I'm sure the Leaf is a good car, but you may be taking your defence of the brand too far.
I think not, since for almost the first decade of e-cars it was by far the largest seller, yet with the least problems, especially compared to their nearest competitor Tesla and their many fires. Not only that, it was clear that the fires the Leaf suffered were often easily identified as starting in the 12 volt system under the bonnet. I'm sure that with a little thought you might realise why that should be so.
It was clear that Nissan were cautious from the beginning, always putting safety first, being content to launch with only 70 miles range and a top speed below 90mph. Then advancing carefully with small incremental improvements every two or three years.
Compare that to Tesla and another early entrant, BMW, pushing li-ion technology to the limit to claim maximums of supercar acceleration, very high top speed and hundreds of miles range and suffering the consequences. And now of course all newcomers feeling they have to do the same to compete.
Your summary of Leaf fire events shows very clearly that, with the exception of the 2015 Texas fire which as I've previously stated definitely started in the 12 volt system, they only began after the 2018 40kW model that I bought and which has largely remained blameless. That was when they introduced their biggest jump, the modification for a very high performance option using a much larger battery.
This was probably anticipating Tesla's yet to launch Model 3, that being designed to topple the Leaf from its affordability platform. Obviously a Nissan mistake, but followed by Tesla's mistake when their intended Leaf competitor finally turned out to cost at least 56% more than the Leaf at entry level.
My confidence remains as it was in 2018, that my now 7 year old Leaf and it's original battery will serve me to the end of my life or driving days, so confident that I've already paid for my cremation, knowing the Leaf won't do it for me.
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