Neo
Well-known member
- First Name
- Neo
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2021
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 88
- Reaction score
- 98
- Location
- Arizona
- Vehicles
- Porsche Cayenne Turbo | Toyota Highlander Hybrid
- Occupation
- Professional
- Thread starter
- #1
When I made my reservation for the Tri-Motor Full Self-Driving, it was late in the game, January 25, 2021...
I wasn't a fan of the design, but I was a fan of these main things:
I plan on becoming mostly nomadic traveling to see my aging mother, my kids as they disperse across the country, my sister, friends and a tour of our National Parks. I'll do this by traveling the distance the CT can take me, charge up the CT from Taj-Ma-Haul and sit a day or two to recharge Taj-Ma-Haul's battery and continue on to my destination. A deliberate leisurely pace.
You can see why the original target (let's be fair, nothing contractual/promised about the initial specs) of 500 miles of range, which I'm dropping to 250 miles for towing, was a pretty crucial part of my decision making. 250 miles for the day is a good towing day and roughly the distance from Tucson to Flagstaff (260).
Then we get the release data and boy was I disappointed.
420 440+ miles range? We're already $30k over and then another cost above that to still come up shy of the original target range of 500 miles?
I'm sitting on my reservation for now, but I'm really disappointed. Time has lessened the feelings and I'm glad I've been patient working through this, but man what a significant let down. There aren't any better options out there, electrically I mean. The CT is still the best electric option out there, but I am hoping the time it takes to get to my reservation number that Tesla get's closer to the original targets somehow, wishful thinking I know.
My stop gap vehicle, a Porsche Cayenne Turbo S is showing the wear I'm putting on it, now with 170k miles and 80k miles of towing. It has been marvelous so far, but the maintenance is increasing with its age and wear. So I've been considering all kinds of other stop gap -or- final solution vehicles. The GMC 3500 Safari, Toyota Tundra, second hand FedEx delivery vehicle or another newer Porsche Cayenne Turbo S. All of these range in cost between $30 and $60k for the ones I've looked at. If I go this route I'd convert it to an electric vehicle. Which would be less than ideal, I'd have to be in the business of dealing with the conversion and reliability of it...
I say all of this to hear constructive feedback, what are your thoughts?
Cheers,
Neo
I wasn't a fan of the design, but I was a fan of these main things:
- Tesla Infrastructure & ideology
- Energy Independence
- 500 miles range (250ish towing)
- $69k price at the time
- 17k Towing Capacity (tri-motor)
I plan on becoming mostly nomadic traveling to see my aging mother, my kids as they disperse across the country, my sister, friends and a tour of our National Parks. I'll do this by traveling the distance the CT can take me, charge up the CT from Taj-Ma-Haul and sit a day or two to recharge Taj-Ma-Haul's battery and continue on to my destination. A deliberate leisurely pace.
You can see why the original target (let's be fair, nothing contractual/promised about the initial specs) of 500 miles of range, which I'm dropping to 250 miles for towing, was a pretty crucial part of my decision making. 250 miles for the day is a good towing day and roughly the distance from Tucson to Flagstaff (260).
Then we get the release data and boy was I disappointed.
- 320 miles Range (160ish towing)
- $99k
- 11k Towing Capacity
I'm sitting on my reservation for now, but I'm really disappointed. Time has lessened the feelings and I'm glad I've been patient working through this, but man what a significant let down. There aren't any better options out there, electrically I mean. The CT is still the best electric option out there, but I am hoping the time it takes to get to my reservation number that Tesla get's closer to the original targets somehow, wishful thinking I know.
My stop gap vehicle, a Porsche Cayenne Turbo S is showing the wear I'm putting on it, now with 170k miles and 80k miles of towing. It has been marvelous so far, but the maintenance is increasing with its age and wear. So I've been considering all kinds of other stop gap -or- final solution vehicles. The GMC 3500 Safari, Toyota Tundra, second hand FedEx delivery vehicle or another newer Porsche Cayenne Turbo S. All of these range in cost between $30 and $60k for the ones I've looked at. If I go this route I'd convert it to an electric vehicle. Which would be less than ideal, I'd have to be in the business of dealing with the conversion and reliability of it...
I say all of this to hear constructive feedback, what are your thoughts?
Cheers,
Neo
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