Cyberostachu
Well-known member
- First Name
- Manny
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2023
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 230
- Reaction score
- 152
- Location
- Nevada
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck
- Occupation
- Retired
The
They pointed out I was using 290 to 350 wpm but where I live it's up and down so I couldn't maIntain an ideal 200 to 220 wpm. In a way I had a "Uranium foot" in my first visit but I eased up later but did make much difference. I told them, "You bragged your car can run 135 mph and can acceleration 0 to 60 mph in 4.2 seconds but you are telling me to drive 65 in a 75 mph zone and accelerate 9 sec on the first 60 mph? If you advertised like that, I would not have been crazy to replace my BMW for this." They had no solution. I admit I like fast cars but can not accept 220 miles on a 330-mile rated car. Enough complaining but I hope more people realized that it could happen to them too. ? ?I think Jhodgesatmb answers his own question right there.
What is Tesla supposed to do? If the window sensors are operating in the correct (and safe) manner, there still will be some failure rate. Might be a one in a million fluke, and there's logs.
I'm not sure what they're supposed to do here, if they can't find the error in the logs or replicate the issue.
What this really is, is a failure of how Tesla (and pretty much all manufacturers today) don't reveal these logs except under legal duress. And they don't reveal their formula for things like battery capacity, either.
Yes, and they can tell what speed you've been driving at, what the weather conditions are, how you pressed the accelerator, and what the battery voltages are.
They can tell if you're just a lead foot or not.
Are they supposed to tell you that you're a lead foot to your face? Sounds like a position I wouldn't want to put my employees in.
-Crissa
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