There was a time, not so long ago, when hitting debris on the highway was a minor inconvenience, a bent rim, a cracked oil pan, maybe a chunk of aluminum embedded in your undertray. You’d pull over, curse the Department of Transportation, throw a wrench or two, and be back on the road after a weekend in the garage with a six-pack and some elbow grease.
When Road Debris Leads to Expensive EV Repairs
But in the electric era, when a 4,000-pound techno-pod glides silently over pavement with a lithium heart beating beneath, the stakes are wildly different. What once cost a couple hundred bucks and a few swear words now threatens to write a five-figure check and throw a wrench into the entire green-car utopia we’ve been sold.
"My wife passed over metal can in highway with her new Tesla 3 2025 , Tesla told me that i need to change the whole battery , i am disappointed that battery is not protected with any metal. Insurance told me they will cover repairs in Tesla certified garages only not Tesla itself ,
Any thoughts about certified garages , i am in Montreal ?
** These photos in Tesla service center after they towed there , they told they will send me the estimate tomorrow to replace the whole battery , There is Battery Coolant Leak as well.
That’s the reality of owning an electric vehicle in 2025, a reality wrapped in laminated spec sheets and sold with the aroma of progress. One metal can on a Quebec highway, and suddenly, you're looking at a full battery replacement, not a patch job.
$15K+ Costs and the New Reality for EV Owners
Not because the car exploded in a lithium-fueled inferno, but because the underbody battery pack, the core of the vehicle, was compromised. There’s a coolant leak and a dented casing, and now a tech at a Tesla-certified shop is running the numbers on what’s likely a $15,000-plus ordeal. Welcome to the age of plug-in fragility.
Back in the days of crankshafts and cam lobes, this would've been a two-hundred-dollar problem. Maybe you cracked the oil pan, maybe you dripped some oil onto the driveway, maybe you cursed your luck. But the fix was surgical, targeted, and rooted in decades of mechanical logic.
From $200 Fixes to $15K Replacements
Not anymore. Now, a stray soda can trigger a cascade of diagnostics and a full battery swap, as though the only acceptable solution is total organ replacement. It’s the kind of overreaction you’d expect from a bureaucratic health insurance plan, not a modern car company. More troubling still is the environmental contradiction.
Essential EV Battery Insights: Longevity, Warranty, and Replacement Costs
- Electric vehicle (EV) batteries are designed to last between 15 and 20 years under optimal conditions, depending on the manufacturer.
- Most automakers offer warranties covering EV batteries for 8 years or 100,000 miles, ensuring coverage against significant degradation or defects during this period.
- Over time, EV batteries may experience reduced capacity, leading to decreased driving range. Signs of degradation include diminished range and longer charging times. Replacing an EV battery can be costly, ranging from $5,000 to $20,000, depending on the vehicle model and battery size.
The electric car was pitched as a beacon of sustainability. But where’s the sustainability in replacing an entire battery pack over minor underbody damage? That’s 1,000 pounds of lithium, nickel, copper, and rare earth materials heading for either an industrial refurbish plant, or worse, a landfill. It’s a wasteful response to what should be a routine repair. The absence of proper underbody shielding, no steel plate, no sacrificial panel, nothing, feels like negligence disguised as engineering efficiency. A few millimeters of aluminum could’ve prevented this mess entirely.
How Bureaucracy Drives Up EV Repair Expenses
Of course, it doesn’t end there. The insurance labyrinth adds insult to injury. Tesla won’t perform the work unless the insurer signs off, and the insurer won’t cover Tesla’s own shops, only third-party “certified” garages that often lack full access to proprietary repair tools and diagnostics. The result is a bureaucratic standoff while the car sits lifeless in a garage bay somewhere in Montreal. The owner is left pacing between adjusters and service advisors, fighting not just a coolant leak but the opaque policies of an automaker that seems allergic to its own customers.
The Growing Pains of the Electrified Auto Industry
This isn’t a Tesla-only issue, it’s systemic. It’s the growing pains of an industry sprinting toward electrification without considering the mechanical realities of daily life. EVs are marketed like smartphones, but roads are not sanitized Apple Store floors. They’re littered with cans, rocks, potholes, and the occasional rogue muffler. Until manufacturers harden their designs and rethink the “replace, don’t repair” philosophy, these small incidents will continue to balloon into headline-worthy disasters. It’s not that EVs are inherently flawed, it’s that they’ve been built for the showroom, not the street.
