Elon Musk Talks New Tesla Model In Europe (electrek.co) 102
Elon Musk made rare comments about a new Tesla vehicle to be designed in Berlin, adding that the reason behind the new vehicle program is to attract new talent from Europe: "I think there's a lot of talent, talented designers and engineers, in Europe. And a lot of the best people, they want to work somewhere where they are doing original design work. They don't want to just be doing the European version of something that was designed in California. So, I think it's important in order to attract the best talent to do original design." Electrek reports: Tesla has been putting a lot of efforts into attracting top talent and it has been successful at it in its home country. Furthermore, Musk commented on the vehicle segment that Tesla plans to address with a locally designed vehicle: "In Europe, I think it would make sense to do I guess a compact car -- perhaps a hatchback or something like that. Something that answers "what do most people want?' in a given region. In the US, cars tend to be bigger for personal taste reasons and in Europe, it tends to be smaller. If you try to park in dense urban environments, having a car that fits in tight parking spaces is important."
Musk didn't offer a timeline for Tesla to design and build the new electric car in Germany, but it's not expected to hit the market for at least a few more years as Tesla focuses on bringing the European Model Y to production at Gigafactory Berlin next year. You can watch the interview where Musk makes the new comments here.
Musk didn't offer a timeline for Tesla to design and build the new electric car in Germany, but it's not expected to hit the market for at least a few more years as Tesla focuses on bringing the European Model Y to production at Gigafactory Berlin next year. You can watch the interview where Musk makes the new comments here.
Form follows function? (Score:2)
Much of the existing Tesla designs are heavily influenced by the goal of reducing wind resistance as much as possible. Looking sleek and cool is nice but flowing air correctly gives them a few more percentage points of range.
So what are the new designers going do do exactly? What can they do that doesn't run counter to that?
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" What can they do that doesn't run counter to that?"
Smaller, lighter and faster.
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Tesla M3's CD value is 0.23, the same as the current BMW 3er, Audi A4 or Alfa Rome Giulia, so apparenly there is room for styling. Also, the interior of the Teslas are exceptionally ugly, applying some European taste there could go a long way.
Re:Form follows function? (Score:4, Funny)
Its spartan, minimalistic, and sort of looks like Tesla Model 3 interior.
If you want a different interior for Tesla you need to recruit talent from the original Star Trek prop creators, who would put glowing jelly beans on consoles...
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You're seriously likening Ikea to BMW?
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I was not talking about being minimalistic but being ugly.
Ikea is (mostly) minimalistic and (mostly) nice to look at. Tesla's interior is minimalistic and ugly.
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You think Ikea is indicative of "European Style" interiors? You think Tesla interiors look "European Style"? Why not look at a European car interior? Do they look like Ikea furniture?
Weak sauce.
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Him thinking that is no problem. It's simply a sign that a European design team is a good idea. USians simply don't know European style.
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Also, the interior of the Teslas are exceptionally ugly, applying some European taste there could go a long way.
Not sure where that is coming from, but most times I have stayed in a modern European hotel the room is styled much more like the interior of a Tesla than something like Rococo architecture or Louis XVI furniture. In Europe I see lots of minimalist designs with clean lines, and high-tech fixtures.
So I wouldn't expect any big breaks from what California is producing.
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I wouldn't expect any big breaks from what California is producing.
Then expect disdain from europeans. Who also know how to stick a pallet load of cell phone batteries in a car by the way.
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Who also know how to stick a pallet load of cell phone batteries in a car by the way.
My guess is you don't know much about engineering, but this is about like saying someone who can put on a pretty good puppet show in a shipping crate for a stage is equally qualified to produce an OLED television that will kick Samsung and LG out of the market.
The most pessimistic estimate for Telsa is a 5 year technological lead and they are maintaining it.
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Zero technical content in your post, you're trying to convince me you're an engineering genius? You're also a bit of an idiot, you know, "open your mouth and remove all doubt" variety. As it happens I work with electric propulsion, I won't elaborate further as I feel you are just posting to create stress.
