- High-voltage battery packs must be de-energized and insulated before structural work or welding starts.
- Paint booths heating cycles can degrade EV battery cells; temperature thresholds must be strictly monitored.
- Estimators must write labor lines for pre/post-repair scanning, safety shut-down, and battery state of health checks.
Why EV Estimating is Different
Estimating collision repairs for Electric Vehicles (EVs) goes far beyond standard cosmetic repair. High-voltage (HV) systems operating between 400V and 800V pose severe shock and electrocution risks to technicians if not handled correctly. Consequently, estimators must write distinct safety and procedural lines into every EV estimate to protect personnel and ensure vehicle structural integrity.
Important EV Labor Steps to Include in Estimates
To produce an insurance-compliant, safe EV repair plan, your estimate must include specific OEM-mandated steps. Omitted steps represent lost revenue and, more importantly, liability exposure:
- Pre-Repair Diagnostic Scan: Reading all system codes to check battery pack cell status and high-voltage isolation fault history.
- High-Voltage De-Energizing (Power Down): The labor required for a certified technician to disable the HV system using the service plug or fuse disconnect under insulated conditions.
- HV Battery Removal/Shielding: MSOs must document if welding or pulling operations are close enough to the battery to require full removal or specialized safety shielding.
- State of Health (SOH) Evaluation: Post-repair analysis of the battery condition to verify that no collision forces caused structural or cell degradation in the pack.
Baking Cycle Temperature Safety
A critical consideration during EV refinishing is the paint baking booth cycle. Most lithium-ion EV battery packs have a maximum exposure temperature threshold. Exceeding this threshold can lead to cell degradation or, in worst-case scenarios, thermal runaway.
| OEM Manufacturer | Max Temperature Limit | Max Allowable Booth Duration | Mandated Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla (Model 3/Y/S/X) | 140°F (60°C) | 45 Minutes | Monitor pack temperature via scan tool |
| Ford (Mustang Mach-E) | 122°F (50°C) | 60 Minutes | Remove HV Battery if booth exceeds limits |
| General Motors (Lyriq/Hummer) | 140°F (60°C) | 40 Minutes | De-energize system, track cell temps |
OEM-Specific Estimating Guidance
Every EV manufacturer has distinct guidelines. For instance, Tesla requires structural adhesive curing parameters that are quite different from Rivian's aluminum frame segment requirements. Estimators must consult the specific OEM workshop manual for every vehicle to verify that the repair methods conform to certified standards.