The Paradox of EV Sustainability and Fragility
And therein lies the central contradiction of the modern EV: A promise of progress wrapped in fragility. Tesla and its peers need to learn something ICE cars figured out decades ago, real-world durability matters. People don’t drive in controlled environments. They drive through snow, gravel, city filth, and yes, even over metal cans. And when a $200 oil pan fix becomes a $17,000 battery replacement, it’s not just a repair issue, it’s a design failure. Until that changes, every soda can on the highway is a reminder that the road to sustainability is still full of potholes.
Noah Washington is an automotive journalist based in Atlanta, Georgia. He enjoys covering the latest news in the automotive industry and conducting reviews on the latest cars. He has been in the automotive industry since 15 years old and has been featured in prominent automotive news sites. You can reach him on X and LinkedIn for tips and to follow his automotive coverage.
Comments
Come on, it wasn't a soda…
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Come on, it wasn't a soda can. News writers should do better than this. Your bias is very visible.
Yup! Huge bias showing…
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In reply to Come on, it wasn't a soda… by Bryan Simmons (not verified)
Yup! Huge bias showing. Suggesting that an entire EV battery would ever go to a landfill is incredibly dishonest. The cost is high because Tesla is swapping the whole thing out (fast) and then location the damage and "surgically" fixing it as the article tries to say can't be done with EVs. That battery pack will end up swapped into another car. The article leans into battery degradation despite all current research showing EV batteries lasting 40% longer than the manufacturers estimates. 20 years becomes 28 years, 10 years becomes 14. The average ICE car lifespan is 14 years. How is a battery pack that outlives an entire ICE car a worrisome thing? Only if you buy into oil propaganda and Fox fear-mongering. That said, Elon's obvious hand motions are a perfectly valid reason to avoid the Neo-Volkswagens of 'Merica.
Average ice car does not…
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In reply to Yup! Huge bias showing… by Zooxia (not verified)
Average ice car does not last 14 years there's a bunch of cars from late 90s early 2000s that are still on the street running strong, I have a 1990 Toyota pickup that has everything factory except the starter that gave out 2 years ago. My girl drives an 07 Yaris that still has excellent has mileage and with regular maintenance it can go for a long time.
You understand the idea of …
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In reply to Average ice car does not… by Alejandro Martinez (not verified)
You understand the idea of "average" vs. your own personal experiences right?
Lol! I only drive toyota. I…
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In reply to Average ice car does not… by Alejandro Martinez (not verified)
Lol! I only drive toyota. I had a Corolla that, at 611K km, finally went to the scrap yard only because it was T-boned by a lexus.
I typically buy 1999 to 2004 Toyota Corollas. Barring the leak from the timing chain cover and the inevitable check engine light from the evap canister, they are mechanically sound and cheap to maintain.
More to the point, even if there was a hole punched in the oil pan cover, you can still drive the thing!
Whether it's going to a…
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In reply to Yup! Huge bias showing… by Zooxia (not verified)
Whether it's going to a landfill or not, he's paying $5-20K for a new battery. You can get a used car for that. Lol There're many stories like this out there dating back to the beginning of EVs. This is not a new issue. People fail to do proper research and just go with the newest cool thing. 😀 My car came with an Aluminum undershield standard, and it's a cheapish car.
No one said a soda can, they…
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In reply to Come on, it wasn't a soda… by Bryan Simmons (not verified)
No one said a soda can, they said a metal can, a paint can came to mind for me. I remember 15 to 20 years ago I had a plastic hubcap fly off a car and cut right through my lumina front bumper cover, split it right in 2. I can see a pint metal paint can doing that kind of damage at the certain speeds.
I am sorry to tell you that…
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In reply to No one said a soda can, they… by John (not verified)
I am sorry to tell you that you should reread the article more closely. At one point e.hw did say exactly that. He specifically said a soda can. I think he said it that way to make a point, but he dud specifically say Soda can.
Are EVs sustainable?
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Are EVs sustainable?
I think the Author is really…
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I think the Author is really downplaying this accident. A "Soda Can". I guarantee it wasn't a Soda Can. I have also read stories of Gas Powered Vehicles running over metal objects and it split opened the Gasoline Tank, caught on fire, and all Occupants were killed. You can't downplay running over a metal object on the road. Extremely dangerous. I'm glad your Wife is okay.
They're not sure what caused…
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In reply to I think the Author is really… by Thomas Wehmeyer (not verified)
They're not sure what caused the damage, some commenters agree that it wasn't a metal can.
