HaulingAss
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2020
- Threads
- 10
- Messages
- 3,455
- Reaction score
- 668
- Location
- Washington State
- Vehicles
- 2010 F-150, 2018 Model 3 P, FS DM Cybertruck
My wife and I were both early adopters of the Model 3 and, going on four years, no issues of any note. My wife's broken charge port door was fixed by a mobile tech in our driveway. My failed trunk switch was repaired the same way. It's been clear sailing.Ah, that's a shame. Hopefully, the utter lack of original model S's with brittle/cracked wiring at service centers stays consistent. On a related note, I shouldn't say when, but I once heard a bunch of production line managers at Tesla got sacked because they allowed peanut oil as a lubricant when threading wires, which in-turn attracted rats. Morning shift has the dumbest people, I tell you.
Idk, I have a bunch of similar stories like that, which say the exact opposite, when I think bad warranty repairs I think about the Taycan whistleblower (activating reserve battery instead of repair, and charging repair prices). Tesla may take a while to get to you, but there's a lot of effort put towards actually fixing your issue vs bandaiding, and they regularly voluntarily recall real issues. As a quality tech, Tesla tends to have too many pots on the fire when it comes to diagnosing reoccurring supplier issues, i.e. a lot of cosmetic issues go on the back burner. I said it before and I'll say it again, I'm happy to wait for my CT so shit like heater issues and peanut oil get found.
It's true the Cybertruck will have more new tech in it and I do expect it to have a higher rate of incidents vs. the Model 3 but, if the later models are significantly better, I'll just sell the early one and move into a new one. Cybertrucks are going to be in such high demand for so many years the cost to upgrade to a new one will be somewhere between minimal and zero. Because some people just can't wait.