It is becoming increasingly clear that electric vehicles are the future of vehicles. But who’s going to fix them when they break down?
The world’s greatest grease monkey (as a mechanical dunderhead I use that term with respect and admiration) can’t do much if your electric car’s battery management system fails. That’s a concern which is starting to resonate with industry, including the folks in New Hampshire who train tomorrow’s auto mechanics.
“Tesla reached out to us,” said Marc Bellerose, chair of the automotive technology department at Manchester Community College. “They were looking, just like everyone else, to bring new technicians into their industry.”
Last week, this question brought 22 teachers from high school auto-tech programs around the state to Nashua Community College, one of several state community colleges that train auto technicians (Concord’s NHTI is not one of them).
As part of continuing education to keep their certification, the teachers had classroom work; checked out a Mustang Mach-E, Ford’s first entry into the battery-electric market; looked at the stripped-down Switch Lab electric vehicle used for training; and talked about life once engine oil changes are a thing of the past.
“For five years out, maybe 10, I don’t see it changing,” said Scott Mayotte, who teaches auto technology at the Concord Regional Tech Center at Concord High School.
That’s partly because the introductory classes of tech training have to spend their time on the basics starting with “righty-tighty, lefty-loosey,” and partly because they have to teach about current systems that will remain no matter what, such as suspension, brakes, lights and steering. Also, every internal-combustion vehicle sold today is going to need a mechanic for its working life; our roads won’t be EV-only for decades.
But the biggest problem may be that it takes specialized equipment and training to work on electric-car batteries as compared to traditional low-voltage auto electronics.
All auto-tech classes already teach safety around high-voltage electronics because of hybrid cars, but those classes don’t go much beyond telling students what not to touch. The Switch Lab training car, which is used in some high school courses, is more hands-on but has a specialized battery design that keeps it below 60 volts.
Nashua Community College is in the process of assessing how it should alter curriculum and courses to train electric-vehicle mechanics, which also involves how to integrate this future technology into all their other departments.
“We want their log files for database analysis,” said Prof. Betsy Gamrat, who coordinates Computer Science and Web Engineering & Computing Sciences at NCC, gesturing at an electric car.
Cars are an interesting challenge for wannabe software developers, she said, because failure can be life-threatening.
Part of the issue of electrification of motors is that it will speed up the pace at which cars become mobile computers. As the recent computer chip shortage has shown, even gas guzzlers depend on dozens of modules, each basically a small computer, to control everything from engine operation to pollution control to audio systems. Auto mechanics won’t have to be programmers but they will need skills more often found in the I.T. department.
“The students are not writing code, but they do reprogram the computers on the car,” said Bellerose. “If you replace a transmission, you have to go to the programming procedures for its computers – they have to be set back to zero, if you will, so it knows that this is a new transmission. … You’re a software user and an installer.”
Electric mobility is going to redefine cars and trucks in ways that haven’t happened such at least the invention of the automatic transmission or the electric starter, to the point that transportation won’t be the only thing mechanics have to think about. Dealing with vehicle-to-grid technology, in which a car or truck system can power a house, is going to become part of the auto technician’s toolbox.
This is not, of course, the first time the auto industry has adjusted training due to technology. Ask starting mechanics about carburetors and you’ll probably get a blank look.
“The job hasn’t shrunk – if anything it has just expanded,” said Bellerose. “You need to know all the fundamental things you would do as a technician, and then you add more technology. . . It just keeps growing.”
David Brooks is the writer of the sci/tech column Granite Geek and blog granitegeek.org, as well as moderator of the monthly Science Cafe Concord events. He can be reached at 369-3313 or [email protected] or on Twitter @GraniteGeek.
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