The owners of 146 battery-powered Ford F-150 pickups produced by a failed Brisbane converter have been thrown a lifeline by a fellow Queensland company – but they’ll have to pay for a recall fix to prevent their fingers being burned, literally.

Following the end of F-150 Lightning production in the US, local converter AUSEVwent into receivership on March 17, a week before it issued a nationwide product safety recall on March 24, warning owners not to use DC fast-chargers due to the risk of being burnt by overheated charge port pins.

“Vehicles that are fitted with a Combined Charging System (CCS2) charge port may experience increased electrical resistance during high-power Direct Current (DC) fast charging causing the internal charging pins to overheat,” said the recall notice at the time.

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Owners were directed to only charge their vehicles using AC power, a process that could take up to four days to complete via a household power outlet.

“Please avoid charging the vehicle using DC fast chargers. Use AC (Alternating Current) charging instead,” said the recall notice.

“If a person makes direct contact with the overheated charge port pins immediately after a charging session, there is a risk of burns or serious injury.”

However, AUSEV parent company BossCap had gone into receivership a week earlier, and its public website no longer loads, emails to its info address are bouncing back to senders, and calls to the company’s phone number are automatically forwarding to voicemail, leaving affected owners in the dark about how their vehicles can be fixed.