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Two New Teslas - Terrible Reliability Hits New Records
Tesla has now acheive a number of new records.
Record #1 and #2 - As of today my Model S which I took delivery of 30 days ago and my Model X that we took delivery of 16 days ago have both now individually each spent more days in the Service Center (5 days each, but S clock is still running as it is still there) than the combined total days of all new cars I have bought in the last 30 years.
Record #3 - Tesla service has put more miles on my Model X than my wife and I have since delivery.
Record #4 - I have now had 7 different Tesla loaner cars over the past month. That is 7 more than any car I have ever bought (although I tend to wait for service even when Porsche oil change took 4+ hours).
That is quite an amazing streak over such a short period. When I drive my Telsas I love them, just wish I got to more often.
Joking aside it has come to the point where I worry about my wife taking her X too far right now and I am docmuenting everything on both cars in the case I have to Lemon Law them. Really a shame and starting to feel foolish for purchasing two in such a short time period.
Wow, who changed the title of my Thread? I did not label it Lemon Law.
Model X - Parking Brake Needs Service - Fully documented in my other thread where the Technician who picked up my X decided to take it home 70 miles from the Service Center. Tesla Service Experience Takes a Strange Turn
Let's take a look at lemon law:
- The warranty for the vehicle must be current:
- The vehicle must be taken in for repair to an authorized dealer, for the same problem, at least 3-4 times. NOTE: For California law specifically, the law includes that if a certain repair may cause death or serious injury, 2 attempts to repair is sufficient cause to qualify a vehicle as a lemon. For example, brake failure would qualify after two repair attempts, as it is a major safety defect.
May be not 3 to 4 times so far?
- The vehicle must have been inoperable for a total of 30 days (the days do not need to be consecutive).
- The defect or malfunction in the car must be of severe impact either impairing the safety, value or use of the vehicle.
- In order to qualify, all cars must be leased or purchased in California and used for personal, family or business use.
So, for Lemon: You got 3 checked off but the other 2 are not?
I recently saw a thread about parking brake messages. There's a firmware glitch that as far as I know Tesla's still working on.
"Parking Brake Needs Service"
All the service centers really should know about this, no surprise if they don't though.
When buying Tesla's, it may be a good idea to space the purchases out and let the first one go through the break-in period, fix everything, before buying the next one. For all 3 Tesla's that we bought the break-in period was under 6 months (actually, the oldest - 2013 - was the best in that respect). Knock-on wood, once all fixed they've held up great so far.
https://teslamotorsclub.com/tmc/threads/two-new-teslas-terrible-reliability-hits-new-records.100099/
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