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Zero technical content in your post, you're trying to convince me you're an engineering genius?
That's pretty amusing from the guy who wrote this:
.. also know how to stick a pallet load of cell phone batteries in a car by the way
Apparently that is your idea of superb engineering insight.
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I wouldn't expect any big breaks from what California is producing.
Then expect disdain from europeans. Who also know how to stick a pallet load of cell phone batteries in a car by the way.
Modded down by an American I presume. Seriously, expect disdain from Europeans. Go there, look around, try to see an American car, you won't. The few that are there are just conversation pieces, a sort of low key joke.
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Wow two. Out of how many?
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In Sweden we have many Teslas. I see them so often that I don't really pay attention to them any more.
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The country's best-selling car in 2019 was Tesla's mid-sized Model 3 sedan
Sep 2020,
Tesla 3 down to second best seller after VW id3.
Hardly "won't see an American car", though I will give you that it's only a single Nordic country.
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I think the OP meant in the conventional automotive space.
And - Trump complained about this a while ago - he is right: No-one in their right mind buys American cars in Europe. They're absolutely not suited for the local market in almost all criterias you could apply (from design to energy efficiency to size)
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Except Norway, where they have money to burn, for now.
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You know why is that? Because we Europeans are generally too poor to afford American cars. Go to Norway and Sweden where people are more wealthy and you will see quite many American cars from private import - mainly pickups and offroaders, but also many classic cars. A Swedish businessman running a company doing forestry automation can afford an F150 and will buy and F150 because they are great for towing boats and horse trailers. They are alos great for hauling gear into forests, where you may be testing y
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we Europeans are generally too poor to afford American cars
Sure! That must be why every German drives a Trabant.
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Car ownership rates in Europe are much lower than in the us. There are very few households with more than one car, whereas in California everyone who can drive owns a car. The cars in Europe are also much smaller. Popular cars in Europe are Renault Captur, with a 0.9l base engine, or Peugeot 208 with a 1.2l engine. Both cars have around 90 HP in base models. For comparison, people in America roll in Honda Civics with 150 hp engines. Very few people in the US buy cars smaller than the Civc.
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Well, according to you designers only concern themselves with wind resistance anyway, so who cares. I'm sure the Cd of those modern European hotels is great. Are these hotel rooms blank slabs with a giant tablet computer velcro'd to them? I mean, what else is there for designers to do? Telsa design work is done.
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"Also, the interior of the Teslas are exceptionally ugly, ..."
Cannot be said too strongly. Also, engineers have a lot of work to do to correct the worst quality cars on the planet. Manufacturability is an engineering problem. Who knew?
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"Also, the interior of the Teslas are exceptionally ugly, ..."
Cannot be said too strongly.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so I accept your take and the fact that many people probably feel the same way.
For me, in my Model 3, I spend most of the time looking out the windows, not at the interior. And when I am looking at interior it's at the display. Whether or not the rest of the interior is ugly or not makes no difference - to me.
I suspect owners of cars with "beautiful" interiors only really look at them while they're picking out the car.
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Beauty and uglyness can also be the interface design - and I dread when I am moving to my next car as it will inevitably have a touchscreen for important functions.
I'm a tech guy, I work in IT, but I think touchscreens in cars are one of the worst developments we had in the last 10 or so years.
I get the advantages it gives to tesla in the sense that they can add / change features after the fact, but numerous studies have shown that controlling a car via touchscreen for basic functions is a bad idea. And yes
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Besides seat heaters and climate controls, which you're right, you can access using voice control, what other functions do you wish the Model 3 had tactile controls for?
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Honestly, it begins with things like a latch for the storage compartment on the passengers side (again, Tesla has reasons why they do it like they do, I just don't like it), adjusting the air stream for the vents (obviously not possible with Teslas design), a HUD (never buying a car without it anymore), a central instrument cluster behind the steering wheel (this can be replaced by a HUD in my eyes), heated front and back window controls (my car has both)...
