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Cybertruck engineers bend upper control arm in testing

scottf200

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Wow, that looks flimsy and can't possibly be production.
Certainly doesn't look "Baja" and off-road seriously capable.

Haha, no comments after an hour but if you put sightings or pricing or range in the title there would be pages by now. :sneaky:

Digit 6: Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR)
E = Class 8 – Greater than 14968 kg. (33,001 lbs. and over)
G = Class G – Greater than 3629 kg. to 4082 kg. (8,001-9,000 lbs.)
H = Class H – Greater than 4082 kg. to 4536 kg. (9,001-10,000 lbs.)
 
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cvalue13

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Wow, that looks flimsy and can't possibly be production.
Certainly doesn't look "Baja" and off-road seriously capable.
Either the photographed truck *is* the one they took to Baja, or it is a second unit with similar upper control damage

because here is one of the Baja units, with similar/same damage

Tesla Cybertruck Cybertruck engineers bend upper control arm in testing 11E009AC-0217-4835-9333-8C3280DF3A60
 

JBee

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Either the photographed truck *is* the one they took to Baja, or it is a second unit with similar upper control damage

because here is one of the Baja units, with similar/same damage

11E009AC-0217-4835-9333-8C3280DF3A60.jpeg
Looks like it is nearly bent the exact same.

That means they bent it, saw it was bent and took a photo of it, then drove off and made it dirty in Baja, and then took another photo??

Sounds like a good way to break something else.

My question is if that part is meant to bend intentionally like that on a impact, or was it undersized and actually failed?

It does look flimsy.
 


Crissa

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scottf200

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TyPope

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I'll be surprised if Tesla doesn't make that part more robust. Is it possible the CTs were all there to get updated parts? It'd be interesting to keep an eye on newer CTs to see if they've already addressed it.
 


Crissa

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Tesla Cybertruck Cybertruck engineers bend upper control arm in testing TTg39xl


Aha, so the green line should follow the yellow, but doesn't, because it twisted on the red axis. Seems like an easy design fix.

This is why they test!

Those pictures aren't from the same angle so they won't line up like you are showing. You can't even see the label in the top image.
Yeah, there's already overlapping curves there so it's really hard to see if the angle is just making it look wrong or not, the green line is already curved in the second image, the camera angle just hides it.

-Crissa
 

RVAC

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Looks like it is nearly bent the exact same.

That means they bent it, saw it was bent and took a photo of it, then drove off and made it dirty in Baja, and then took another photo??

Sounds like a good way to break something else.

My question is if that part is meant to bend intentionally like that on a impact, or was it undersized and actually failed?

It does look flimsy.
More likely it got bent in Baja and they haven't replaced it yet, just washed the truck.
 

JBee

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More likely it got bent in Baja and they haven't replaced it yet, just washed the truck.
If so they done an excellent job at cleaning it afterwards. It looks the other way around.

I do wonder how close that top joint on the knuckle will go with larger tyres on. The MY is limited by it.
 

SKUUT

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The upper is not bent, IMO, simply a different viewing angle causing it to appear that way. You would have to ask yourself, what would have impacted it to cause it to bend upward? Other components would have needed to fail before the upper control arm could have been pushed upwards by an outside force. Launching the vehicle in Baja would not have done this either, as this is a pivot point for the upper ball joint. Rather, the strut tower would have likely blown out, or the chassis control arm mounts would have ripped. I'm leaving it at that...
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