Open your eyes this is a…
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In reply to I think the Author is really… by Thomas Wehmeyer (not verified)
Open your eyes this is a Tesla, that's the company that is the most corrupt car manufacturer in America. Their workers are trained to use any excuse to get the most $ out of a car repair. And that means they go straight for the battery pack cause it's good for 15k-20k.
Wow, I just realized that…
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Wow, I just realized that torque news is so anti Musk.
Torque News is not ani Musk…
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In reply to Wow, I just realized that… by Arman (not verified)
Torque News is not ani Musk. In fact, I am the editor of Torque News and I do support what Elon Musk and the president Trump are doing to improve life in the United States and in the world.
Thanks for letting us know…
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In reply to Torque News is not ani Musk… by Armen Hareyan
Thanks for letting us know that you as the editor of Torque news specifically told us that you support what Elon Musk and Donald Trump are doing to the American people, Canada and the rest of the world.
I really don't care that…
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In reply to Thanks for letting us know… by Im-out (not verified)
I really don't care that Elon is the one looking for waste, corruption ir out rite fraud and theft. I am however glad someone is finally trying to rout out all of this and anything else to bring down our unsustainable inflated budget. I have fir years dug into the congressmen and wemon as well as our senators. So many Simon money off to friends and family. Like the senator that just ranted in Sunday show about an unelected person digging into all thus. Well it come to light his wife has been getting millions and millions pointed to her nonprofit companies by her husband fir decades. I think I added it up to a total of almost half a billion over the years. These monies had no requirement of showing where the monies went. So no accountability.
Then the judge that is throwing a fit about the planes nit being stopped in rout to El Salvador. He should not be involved in this subject at all due to conflicts of interest. His daughter is a lawyer that gives advise to people on how to prevent being deported. She also was representing some and in the process of trying to represent others if the illegals o. Those planes. Also the only person that has the power to inactive the seldom ysed law he was using to get those people out of our country is our President. And he does not have to declare war, he only has to publicly announce or state that a specific group of people or organization is invading, involved in an incursion ior is suspected of being associated with an organization to inactive that specific law. No judge has the authority to interfere with acts undertaken in this area.
So I respect the editor for being bold enough to state he supports the actions being undertaken to make our country more financially and securely safer.
Good to know, sir! I am no…
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In reply to Torque News is not ani Musk… by Armen Hareyan
Good to know, sir! I am no longer at Torque reader as of now.
No "soda can" did that.
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No "soda can" did that.
He didn't specify what…
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In reply to No "soda can" did that. by Bone (not verified)
He didn't specify what caused the damage.
When are you people going to…
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In reply to He didn't specify what… by Noah Washington
When are you people going to learn to stop buying these EVS that are being forced on us by the government saying that this is the future whether we like it or not all these things are is overpriced junk regular batteries three to four hundred dollars now they're $15,000 to replace wake up dummies.
EVs can be good cars. But…
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In reply to When are you people going to… by Floyd Smith (not verified)
EVs can be good cars. But when they're bad, they're VERY BAD.
Yes he did. It was even…
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In reply to He didn't specify what… by Noah Washington
Yes he did. It was even hyperlinked...
"Not anymore. Now, a stray soda can..."
A soda can did that? Well I…
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In reply to No "soda can" did that. by Bone (not verified)
A soda can did that? Well I have a bridge to sell you !!!
Lefty winger trying to sound…
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Lefty winger trying to sound like a tough guy is hilarious.
"Hit some road debris, then throw a wrench or two and be on my way." Hahaha, ya right.
Maybe the lefty can explain what happens when thousands of ICE cars a year drive into a few feet of water and destroy their engines.
Ya, didn't think so.
If leftys are considered…
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In reply to Lefty winger trying to sound… by Steven Heagstedt (not verified)
If leftys are considered weak or less "manish", rightys must be buffons...clearly. btw i thought rightys only liked gas guzzolers. You are in the wrong article bud.
I should think the car…
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I should think the car insurance would cover this. It was a collision after all.
Insurance did cover it.
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In reply to I should think the car… by Steve Horne (not verified)
Insurance did cover it.
That's awful and makes me a…
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That's awful and makes me a bit nervous. Were you being serious when you said it was a soda can? I sure hope not because there's no way on Earth a soda can could cause that kind of damage. It would have had to be something much stronger than that to break through. If that's the only thing you know was hot do you think it could have happened some other time and you just didn't realize it?
Tesla's are junk too cheap…
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Tesla's are junk too cheap to put a metal skid plate instead of plastic.
It is metal I believe.
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In reply to Tesla's are junk too cheap… by Dang (not verified)
It is metal I believe.
Pagination