Electrical Defects Under Oregon Lemon Law
Electrical system failures — battery drain, module failure, warning lights — under Oregon § 646A.402.
Electrical defects are increasingly common as vehicles become more software-dependent. Oregon’s Lemon Law (§ 646A.402) covers electrical nonconformities that substantially impair use, market value, or safety.
Common electrical failure modes
- Phantom battery drain — battery dies overnight from parasitic load.
- Body Control Module (BCM) failure.
- Powertrain Control Module (PCM) failure.
- Alternator failure — premature.
- Wiring harness chafing — recall-worthy.
- Headlight / DRL failures.
- Sensor failures — recurring DTCs without root cause.
- Multi-system warning lights.
Brand-specific patterns
- Tesla 12V battery — premature failure across all models.
- Ford SYNC / MyFord Touch — module failures.
- Subaru EyeSight — sensor calibration drift (relevant for OR rain/fog exposure).
- Stellantis UConnect — module reset, audio failure.
- GM CUE / IntelliLink — touchscreen failure.
- Audi MMI / VW MIB — system lockup.
- BMW iDrive — module replacement cycles.
Why electrical defects qualify
- Cumulative attempts — diagnosing electrical issues often takes 3+ visits.
- Safety implications — many systems are safety-critical (ABS, airbag, traction control).
- Market value impairment — electrical issues plague resale value.
Oregon climate considerations
- Cold rainy winters — connector corrosion, electronics moisture intrusion.
- Coastal salt exposure — Oregon Coast salt-air corrosion.
- Wildfire smoke — HVAC and electrical exposure during summer fire season.
Documentation specifics
- All DTC codes captured — even “transient” or “history” codes.
- Parasitic-draw test results if battery drain.
- Module replacement ROs.
- Software-update logs — TCM / PCM / BCM reprograms.
- Recall documentation.
Bottom line
Electrical defects qualify under § 646A.402 when they substantially impair use, market value, or safety.
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Read →Think you've got a lemon?
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