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Tesla Motors Battles the New York Times

redletterdave writes "Days after the New York Times released a brutal review of Tesla's electric Model S sedan, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has fired back, claiming the Times article was completely bogus and misleading. In the article in question, Times writer John Broder took the Tesla Model S on a test drive from Washington to Boston, stopping at various service plazas in Delaware and Connecticut well within the projected 265-mile range of the car, as rated by the EPA. However, Broder's Tesla Model S, despite a heftier 85 kilowatt-hour battery for an extra 100 miles of range in 'ideal conditions,' died shortly before reaching its final destination. Broder blames the cold weather and heating issues for his abridged trip; Musk, however, claims the driver did not follow Tesla's instructions, which is why his trip was cut so short. 'We've taken great pains to ensure that the car works very well in the cold, which is why we're so incensed by this ridiculous article,' Musk said."

700 comments

  1. CEO Switchout by regular_guy · · Score: 5, Funny

    You're driving it wrong.

    1. Re:CEO Switchout by war4peace · · Score: 4, Interesting

      He also says they have the car logs. That's gonna be interesting to look at.

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    2. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They should publish these logs. Given that there's a PR disaster on their hands, I'd think full disclosure would be wise.

    3. Re:CEO Switchout by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      That really really depends on whether it was the cars fault or not, if it was they obviously wouldn't want to, but would that be a statement in and of itself? It typically is, otherwise they can use the logs as weight against Times.

    4. Re:CEO Switchout by siddesu · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Logs don't mean much in this case, unless they show the journalist purposefully took the car out on half charge and drove around much more than he's describing. These two are quite unlikely to have happened.

      If you buy a luxury car, even an electric one, you expect it to handle itself like a luxury car. You surely should not be expected to look at the log all the time, to adjust your manner of driving to suit your battery, your route to be within a pushing distance of a charging station all the time, and to have no heating inside.

    5. Re:CEO Switchout by preaction · · Score: 3, Informative

      That is indeed what the logs do say: The car was not fully-charged, and the journalist took a detour from the given route. The logs are only on the test models, though regular customers can get them added if they want. I imagine this means they aren't meant to be real-time monitors that you look at frequently.

    6. Re:CEO Switchout by siddesu · · Score: 1

      I take it that you've seen them, then? Care to post a link where I could take a look too?

    7. Re:CEO Switchout by cheater512 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It wasn't fully charged, but he didn't need it to be fully charged.
      It had plenty of charge indicated to get him to the next charging station.

    8. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, they should just stick to luxury gas powered cars. At least then you just take the car and do what you want with it, no need to pay attention to the gas gauge or make sure it is full enough to go to your destination, no need to take driving conditions into consideration when deciding how far you can get on a tank of gas. You should not be expected to check your gas gauge all the time, to adjust your driving to suit your gas tank.

    9. Re:CEO Switchout by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      The article accurately states the route he took and what he did when charging. He didn't charge the car to full capacity, but he did charge it until it showed that it was well within the range he wanted to go.

      Elon Musk was trying to say that he never mentioned driving in Manhattan, but he did state that fact. He took the car on a detour through Manhattan to Connecticut, and when he parked it, it still said he had plenty of miles to get back to the charging station. When he got up in the morning, 2/3's of those miles dissappeared from the car overnight.

      Not what I'd expect from a luxury automobile.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    10. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They haven't released the long-form logs.

    11. Re:CEO Switchout by siddesu · · Score: 2

      I have yet to park a gas-powered luxury car with half the tank full for the night and find the tank empty in the morning, dimwit.

    12. Re:CEO Switchout by MightyYar · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's because they show that the reporter made a stop to drop of guns in Sandy Hook.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    13. Re:CEO Switchout by Curmudgeonlyoldbloke · · Score: 4, Informative

      There's a bit more "he said / she said" in this followup article:

      http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/12/the-charges-are-flying-over-a-test-of-teslas-charging-network/?ref=johnmbroder

      including links to Elon Musk's "detour" claims, and the NYT journo's rebuttal.

    14. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      You obviously haven't parked in Harlem.

    15. Re:CEO Switchout by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      And, while that has happened to me, at least the gas station was only 3 blocks away and the generous thieves left enough for me to get there.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    16. Re:CEO Switchout by Dahan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The car was not fully-charged

      The car may not have been fully charged, but it was charged to the point where it displayed "Charging Complete" (which is apparently about 90% charge), at which point the estimated range displayed by the car should have covered the distance to his destination with no problems.

      and the journalist took a detour from the given route.

      A two-mile detour into Manhattan. Which he was thinking might actually increase the range, seeing that air resistance is lower at slower speeds, and regenerative braking can help recoup much of the energy lost by a gasoline-powered car during stop-and-go driving. Have you noticed how hybrids have a higher MPG for city driving vs. highway, whereas gas-powered cars have a higher MPG for highway vs. city? It turns out that he was wrong--driving at a slower speed is what saves energy, not the stop-and-go driving of going through a city, but a two mile detour is hardly the make or break thing that Musk is making it out to be.

