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This Tesla Model S arrived with a ghost in the machine. It would start intermittently, but when it failed, it threw a trio of terrifying codes: BMS_w126 (Blind Mate), BMS_w036, and BMS_w008. Two Tesla Service Centers and an independent EV specialist couldn't find the fault because it was intermittent—the car would "behave" as soon as it got to the shop. They were looking for loose connectors, replaced Harnesses, but we suspect an BMS failure now. I deployed my custom ESP32 4-channel voltage logger. While the "pro" tools only show you a snapshot or run out of Memory over long durations, my logger can catch the exact moment the BMS logic "goes blind" to its own High Voltage Interlock Loop (HVIL). What’s happening in Part 1: The "Ghost" Symptom: Why an intermittent HVIL fault is so hard to catch. The Backstory: 3 professional shops, 0 permanent fixes. The Strategy: Using high-speed data logging over days to monitor the loop in real-time. The Capture: Catching the loop breaking at the Battery Management System (BMS). Coming up in Part 2: We’re dropping the pack. I’ll show you the teardown, the BMS board replacement, and the "BMS Restore" procedure required to get this Model S back on the road. #TeslaRepair #BMS_w126 #HVILFault #TeslaDiagnostics #ESP32 #ADS1115 #ModelS #ElectricVehicle #BatteryRepair