The wind blew it shut!
Posting my tweet as it is specifically the clip in attention.
Brad Sloan today :
But all of their other frunk lids are much lighter and smaller. This one has some serious weight to it that would require a stiffer spring to open and thus one would have to overcome the spring stiffness and the weight of the hood to close it. In fact it would be much easier for Tesla to just power it.It looks to be a soft open and close frunk. Letās remember Tesla does NOT have a powered frunk on any other vehicle I doubt they will have one on the CT. I donāt like it but video seems to prove disappointing.
Oh, I can hardly wait for the day when there is input from guys/gals that actually posses a CT.But all of their other frunk lids are much lighter and smaller. This one has some serious weight to it that would require a stiffer spring to open and thus one would have to overcome the spring stiffness and the weight of the hood to close it. In fact it would be much easier for Tesla to just power it.
Me too I hope to be proven wrong.Oh, I can hardly wait for the day when there is input from guys/gals that actually posses a CT.
Why would they bother? When CTs are out all of these questions will be answered in the owners manual, by some reviewer, or by a Munro tear down. There might be a few user-experience posts, but like @Crissa mentioned it will be mostly people looking how to solve some problem, where to find some accessory, etc. until that day you are stuck with the likes of meOh, I can hardly wait for the day when there is input from guys/gals that actually posses a CT.
It's also probably the first, or near the first, time they're doing it. We've been seeing loaders and drivers, not the engineers and line workers who made the things.Every time I see them handling the frunk lid they are doing it very very delicately. It looks to me like they have some sort of problem they are trying to work out.
I have no inside intel, and Iām not currently staying at a Holiday Inn. But Crissaās post got me thinking.It's also probably the first, or near the first, time they're doing it. We've been seeing loaders and drivers, not the engineers and line workers who made the things.
It's early still. We'll see.
-Crissa
The powered trunk on my S will start to close with just a pull, but it fully closes and latches itself if you don't physically stop it. I can't guess why a powered frunk on the Cybertruck would behave differently. If it is not powered then the varying resistance we seem to be seeing as they open and close it is also odd. I've been watching with much curiosity.I have no inside intel, and Iām not currently staying at a Holiday Inn. But Crissaās post got me thinking.
IF the frunk were powered, and IF you were just a guy out there putting on covers and stuff like that, you wouldnāt have the CT paired with your phone. And IF you had the valet card, you would have to get INTO the CT to make the frunk get frunky. So you open and close by hand, and youāre careful not to lock it, cuz you gotta get back in there at some point. Maybe you even tape it so that it stays open and you have access to it without having to find the dang valet card and get in the CT just to put the darn cover away. And all this gingerly handling (if, in fact, thatās what weāre seeing) is just pressure against the motor. I know of planes where the stairs are electric up, and just the resistance of the geared motor slows them for extension on the way down.
Or, Iām completely wrong.,
my working theory regarding the taped seams between hood and quarter panels, is that they do not yet have gasketing supply for those sealsAlso I wonder why there isn't gasketing on the frunk itself to hermetically seal the area? I see those 2 strips is all.