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I was really worried about the lack of central instrument cluster behind the steering wheel before I bought the car, I even found an aftermarket HUD that I could purchase to deal with that. But after driving it, I found that what would be in the central instrument cluster, was closer to my forward view than the rear view mirror was. And since I'm used to checking my rear view mirror every 10 seconds
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engineers have a lot of work to do to correct the worst quality cars on the planet.
We're not talking about Ford in this thread, just Tesla.
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Is Ford that bad in the US?
I know Ford in Europe had a lot of issues with steel quality when they built in eastern Europe, and your car basically rusted away after about 10 years (owned a 1992 and 1994 Ford, and they both exactly made it to 10 years until being uneconomical to maintain).
But - I own a German-built 2004 Ford that has been my daily driver for the last 10 years, that I have modified in more than one way, has had multiple parking dents, big deep scrapes and bends in almost all parts of the exter
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Here in the US they joke that Ford is an acronym for "Found On Road Dead" or "Fix Or Repair Daily". The exception is their truck line, which except for minor cosmetic modifications they've been producing unchanged since the 1970s so they have that down pat.
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I'd probably ask the guys at Lamborghini, Ferrari, Bugatti, Pagani, Maserati, Porsche, Pininfarina, .... ;-)
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So ask the guys at Volkswagen and Fiat?
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It is an exercise in marketing. A European design and that is the some total of the intent, 'A European Design', that is all it is about. Tesla is about to run face first into a whole range of experienced competitors with a less than reliable vehicle (more to do with a lack of decades of experience in vehicle production).
Right now with Tesla way overvalued, it would be a good idea, simply to use Tesla shares as junk bonds and buy an EU car manufacturer. Volkswagen would probably be a good fit, kind of a rev
Like how Apple got trampled by Nokia? (Score:2)
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Yeah the disruption is coming to an end as they are playing catchup and doing a really good job of it and unless Tesla makes big moves it will fail. The logical move, use overpriced shares to buy an existing auto manufacturer to rapidly expand the range and sales and to 'electrify' that manufacturer. As it stands at the moment Tesla will lose out, not much competition, with a lot of very biased environmental support (which will no disappear) to lots of competition. The disruption will now be going in the ot
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There are two fundamental concepts that you need to learn:
1. When there are big technology shifts, usually there is a significant cull and only some of the established players survive.
2. Tesla doesn't need 80% market share to be a success, just like Apple is a trillion dollar company even though they are like #3 in worldwide smartphone sales.
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If you look outside the US, this is basically what happened.
Apple has a very high market share in the US, but that is an outlier in the global picture. Android is much more dominant globally.
I think globally, Apple/Android is something like Apple/Android/other 10%/85%/5% - and even in a rich country like Germany, the sales are still 1/4 Apple 3/4 Android.
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Tesla doesn't need to completely own the EV market, and Apple doesn't need to completely own the smartphone market. Apple is a nearly $2T company despite having a minority share of the worldwide smartphone market.
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Unfortunately, VW pretty much botched the Launch of the ID.3 - they should have given it 6 months more development until they put it out in the public.
But, the lineup ID lineup they have shown so far looks pretty good, and much better suited to the EU market than the S3XY Truck Lineup from Tesla, so I do think designing a car in Europe for the European market is a very good idea.
Tesla as a car manufacturer has many issues, but the biggest challenge to their supremacy will not come from other Automakers dire
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Much of the existing Tesla designs are heavily influenced by the goal of reducing wind resistance as much as possible. Looking sleek and cool is nice but flowing air correctly gives them a few more percentage points of range.
So what are the new designers going do do exactly?
Not be American.
Oh,, sorry...that was probably a bit too blunt calling out the underlying reason Elon is now scouting outside the dumpster fire that is the "United" States right now...
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Untied States seems more apt, now.
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"talented designers and engineers". Virtually everything designers and engineers do is unrelated to "wind resistance".
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There is much more to design than shape. While shape is the most visible and, in some people's minds, the most glamorous, there are many more interesting design challenges waiting for the right engineer.
