So as of a couple weeks ago, they were replacing a wiring harness. I went in today and discovered it's the ENTIRE wiring harness. The tech's spent a couple days so far pulling the old one out. I saw the new one laying on a table.
But before that, Zero called back and said "don't replace the wiring harness, replace this electrical module" which they had to wait for, and then that didn't work, so they're going ahead with the new harness.
And sure, Ducati can afford to give their employees nearly free used bikes. They've got enough bucks to pour down the drain on their MotoGP bike that was killing rider careers until a couple weeks ago when it finally started winning races again. Plus Ducati has the advantage of ICE where you can listen to it and go, "oh bad plug" or "the timing is off" - you flip the switch on an EV and it just doesn't go. That's the only symptom, and like a dead PC, it could be **anything**
Zero is still the student in college scraping the $3 for a McDonald's burger so he can eat today, where Ducati was 75 years ago. I'm hoping in a year or two as sales increase they can afford more tech staff.
Their salesforce portal is mostly a tool for ordering parts, filing service tickets, and a repository for PDFs like "how to install [$FOO]" but nothing approaching a coherent service manual or troubleshooting guide.
While I was in there, I showed the service manager a couple tricks for getting around in the app that he didn't know.
Oh and the service manager said "you know, he's got to be careful replacing that harness, there is still power in that battery" and I said, "yeah LOTS AND LOTS, look at the thumb size cables going to the sevcon there..."
"the sev---what?"
"er, that's the motor controller, made by sevcon"
"sevcon?"
So I told him who Sevcon are, and what other stuff uses them. Sigh.
I pointed out the charger sitting under the frame. He didn't know that either. Double sigh.