Grumpycat
Veteran Member
Fantasy.Nice try.
You can’t take an overall statistic you scalped off the net and infer it to a specific circumstance of being parked in a garage…where it could “burn the house down”.
Ice vehicles very rarely self combust, sitting parked in a garage.
Battery vehicles on the other hand, are connected to high amperage power, being charged in the garage, which raises the odds of starting a house fire considerably.
The EV isn’t even on the biggest circuit in the house. But it is new and scary!
Clearly you have forgotten how combustible gasoline is? Why diesel is the military battlefield fuel?
Again, where are the facts of EVs burning homes? Statistics. Not the, “I’m a genius I thought about it, no real experience but I thought about it and am a genius so I know!”
Just over 10 years ago Tesla made a software change to the Model S charging which upset a few users. It monitored the quality of the connection and greatly lowered the charging current fearing a bad connection.
Where are these house fires?

Tesla is vindicated over fire after salvaged car buyer reveals video showing how fire originated
Tesla has been vindicated after a Model Y was wrongly blamed for a fire that happened earlier this year in...

“This particular fire is currently under investigation and no cause has been officially announced. Back in 2019, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said no to a petition asking for an in-depth, formal investigation of the Tesla battery management software, in order to find a link between recently updated software and the battery fire issue.”
“However, the NHTSA said no, partly because most complaints about this came from outside the United States - the fires seemed much more common in China than in the US and they seemed to be most common among vehicles that were frequently fast charged and then quickly discharged, although no actual link was ever established.”
So, the NHTSA doesn’t see any elevated risk?