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For instance sedans aren't popular in Europe. In the luxury car segment, the stationwagon is far more popular. Designers from Europe, designing for Europe know this. So they could conceivably design a Model 3 Stationwagon.
This of course is not the only difference in taste between Europe and the US. In Europe range is far less important: people rarely drive more than 250 km in a day. Most rarely drive more than 100 km in a day. So an entry level low range (say 300 km) cheap Tesla could be a succes in Europe
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Actually most drivers in the US rarely drive more than 50 kilometers in a day, although you'll find very few of them actually believe it.
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Ford is an interesting example, as there has been less commonality than difference across these markets. Ford of Europe and Ford USA were practically two different companies that had their own design teams that just shared some common parts between cars..
(And for the record, the Mondeo always was vastly superior to the Fusion anyway.. ;)
VW won't like this (Score:2)
Not one bit!
Dreaming (Score:1)
Please let there be a Tesla Superleggera!! (Wrong country, though)
Might work (Score:5, Interesting)
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There are already many EVs with better range and lower cost than a Model 3 as well. The market is getting crowded and any new entrant will have to produce something pretty special to compete.
For example you can get a Leaf 62 for around £30k, range 240 miles. A Kona or eNiro is a few k more list but with finance/lease deals they are very affordable, something like half the price of a base Model 3 for TCO, and range is around 280-300 miles. VW had just launched the ID3 as well, and it is getting s
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We prefer slightly taller cars that are easy to get in and out of.
Sure, but Tesla prefers not to make a people mover because it would make them look stodgy. More likely they will make a subcompact for your market, and it will be just as low as their other vehicles. When you raise up an EV the forces on the suspension add up quickly due to the weight involved.
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We are only talking a little taller, still a saloon shape. Well, we really prefer hatchbacks and crossovers it seems.
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Might be a bit challenging recharging though since there are few private parking spots inside most of the older cities, resulting in more street parking.
Many European countries have charging infrastructure a-plenty. There's a reason electric car adoption in Europe is putting the USA to shame and it has nothing to do with Tesla.
People currently park cars somewhere. Those somewhere can get charging stations. Like my nextdoor neighbour who works for BYD, when he got a company car he just told the government and they put a charging station up on the street outside our apartment.
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In an EV weight reduction has 30 times less bang for the buck compared to ICEV. The root cause of inefficiency in ICEV is, when it brakes it converts all the kinetic energy into heat and throws it away. This is why ICEV has much longer range in highways compared to stop and go city driving. So weight reduction directly reduces the wasted kinetic energy and improves ef
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My classmate said he had access to Toyota engineers and they had dismissed regen as "not worth pursuing, it can only recover 7% of the kinetic ener
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Excellent observation. The brakes are dissipating an enormous amount of power, and if you want to do regen efficiently you need to be able to absorb that power. Fast charging, long range, fast acceleration and strong regen go all hand in hand.
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Also, in electric cars the factor limiting the power is the battery size. Bigger battery means more power. Using a more powerful electric motor enables also a higher degree of recuperation. I see non-Tesla electric cars with 150 HP and I am thinking to myself what the hell are they doing? The engineers certainly know what a bigger motor will give them more regen, so who is the idiot capping the motor power?
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Reduce weight, that gives better efficiency so it would get more range is a typical projection made by ICEV people coming into the EV world.
You talk as if Volkswagen is a newbie [porsche.com] in the EV world.
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This is the pay dirt. If you understand this plot, you would understand why Tesla did this well. Porsche, Cayenne etc are not the leading edge, they are the followers of the trail blazed by Tesla.
No car company is a
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The only trail that Tesla blazed is the financing model. Otherwise they just bolted standard stuff together. The rest is hype.
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The only trail that Tesla blazed is the financing model. Otherwise they just bolted standard stuff together. The rest is hype.
Maybe for the [original] Roadster, which I haven't looked deeply into electronics-wise. But since, Tesla designed their own motor controllers and even their own motors. They designed their own electrodes and built battery packs out of cells using them. They have even designed unique suspension components using designs formerly unknown. Shame about not bolting them together properly, but that's another topic. The fact is that Tesla came up with substantially new hardware.
