I respectfully disagree, although I cannot prove my new Xtrek Sport suffered temporary battery issues as other members have reported on their new '24s. I can state that when I took delivery of my Xtrek 7/23, Eyesight dropped out one late morning drive (for 7-11 coffee) and reset on its own after a few blocks. I was already familiar with Eyesight issues from these forums and guessed morning humidity did it as I immediately turned on ac in defrost mode. In a few blocks, Eyesight reset. Another incident was driving in upstate NY whiteout conditions of a temporary snow squall. In two or three lanes of highway, we could only see the right and left solid white llnes, no lane divider lines at all. Eyesight dropped out, didn't need it since we slowed down and the highway was nearly empty. A soon as we passed thru the snow squall, Eyesight returned. 'She/he' (Eyesight) was telling us "I can't see and I'm disabling electronics and light up the driver's display, hold my breath until........." Worst case was on a Friday, a month or two ago, when E dropped out. It didn't reset the next day and I called Subaru to discuss it. The receptionist acknowledged E issues, calmly stated it can drop out and reset but said appointments were booked for the day (Saturday) and I would have to schedule a visit on Monday. I mentioned having it drop out previously, familiar with it resetting and agreed to call Monday if E doesn't reset. I think it reset the next day, Sunday as I went about errands and didn't realize the yellow alert disappeared on it own. About two days before E reset. Battery is fine with zero issues in a year of ownership. Hopefully, I have one of the batteries that didn't come from the lot(?) of faulty batteries in '24s made in Indiana.
If Eyesight is sensitive to voltages, it may as sensitive as abs in some GM models. A number of GM abs issues were determined battery failures, turning on the abs alert.