People aren’t selling checklists, but it’s not hard to find people also doing similar new car checklists for other brands (just a quick Google of the German big 3 for example):
People aren’t selling checklists, but it’s not hard to find people also doing similar new car checklists for other brands (just a quick Google of the German big 3 for example):
Yeah, I laughed when he pointed out the MachE as a positive example, given all the horror stories I have heard (many reported in the news). It had so many serious problems that the Teslas look a lot better in comparison. As much as people here like to harp on panel gaps, they largely don’t matter to most people, which…
Yeah, this doesn't bode well and seems like desperation. It sounds like a great deal, except for the high probability the company goes bankrupt and you would be left high and dry if you need service. Heck, even if it survives, service may still be a challenge.
There’s also this one, which still has the same point about assuming it was the touchscreen and also includes a claim about the windows being unbreakable, which we now know is not true.
The WSJ passage is here:
Sure but the “suck in multiple ways” have nothing to do with this incident, especially given now there is finally confirmation that the car had physical stalks (see below comment). There was zero evidence in the first place it had the touchscreen system (the initial WSJ article never claimed that), it was only some ”jo…
Except the whole point about the gear selector is complete BS, given the WSJ article says it’s a 2020 Model X, which uses a physical gear stalk. The details out now says the driver side window was able to break and they pulled her out from there, dispelling previous claims about laminated glass and further confirming…
The only “journalism” done on the gear selector is WSJ (the main article almost all the stories are based on) says the car was a 2020 Model X, which you can find uses a physical Mercedes column shifter that was released in 2006. Jalopnik did no such verification, they just “assumed” in their own words that it was the…
Same reaction. I remember some comments speculated she was drunk but it was dismissed. Now knowing she was super super drunk, it makes sense why things happened the way they did. If she wasn’t, even shifting into the wrong gear shouldn’t have this consequence, especially given now we know there was even a retaining…
No we didn’t. See the previous article that practically all blamed the car, whether it’s the manual release or the shifter (which so far still not confirmed, although WSJ reports the car was a 2020 Model X, a year that still had the physical gear stalk). There was zero mention of suggestion she was drunk (much less…
Yes they do, every Tesla has manual releases on the front doors. For rear doors, it’s a mixed bag. Some have hidden releases, the Model 3 has no manual releases. Note this is acceptable for rear doors due to a similar condition for rear child locks (which prevent the doors from opening at all).
Yes, it’s an official Chevy accessory even, not a random third party:
It's mandatory for trunks. This isn't a trunk, plus it isn't fully enclosed from external light, given external light comes in from the cabin windows.
“If you are going to advertise that your system does not require the driver to pay attention on limited access highways”
None of the L2 systems advertise that they do not require the driver to pay attention. In fact all of them have various nags that complain when it detects you are not paying attention.
As you mention, it likely depends on what type of road you are on, as that changes whether you have your high beams on, what speeds you are travelling and whether you have the mindset to expect animals in the middle of the road. Also matters if the road was curved or straight. From the account it seems the car was…
Not sure why you don’t mention it, but the CRV that was hit was in the middle lane with the lights off at night. That is a recipe for disaster even with a human driver.
I find it funny that they think gull wing doors are cool when Apple does it, but they hated on it when it was Tesla doing it.
Well, reviews tend to be based on opinion, especially video reviews with a “personality”. Heck, Top Gear worked a long time on a similar format. Basically different people care about different things, same applies to reviewers. Given he comes from a phone reviewer background, UI probably weighs in heavily. For other…
Plus, like any other car, the current "gear" is displayed on the dash for all versions as is required by Federal law.
“but because the issue revolves around the screen shifting problem, we can assume it was the latter.”