Absolutely, wheel bearings, shocks, tie rods, sway bars, etc.
Yup, Im not sure where the idea these are "maintenance free" ever came from, there is plenty to do that isn't engine and trans related.
Absolutely, wheel bearings, shocks, tie rods, sway bars, etc.
Absolutely, wheel bearings, shocks, tie rods, sway bars, etc.
Tesla's residual values might mean a different (later) mileage/age sweet spot at which rental companies turn them over.Rental car keeps a car for what, 2-3 years? They won't be dealing with any of that.
This is great. Let's not innovate because the economy can't take the hit. How many manure shovel operators were put out of business when the first Fords started rolling off the assembly lines? How about all those who grew grain/feed/ for those horses?Let's hope the "deal" included charging stations at the rental locations.
Unfortunately, nobody is prepared for the loss of maintenance jobs associated with ICE cars. If I was a "mechanic" for Hertz, I'd be worried.
In that same vein, the entire economy is not prepared for the loss of jobs linked to the adoption of electric vehicles. No oil filters, no oil changes, no coolant changes, no fuel rails, fuel pumps, injectors, none of that.
Teslas charge at 3 miles per hour on 110, so they'll probably have something better. Perhaps provide multi-day users with a 110 charger.This is good news. After 3 years it will open opportunities to buy used Tesla’s. Regarding charging, customers will probably bring them in uncharged and pay the fee. Each car stall will have a charger, maybe just a 110 V. I don't know what the turnaround is on a rental car but I suspect no faster than gong out the next morning. ( 8 to 24 hrs).
Who are you referring to as stupid? The officer for attempting to stop a felon or the department for placing a Tesla on patrol?Then they are stupid. Tesla warns the heck outta you. And then goes into a low power mode.
Perfect Business Model. Customer has to allot four to six hours of charge time before handing it back.Hertz charges up the Ying Yang if you return a car low on fuel. Imagine how much they will charge if you return it with a low battery.
Hopefully electric charging becomes taxed. There should be at least parity with what fueled vehicles pay for roads.The cost of electricity is still a fraction of gasoline, right?
If these cars were so much trouble, why is the demand so high?
To be fair, I don’t think shocks, sway bars, tie rods, or wheel bearings are a normal maintenance item. Those are repairs these days. A lot of the time they can go 100’s of thousands of miles without needing replaced. Sometimes they don’t last that long.Yup, Im not sure where the idea these are "maintenance free" ever came from, there is plenty to do that isn't engine and trans related.
To be fair, I don’t think shocks, sway bars, tie rods, or wheel bearings are a normal maintenance item. Those are repairs these days. A lot of the time they can go 100’s of thousands of miles without needing replaced. Sometimes they don’t last that long.
The point is, Tesla sends up all kinds of warning flags when your range is low.Who are you referring to as stupid? The officer for attempting to stop a felon or the department for placing a Tesla on patrol?
Charging might be hard to tax, for example I charge with solar panels. Who knows?Hopefully electric charging becomes taxed. There should be at least parity with what fueled vehicles pay for roads.
Regarding trouble, how many of these cars have been in private owners’ hands for 10+ years? How many have gotten sold on a car lot, or better, a buy here pay here lot? Can people actually own these cars and maintain them themselves? Go to autozone to get parts?
The reality is that nobody can say much when it’s an infant technology. Taxicabs don’t really count, just like they don’t when looking at IC vehicles.
Good tech and longevity are vastly different parameters.
The point is, Tesla sends up all kinds of warning flags when your range is low.
You made that clear in your post which, I don’t doubt is the case but you opened that post by suggesting that the officer was “stupid”. Because why, for continuing to follow the suspect given those warning indicators? In an ICE vehicle there is a low fuel warning light that illuminates. Wonder how many times over the decades a cop was stupid enough to continue after a bad guy when it was lit?The point is, Tesla sends up all kinds of warning flags when your range is low.