£600 as they also swap the steering wheel.
Model 3’s came without stalks for a couple of year so they’ll be loads in the used market if you are buying in that era.
Glad they’ve backed away from that decision and gone back to proper stalks; the ones I test drove didn’t have them, and neither did the showroom cars when I looked early last year and the year before.
It’s not something that should have
ever been an aftermarket purchase; I was quite honest with them when I chose not to go ahead long-term that it was part of the reason why.
As someone who spends a reasonable amount of time in London, the last thing I EVER want to be doing is faffing around trying to find indicators and basic functionality.
***
As a seperate update regarding the Ford Capri I mentioned in my big post:
It’s not perfect, but it’s a very, very noticeable step up in terms of quality vs the Peugeots. The software isn’t perfect (the good old forgetting the drive mode on each start etc), but it’s far more stable and far less buggy, and ECO mode actually seems to do something other than just soften the throttle. The drive also feels much more solid and nimble than the Peugeot. Like any EV, it can still show lower efficiency (sub 3 miles per kwh) on short, stop-start drives where heating/cooling and acceleration hit range, but on longer drives I’m typically seeing 3.6–4.x miles per kWh with motorway and dual carriageway use over a decent distance and duration.
Genuinely night and day compared to the Peugeot, which seemed glued to ~2.8 miles per KwH regardless of what I did, whether I used ACC (adaptive cruise control) or not, even in Eco, and that combo should have produced virtually ideal numbers based on Peugeot's own calculations and algorithms. I actually somewhat trust the Ford Capri might be able to achieve somewhere around the range estimates it delivers, at least on longer drives, and whilst it's still not as good in terms of overall range to my BYD, it feels much closer in parity and like a genuinely usable vehicle that you're not constantly worrying whether it's going to drop like a rock because you can't trust it's estimates or feedback. The Peugeot I absolutely lost all faith in to be accurate at all, along with glitches like the language changes/crashes, and then that it struggled to do 200 miles realworld, despite estimating 300 on a full charge. Really felt underbaked and rushed to market as a wider platform. Having the Capri in hand now, I can really reflect back on the Peugeot as thank god it's gone.
Another thing I rather like with the Ford Capri, is that they've tied the ACC in with thier own inhouse Ford mapping solution and the car camera/sensors, so when it knows you're coming to a bend, or a roundabout, it'll start to slow you down, even without you having to do anything. That's a nice little integration touch I've not seen many other manufacturers do as yet. I'm 50/50 on whether I like the fact they have a dedicated Drive and Brake (One Pedal Mode option) directly on the gear selection; I'd prefer that was a little more automatic; and optimal for the drive, especially when you're in Eco mode, but I'm being a pedant here, it's giving you an option, and it actually does do something.
One thing I do think the Ford lacks on a little on right now is the clarity/usability of the reversing camera. It's got a relatively clear image, but it's got a strange FOV that even with the guidelines just feels a little 'off' and makes it harder to judge the car's position from the camera alone, the wide angle switch makes it even worse; and it just feels a bit odd compared to other reversing cameras I've used; it's not awful, and the picture is clear enough, but doesn't feel as usable as other options I've used recently. It also doesn't have multiple cameras to try and build an over the top reflection of the car's position, that most of the other EVs I've tried in the last few years do. Again not a deal breaker, there are a lot of things about the Capri I DO like, but this stood out in my mind as a weak spot that Ford could improve.
Edit: Oh, there's also no 12V Cigarette lighter plug in the front. Not a dealbreaker for me, albeit a shame as a I have a 100W USB-C adaptor, but it could be a dealbreaker for some depending on what kit they use in the car.