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See, Tesla can't do anything right in my book every since Musk outed himself as a pandemic asshole. Thanks for playing devil's advocate, you certainly found a devil.
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I'm on the side of the facts. To that end, I shared some.
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Tesla still can't do anything right in my book. That's called "flipping the bit". No apologies.
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And yeah, impressive to see that plot from 2003 but the same ideas actually go back a hundred years.
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Reduce weight, that gives better efficiency so it would get more range is a typical projection made by ICEV people coming into the EV world.
You talk as if Volkswagen is a newbie [porsche.com] in the EV world.
Not to mention Mercedes Benz, who have won 7 straight constructors titles in Formula One, whose cars are the most sophisticated hybrids on earth. Electric tech that makes Teslas seem like kid's toys.
https://media.daimler.com/mars... [daimler.com]
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No on would have believed the days of steam locos were numbered back in 1952. But a batch of locos for Pennsylvania Railroad made
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EVs will take over eventually but there is an infrastructure problem for people who live in the sticks. For those people, mild hybrids will make more sense for probably decades, because charging stations are being installed so gradually — most of them in places such people avoid deliberately. And with people leaving cities in significant numbers due to Covid, and many of them probably not going back, the lack of availability of quick chargers is going to slow adoption. If you brake early then a mild h
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FI cars don't swap batteries (or refuel for that matter). They do a lot of very heavy duty regen though, braking very quickly from 350km/h or more. Their current 800V systems will soon be replaced by 1000V+ systems. Whether you like hybrids or not, in this case they are test beds for some very exotic electric technology, and like in the past we can expect the tech from racing to trickle down to road cars in due course.
And while you may think one pedal driving is cool, I can't think of many things I would
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In an EV weight reduction has 30 times less bang for the buck compared to ICEV. The root cause of inefficiency in ICEV is, when it brakes it converts all the kinetic energy into heat and throws it away. This is why ICEV has much longer range in highways compared to stop and go city driving. So weight reduction directly reduces the wasted kinetic energy and improves efficiency. EV will convert it back to electricity and charge the battery. So weight of the car plays much smaller role.
Weight plays an equal role in both types of vehicles if you want it to handle and corner well.
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But EVs can have two, three or four independent motors, and ICEV is restricted to one powerplant and complex transmissions, limited slip differentials and transfer cases. (Though some recent hybrids use an electric motor for one axle and ICE for another). Electronically controlled vectored torque is possible in EVs. We can put some wheels in regen and others in drive with micro second differences between them. When it comes to cornering wit
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The Leaf motors are an old design and not very efficient. A better comparison would be with BMW's drivetrain or Hyundai's drivetrain. The Hyundai one is the king of EV efficiency, the Ioniq being the most efficient mass produced EV on the road. It's only got 88kW (118 HP).
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The point I am making is, going from a 150 HP ICE to 300 HP ICE is a huge step. Lot more expensive, lot heavier, lot less efficient. Going from 150 HP electric motor to 300 HP or even 450 HP electric motor is neither as expensive, nor as heavy, nor as inefficient. The stopping capacity of brakes can be measured in HP. It is typically in the range of 250 HP and above. A weak motor can not capture all the kinetic energy back t
Please make Small Tesla for US also (Score:2)
Although I think Musk is right that a large number of U.S. buyers want larger cars, there is I think a pretty significant number of people who would like a smaller U.S. car as well.
Companies like MINI have been making ever larger cars so it would be great for an auto maker to trim down to a more compact size again...
Only downside I could see, is possibly very significant range impact. But since the whole car would be lighter, maybe not.
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People in the US do want smaller cars. But only in a niche way.
Sadly, the big automakers would rather leave that money on the table or try and convert those buyers to SUVs then give them (me!) what they want.
