Yes, well, sometimes I peek. Or think someone has gotten over their tendency and unblock them for awhile.I’d like to take this opportunity to remind you this forum has a block feature and it is lovely.
Ooh, that’s a handy feature.PS, you can get the peek ability bag, there's a check box on the bottom of your ignoring page.
That's like being slightly pregnant. If a part breaks on your vehicle, it's irrelevant how many other people have a vehicle that didn't have that problem. It needs to be repaired (not "barely" repaired). The owner should have the option of repairing himself (if he has the time, tools, experience, and desire), having an independent shop repair it, or taking it to the manufacturer for repair.The logic is If it barely breaks, you barely have to fix it, and if you barely have to repair it, you don't need to implement the "right to repair" for it to achieve the same or greater value for the user.
Feel free to read all of my posts for perspective and context. Thx.That's like being slightly pregnant. If a part breaks on your vehicle, it's irrelevant how many other people have a vehicle that didn't have that problem. It needs to be repaired (not "barely" repaired). The owner should have the option of repairing himself (if he has the time, tools, experience, and desire), having an independent shop repair it, or taking it to the manufacturer for repair.
This was the whole point of the OP, how much should we be encouraging Tesla to make components repairable.There are also things that are not repairable, no matter how much you would like to fix it. The more integrated the design gets for cost and performance, the less people will have the capability to repair. The structural battery pack, castings, and safety cabin are such items, and if not repaired as per manufacturer specification are un-insurable, which in turn is a risk for all those you cause damage to as well. So having the "RtR" doesn't mean they actually physically can repair it, even if they were allowed too.
Owned, repaired and fixed those cars(Renault, Hillman, Jag, A-H,etc…) Jag/Hillman/Renault neigh unrepairable unless dissembling the fronted and/or removing drivetrain equals RtR — Fiat laughably wins the piano wire accelerator pedal to rear of car in RtR wars! My point is that the industry went too far(RangeRover airbag-shocks I’m looking at you) and VW(integrated security ECU). Why do I know this?how far should that balance of ease of manufacture and assembly be weighted, at the cost of repairability
You bring up the main obstacle for DIY, needing to get the OEM to reinitialise the vehicle. The system should be robust enough to not require that sort of intervention.Cars got sorted out so well that despite RR needing to replace $1500 airbag shocks and VW reinitializing your entire car; the Service business(i.e. profit center dwindled).
Propose, if you will, RED,BLUE,GREEN and unpainted code for parts. RED==TESLA<FAV> color, BLUE==Technician<R^R, Green==Shop<R+R> with unpainted RtR.
They are also all highly trained technicians with strict manufacturer and FAA processes and procedures and in the case of the military not even under civilian law so RtR would never apply there anyway. They are most definitely not DIYers in any form, but highly trained and qualified engineers.Absolutely. I am sure that the US Navy has the right to repair its nuclear submarines. And I am equally sure that Delta and Southwest (and other airlines) have the right to repair their airliners.
Then the question becomes should an old jalopy be repaired or; recycled and replaced with a new model made out of recycled materials from the old ones, resulting in a new product that uses less material and has better performance?I would like an example of actual manufacturer liability for allowing repair.
I don't care that modules are more difficult to repair if they're individually more robust and reliable.
The point of right to repair is that the repair can be made, not that every part isn't glued down when glue is more durable. Just that we don't have to junk an entire car when the manufacturer is finished supporting it.
-Crissa
RtR== #1 Octo/bottle—GHGwould like an example of actual manufacturer liability for allowing repair
A CyberTruck is just another motor vehicle. Individuals and repair shops have been repairing motor vehicles as long as there have been motor vehicles. Whether Tom Cruise can or would attempt to repair his jet really isn't particularly germane, in this forum. Right to repair does apply to the military (I would bet that it is written it into most every procurement contract); but, again, it really isn't germane in this forum.They are also all highly trained technicians with strict manufacturer and FAA processes and procedures and in the case of the military not even under civilian law so RtR would never apply there anyway. They are most definitely not DIYers in any form, but highly trained and qualified engineers.
Would you ride with Tom Cruise in his jet that he was allowed to RtR, but didn't know how, using parts he found on ebay, and would you like that jet to fly over your house?