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I ended up selling mine because the build quality started getting on my nerves. Misaligned panels that are "within spec" or interior rattles that make the ride completely unpleasant (at only 10k miles).

The tech is all right, and I got to try auto pilot at a discount. Unfortunately the phantom braking made AP completely useless with passengers who would freak out and complain. However, when it worked it was quite nice but I ended up using it way less than I'd hoped. Glad I didn't pay 12k for it!

The best part of owning the car was the insane acceleration and supercharger network at the beginning. But, that got annoying as more people started getting Teslas. Going on longer trips meant a ton of anxiety especially since some superchargers in cities would be packed. Worse, some would be out of order or slow charging. After the gimmick wore off, wasting 45 minutes to go another 2-3 hours started becoming annoying. And before someone asks why 2-3 hours, its called hills. California is full of them, and especially where I live I lose so much efficiency climbing hills.

Anyway overall I'd rate the car 5/10. Fastest car I've ever owned. Beyond that it was pretty much exactly as they described - a beta product. I'll probably try a Tesla again in 5-10 years.



This is mostly not my experience after 18 months but I appreciate your report. My car's build quality has been nearly perfect (which I didn't expect because of lots of contrary reports in 2020.) I tried FSD on the $200/month plan and I agree it's bad. The car stopped at green lights, kept going at red, turned right from the middle lane, etc. So I canceled it.

I live in the Rocky Mountains so I can relate about the hills, but haven't noticed a big range deficit from them. Probably because every uphill has a corresponding downhill and regen braking can recover some of the uphill energy loss. What I notice much more is wind. Driving fast into a headwind entails a huge energy loss (proportional to your airspeed cubed--yikes!) and it cannot be recovered. OTOH driving with a tailwind can add significant range.

I've also not noticed much of a problem finding open superchargers but that might be because I mostly drive in "flyover country." The supercharger network has also expanded significantly just in the 18 months I've had the car.


It's interesting to see that even customers get Autopilot and Full Self Driving mixed up.


Can you blame us? The messaging from the company is both inconsistent and insane. I just call the built-in autosteer wizard "the lane keeper" now because that bypasses the terminology confusion. BTW it works reasonably well on the highway in good conditions. It's perfect as a way of taking a short break and stretching all 4 of my limbs during a drive, but that's the only reason I use it.


They should just rename Autopilot to some generic thing (but not Autopilot haha) like every other companies adaptive cruise control. Then use Autopilot for FSD.


I think the confusion is a feature rather than a bug from Tesla's POV.


Now I'm curious, what did you replace it with and which model did you have?


Model 3 performance and replaced by a Honda


you're in the minority ...


I am just giving my anecdotal experience. I hope I can have a better one by the time I try a later Tesla model.




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