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I always say the experience is like buying a car from the cable company. People who believe that direct to consumer is better than the franchise model have never dealt with tesla sales or service.
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At the end of the day only you can make your decision and you need to be comfortable with it. It sounds like you made the right decision for you at this moment.1) Hardware uncertainty
Recent trends make it feel like a major hardware shift is around the corner. Elon recently said AI5/HW5 is ready, FSD is no longer being sold outright
2) Sales experience killed my confidence
Dealing with Tesla sales was honestly frustrating. Hours on hold with automated systems, undertrained reps, conflicting answers, dropped calls ā it just didnāt inspire confidence.
3) Final straw: conflicting info from Tesla itself
Today a Tesla manager told me over the phone that a Model S/X yoke could be installed in the Cybertruck before delivery. She told me to confirm with my local delivery advisor.
Exactly. Imagine ordering an F150 but wanting the dealer to install a steering wheel from a Navigator before delivery. No one would accommodate this.3) That is a very specific question and I'm not sure many service centers of other cars would be able to confidently answer that
This just isn't sound advice though. Imagine paying full MSRP for a Tesla just before the better hardware comes out? It is a bad idea. Other manufacturers have model years and you can get substantial discounts buying last year's model when the new model comes out. That is because last year's model immediately depreciates. Same thing happens with Teslas on the depreciation side, but you don't get the discount on the purchase like with other manufacturers. I would have a hard time considering a HW3 vehicle today if it was 80% off, there just isn't any reason to buy old tech from a tech company.Trust me, if I kept on waiting for the next best thing to happen I would still be in my 1995 Honda Accord and have a Motorola flip phone. Sometimes, you just have to pull the plug and go for it. For the longest time, the best vehicle I ever had was my 1995 Honda Accord. It never broke down. No matter what I or the road threw at it. After a 120K, I finally got rid of it. After that, I bought and drove well over 20 different cars. None came close to my Honda. I had Porsches, Mercs, Bemers, Caddy, Acuras, Teslas, Lucid, Kias, Genesis, and Hyundai. Until now. My CTB is by far the best vehicle. When Iām done with this vehicle I hope Tesla will bring out something far more better. IMO, go for it.
Not saying youāre wrong. You have a lot of points that are right. However, neither you nor I know when the HW5 is going to come out. In Teslaās fashion that can be one year to two or even longer. As one person wrote in this post, Tesla will most likely reserve the HW5 for CyberCab(CyberTaxi) before releasing it to the other vehicles let alone the CyberTruck. Tech and car companies are creature of habit. Everyone knows when the next greatest tech is going to come out. That doesnāt apply to Tesla. Iām just saying if this person wants to get the CyberTruck get it now or he might wait for a while. Of course, I can be completely wrong and they come out with the HW5 next month. Honestly, I think Tesla does this on purpose. So, customers keep on buying their vehicles without knowing when the next best thing is coming.This just isn't sound advice though. Imagine paying full MSRP for a Tesla just before the better hardware comes out? It is a bad idea. Other manufacturers have model years and you can get substantial discounts buying last year's model when the new model comes out. That is because last year's model immediately depreciates. Same thing happens with Teslas on the depreciation side, but you don't get the discount on the purchase like with other manufacturers. I would have a hard time considering a HW3 vehicle today if it was 80% off, there just isn't any reason to buy old tech from a tech company.
We have smartphones on wheels. I always wondered what lunatics were buying a full priced iPhone say 11 months after it came out, when the same price will get you something 50% better in 1 month. Even if my phone broke and I had an emergency situation where I needed to buy a new phone, I would rather get a $80 burner phone for a month and then buy the new phone.
HW5 will be a substantial leap, just like HW4 was. We now are on year 3 of HW4, which is ancient in the tech world. HW5 is coming in a year, it will blow away what we are using now, why would you not wait?
It's not about the top speed for me. The beast is about zero to 60 in 2.5 sec. Something few people ever get to experience. I drive in beast mode all the time now. It shouldn't be possible with a 7,000lb truck. Although I don't race Ferrari's or Lamborghini etc. I know I could. The beast is a bargain with no comparison.Or you could settle for a Dual Motor, like I didThere is not much of a difference, in reality.. Yes, it has a higher top speed, but I don't find I can drive or accelerate that fast, in many real world situations. The Dual Motor is about $80K new now, maybe $20-30K more than waiting a year or 2 for a used Cyberbeast, and you get 2 more years of enjoying it
Fair points for sure. I am assuming HW5 is in CT early next year, but absolutely could be later than that. If it ends up being end of 2027, not start of 2027, that is a heck of a long wait.Not saying youāre wrong. You have a lot of points that are right. However, neither you nor I know when the HW5 is going to come out. In Teslaās fashion that can be one year to two or even longer. As one person wrote in this post, Tesla will most likely reserve the HW5 for CyberCab(CyberTaxi) before releasing it to the other vehicles let alone the CyberTruck. Tech and car companies are creature of habit. Everyone knows when the next greatest tech is going to come out. That doesnāt apply to Tesla. Iām just saying if this person wants to get the CyberTruck get it now or he might wait for a while. Of course, I can be completely wrong and they come out with the HW5 next month. Honestly, I think Tesla does this on purpose. So, customers keep on buying their vehicles without knowing when the next best thing is coming.