Front end suspension is poor on Model Y - terrible roads, 42 psi tyres and swiss cheese for suspension parts - All warranty covered work.Is that a common failure on the Tesla's?
Front end suspension is poor on Model Y - terrible roads, 42 psi tyres and swiss cheese for suspension parts - All warranty covered work.Is that a common failure on the Tesla's?
See above - all replaced a few weeks before under warranty
Yes, the original factory ones on ‘older’ cars wear out very quickly. Not so much of an issue on newer cars which have a revised part.Is that a common failure on the Tesla's?
Thanks, it has the exact same spec as this car https://usedcars.bmw.co.uk/vehicle/202504151373569?quoteref=dce8d112-50d5-454e-b1bd-ef396d501c45 including the interior only I paid less and it is a Oct 2024 first reg. Those are the shadowline laser rearlights so it also has the adaptive matrix headlamps as wellAh that looks awesome! Don't often see the red. Makes a nice change from all the grey cars.
Looks like you went for the pro pack, those rear lights look great. What else did you spec?
It's something I hadn't even considered and hadn't seen mentioned in any of the reviews I'd watched/read.It’s surprising how few people do their homework on such potentially non trivial matters. I was looking at an MG4 until I saw it only charged at 3.7 kWh on a lot of destination AC chargers. Hotels and such. Also even 22kWh chargers max out at 6.7kWh instead of 11kWh. While that was not the only reason I rejected one (offset steering wheel), it would have been enough for me to reject.
I would do fairly frequent driving holidays to various parts of Ireland and have in many of these only used destination chargers. The difference between getting 10kWh vs 30kWh while doing tourist stuff for 3 hours is substantial.
It's something I hadn't even considered and hadn't seen mentioned in any of the reviews I'd watched/read.
I like to think I'm generally on the ball with stuff like this but just assumed that these chargers that are everywhere would charge a car at the stated rate regardless so it must catch a lot of people out.
Like I said though for my usage it's not really a problem we use the wife's car for family day out/holiday duty, just a bit of a surprise.
First drive into the office this morning, hooked it up to one of the 11kWh chargers just to see how it all works.
Came back an hour later and it had added...2.4kWh. Seems it doesn't quite work how I assumed![]()
Yes, the original factory ones on ‘older’ cars wear out very quickly. Not so much of an issue on newer cars which have a revised part.
@booyaka - surely you have another year on the factory warranty?
Apologies if my post comes across as a dig. I totally get that my use case is different from other owners. I also roll my eyes at the kind of EVangilists who assume anyone looking for an EV will only be interested in efficiency and charging speed.
I trawled EVDB for such things as AC charging times because my yearly use cases tends to include driving holidays around Ireland at 500 - 600 miles. I tend to stick to destination chargers on these trips and the difference between getting 13ish vs 40ish kWh in 4 hours of charging would be a significant impact on EV suitability.
I know it’s maybe 2 times a year and seems trivial, but for me it’s more important than rapid charging speeds.
Edit: Your point about EV reviews is one of my bugbears with them. You get to zero info about how the app works, how home charging works, how the Bluetooth phone integration works (will it even allow multiple phones). So many of them don’t even quote anything other than the WLTP range numbers. They are only useful for how a car looks.
Oh so it literally would have failed its MOT before 3 years.
So not a TTS Superbusa then? Christ, dude never listens. This is how wars are started
Disgusting behaviour @tom_e
Barely, at least as far as the UK goes, because most places you'll find such chargers will be expensive enough per kWh you're probably better off using petrol anyway.AC/DC charging rates have become more important with the proliferation of large battery 16/20 phev's like discussed in other thread, where faster recharge on those is useful
- is there a one stop ev database with all this kind of info ?
A very very good question.@jpaul given how much time you spend reading and watching videos online about EVs and participating in discussions about EVs, how do you not know about EV Database?
C rate isn’t even a topic for DC chargingAC/DC charging rates have become more important with the proliferation of large battery 16/20 phev's like discussed in other thread, where faster recharge on those is useful,
within battery C-rate; the guy who got the mercedes phev a while back in this thread, thought he payed extra for the faster 22kw A/C option, isn't it a bmw option too.
(wasn't it kia or hyundai who innovatively use the motor invertor electronics to get 3phase for 22kw at low cost, or maybe that was v2l )
- is there a one stop ev database with all this kind of info ?