Deathwatch:
Honda Fit: cancelled
Chevy Spark: Cancelled
Chevy Sonic: cancelled
Ford Fiesta: cancelled
Ford Focus: cancelled
Fiat 500: cancelled
Mitsubishi Mirage: questionable continuation
Toyota Yaris: cancelled
Nissan versa note: cancelled
Kia Rio: continuing
Hyundai accent hatch: cancelled
But, for instance, Hon
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It's funny that US car sizes have grown so much that what is now called a "sub-compact" in the US might now be classified as a mid-sized car in Europe..
I once got booked a car via my company, and they told me I will get a "sub-compact".. and I basically expected a Smart Car and complained. They laughed and gave me a car that was about the size of a BMW 3 series...
Yes to small car (Score:2)
Something in the suzuki swift / volkswagen golf size class would be a good addition to the range.
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VW is building a golf-sized EV, why compete? Better to make something different.
I think Tesla should make an EV white van.
Tesla needs a station wagon and a small SUV (Score:1)
In Europe Tesla needs a station wagon and a small hatchback-SUV that is essentially a hatchback on stilts, like the Renault Captur. In Europe the niche filled in the US by pickups is filled by station wagons and vans like the VW Transporter or Ford Transit Custom. So Tesla would need an equivalent of VW Transporter too.
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Electric vehicles still need to be as efficient as possible until ranges get to the 500+ mile level, yet if you want luggage capacity, apparently you have to have an SUV with the aerodynamic profile of a brick wall and the handling of an angry cow. Hardly the height of efficiency
I really don't understand why every manufacturer is doing this, especially in Europe, where Sportwagon / StationWagon sales are s
And, just like John F. Kennedy . . . (Score:2)
. . . the car will be proud to say . . .
Ich bin ein Berliner!
Except, the folks I know from Berlin would probably say "ick" or "icke" instead of "ich".
And they would probably say "Pfannkuchen" instead of "Berliner" . . . but that would kinda sorta spoil the joke.
. . . although . . . Musk might like that joke, and name the new car appropriately.
Compact Car in NA Too (Score:2)
Compacts and Subcompacts are also a popular vehicle segment in NA.
My family has always owned a large vehicle (currently a Dodge Ram) and a small vehicle (currently a Honda Fit), such that both of them will fit in our garage.
The *entire reason* we do not own a Tesla, nor have a preorder, is because the entire Tesla lineup is too large for our tastes. All of the Model S,3,X,Y are *too large* for our garage with the pickup. And the Cybertruck, is too large in general, with any compact car.
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Compacts and Subcompacts are also a popular vehicle segment in NA.
No, they really aren't. I'm saying this as an American that honeslty likes compact cars. Pretty much nobody else does.
Here, the size of the vehicle is largely associated with how nice it is. It is simply beyond most people's comprehenstion that a small car could ever be nice.
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Here, the size of the vehicle is largely associated with how nice it is. It is simply beyond most people's comprehenstion that a small car could ever be nice.
Modern cars have too much padding for a small car to ever be nice. Even full-size pickup trucks are now cramped because of all the plastic bullshit. I remember when I could stretch out, and I'm two meters tall. And it was only a generation or so ago.
Hobbits might enjoy small cars, but not full-sized Americans. We just don't fit in them.
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Modern cars have too much padding for a small car to ever be nice. Even full-size pickup trucks are now cramped because of all the plastic bullshit.
That's more to do with how fat your typical American is. We don't have a problem here in Europe. I have a Ford Focus which is also sold in the USA and my 6'4" son has no problems sitting in the back without his head hitting the roof and we've managed to get 5 adults in it just fine.
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That's more to do with how fat your typical American is. We don't have a problem here in Europe.
Much of Europe is now about in the middle of the fatness index, so while Americans shouldn't be pointing our fat fingers (and I wasn't) it's probably not such a good idea for Europeans either any more.
The vehicles' interiors have swollen to improve crash standards. There's more space to crush before you hit a human, and you can stuff airbags in there.
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But that could just be in my area.
Talent (Score:2)
is the new resource. we are not people working on these products. we are resources. now we have been upgraded to the talent that works on these products. nice one elon!
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Haha, seriously? You're manufacturing an issue out of nothing.