Crissa
Well-known member
- First Name
- Crissa
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2020
- Threads
- 138
- Messages
- 19,571
- Reaction score
- 31,475
- Location
- Santa Cruz
- Vehicles
- 2014 Zero S, 2013 Mazda 3
I doubt they'd replace it before it failed, alas.I recommend people really the examine glass on the truck. Waviness and areas of clear distortion are a potential issue down the road. Not just a Cybertruck issue. Glass is a unique structure of to keep it simple "stuff". Each one is different and unique. Basically nothing is perfect in life. A careful look at things like this, and a note in the service visit might save some nervous moments later.
That is not the law.There are lot of reports across the internet of people claiming Tesla declined warranties because of tints. It hasnt happened to me. As far as proof goes? They are free to claim its the cause and to fight it you would need to go to arbitration.
The theoretical reason tint would break glass is: The energy from the sun doesn't just magically go away with tint. It is captured in the glass and heats it up. With darker tint the thermal expansion of the glass can causes stresses that break it.
From the Cybertruck warranty documentation: https://digitalassets.tesla.com/tes...rtruck-new-vehicle-limited-warranty-en-us.pdf
The law states they have to prove that specific installation was the cause of the fault. Not some theoretical chance of a fault. Besides, it's nonsensical; the edges are black and the inside could be very warm. It has to be able to survive greater temperature differences normally.
And no, arbitration causes are not an out for them here.
Hold manufacturers to the law. Do not let them avoid responsibility.
-Crissa
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