump accomplishes is that the doors can be opened and the truck put in neutral for a tow.
3. If I can't put it into drive after the jump, I'll presumably need to have it to have it towed to the Montreal service center and they will have to replace both of the 12v batteries at a cost to me of US$700-1000. Does that sound correct?
Am I missing anything or getting anything wrong here? If you really need to tell me I'm an idiot and I should have parked it at a higher state of charge, get it out of your system if you must, but I am already aware and feeling plenty foolish as it is. Do I have any reason to hope the car will be drivable for a mile or so to a charger when I get back to Montreal?
Many thanks in advance for your advice ...
Sponsored