stopcrazypp
stopcrazypp
stopcrazypp

The owner clearly reviewed and recorded the footage on their phone (which is why it’s posted). It’s trivial to just press the save button on the car while they were doing that (or more ideally, safely pause the recording and pull the drive). So they clearly had the time, they just didn’t do it.

Unless your car is equipped with the glass breakage package (which I don’t think any US cars are, I believe that is only offered in Europe) then glass breakage will not trigger a save. You would have to hope that Sentry mode would trigger, but again, it’s not clear Sentry was even active in this case.

Nope, that’s not how it works. If you have Sentry active, the Sentry mode will automatically move important moments it detects to the “Sentry Clips folder”. Those don’t get deleted automatically.

No need, the drive automatically wipes the video loop in 1 hour unless you explicitly press the save button to save a clip, or it was auto saved by other action (like Sentry mode, pressing the horn, or the crash module activating).

If Sentry was not on, it would not automatically save the clip. It would just be in the normal one hour video loop that automatically gets deleted after the time expires.

The USB drive wipes automatically in a one hour loop. The owner didn’t bother to copy it out or order the save button to save the specific clip into a different folder on the drive, so it got wiped.

I didn’t look into the details, it may very well be 55 miles (although if they drove under limp mode it might have gone quite a bit further, as most Teslas keep a buffer below indicated 0 range), but Tesla’s point was more on how they presented it as if Tesla’s range numbers were grossly exaggerated.

The first one was an outlier after multiple suits where that argument failed.

I see this argument a lot suggesting that is how L2 cars make things more dangerous, but that comes with the assumption that drunk drivers wouldn’t attempt to drive drunk in the absence of the tech, which is generally false (same thing with drowsy driving). Instead L2 at least gives a decent chance the drunk doesn’t

Autopilot was already blamed in multiple suits and the argument failed. The naming is a red herring (Tesla can easily point to the textbook definition of Autopilot anyways, which is a system that still requires the pilot/copilot to monitor the plane and where the pilot/copilot is still legally responsible). What

I’m guessing they have a generator onboard? I did research for someone getting a backup generator and there are quite a few decent inverter generators that can charge EVs.

According to the parts catalog for the Highland refresh, the part numbers are different even though they look similar:

The car in question is a major refresh. Some people did a teardown and there are many major changes. In the body, they changed the sound proofing significantly. Although the overall shape might be similar, the doors are actually different too because they added a side impact latch:

You want to do this when the car is brand new. Even if you don’t opt for PPF, a lot of people opt for ceramic coat, which you want to do on a clean surface. Waiting until it gets dirty (and likely with some clearcoat damage at minimum) doesn’t make sense because you would be building on a flawed surface. Note this is

Even for a Performance? From what I see in the forums, a lot of people cross shop that with cars like the M3 and it is actually pretty decent value for what you get.

Yeah, I think the requirement is likely outdated. Also many now have brake based traction seeking functions which works surprisingly well to find traction on the available wheel and stop the spinning wheel from spinning (even with a car with a open or limited slip diff). Computer control systems have advanced

My impression is the amount of water released is much more than rainwater, especially the type that can release 60 gpm. Yes obviously blasting it directly with a firehose from the bottom is more effective, but presumably sprinklers from the top still help, or NFPA wouldn’t be pushing for this requirement.

That sounds even more inexpensive, but NFPA instead is now requiring all new garages to have sprinkler systems in order to deal with EV fires.

I thought this would be another effective LG Chem thing like what happened to the Bolt, but looks like the battery brand is Farasis, some kind of Chinese brand I’ve never heard of.