    17. Re:CEO Switchout by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It wasn't fully charged, but he didn't need it to be fully charged. It had plenty of charge indicated to get him to the next charging station.

      He charged until the computer said he had sufficient juice for his planned route and driving style (assuming the Tesla is like my LEAF, the car estimates your driving efficiency based on your past driving). Then he took a longer route and drove more aggressively. Surprise, surprise, the charge the computer (correctly) estimated was sufficient for one route and style was not enough for another route and style.

      This is like putting barely enough gasoline in your car for the planned journey and then taking a longer trip and wondering why you ran out of gas. The problem is between the seat and the steering wheel.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    18. Re:CEO Switchout by siddesu · · Score: 1

      On a single charge, too, right?

    19. Re:CEO Switchout by rs1n · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Mod parent down for mis-information. When the reporter got up in the morning, 2/3 of the miles did indeed disappear from the care overnight. Why did you leave out the rest of the article that would essentially refute your post? Here's the rest:

      1) He was instructed to then condition the battery. After some time, the support team "cleared [him] to resume the trip to Milford." We can only speculate what is meant by "cleared." Did they clear the battery conditioning, so that he simply needed to continue with normal procedures to complete his trip? Or did they clear him in the sense that he could stop charging as well and should just head back, disregarding any future messages from the vehicle?

      2) From the article: Looking back, I should have bought a membership to Butch’s and spent a few hours there while the car charged. The displayed range never reached the number of miles remaining to Milford, and as I limped along at about 45 miles per hour I saw increasingly dire dashboard warnings to recharge immediately. Mr. Merendino, the product planner, found an E.V. charging station about five miles away. If the display clearly showed that there was not enough range, why did the reporter not bring this up with the support team? Instead, he drove anyway. Is it a surprise, then, that he never made it back?

    20. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, although I've had gas cars parked over night to find they wouldn't start in the morning because the battery was dead. Or I would find they don't start in the morning because the weather was too cold. Or I would find that when getting back from a camping site on a really hot day I had to skip the AC to keep gas usage down when getting back to civilization.

    21. Re:CEO Switchout by siddesu · · Score: 1, Funny

      Theft is a negative externality we are not considering here. Parking your luxury car in certain neigbourhoods may lead to the evaporation of the whole vehicle.

    22. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, show the logs then. You'll have to excuse me if I don't take your word for it.

    23. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, you have a locking gas cap then?

    24. Re:CEO Switchout by hawguy · · Score: 1

      I have yet to park a gas-powered luxury car with half the tank full for the night and find the tank empty in the morning, dimwit.

      I haven't had it happen in (nor ever owned) a luxury vehicle, but on my old Accord, the gas gauge would sometimes stick randomly between the 3/4 and 1/4 tank setting. And sometimes it would correct itself overnight (I think it was a bad sending unit since the gauge itself went down to zero after turning off the car then back up to the stuck setting after turning on the car. But other times, the gauge worked fine -- oddly it worked better in cold weather). I learned to rely on the odometer instead of the gauge.

      So it is possible to park a gasoline powered car with 1/2 tank at night, and by morning the gauge read empty. But I never really saw that as a flaw of gasoline powered cars in general, just a problem with the sensing hardware.

    25. Re:CEO Switchout by guanxi · · Score: 2

      That is indeed what the logs do say ...

      Have you seen them?

    26. Re:CEO Switchout by siddesu · · Score: 1

      Yes, I have the enhanced 2kg padlock version.

    27. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This seems completely orthogonal to what you were saying in your previous post the AC was replying to. You act like having a gas powered luxury vehicle some how means you can ignore the gas gauge and driving style wouldn't affect your range. People get stuck due to running out of gas all of the time precisely because they ignored their gas gauge. Regardless of how badly behaved their range estimate is and how fair of a criticism that is, that is all irrelevant to what you said in your previous post.

    28. Re:CEO Switchout by icebike · · Score: 1

      That really really depends on whether it was the cars fault or not, if it was they obviously wouldn't want to, but would that be a statement in and of itself? It typically is, otherwise they can use the logs as weight against Times.

      If the logs show the exact route, including the detour, they should publish them in a full page ad in the NYT, then ask the editor once again if they still want to stand by their story that there was no detour. If the editor says yes, sue them for several hundred million. If the Editor say, well, er, no, maybe the route wasn't exactly as we said, send the bill for the advertisement back stamped paid in full.

      If Tesla won't publish the entire log, including speed, route, state of charge, how much was used for heat, then that would be your clue that they might not exactly be totally honest in their promotional material.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    29. Re:CEO Switchout by farble1670 · · Score: 0

      the reporter stated that the car indicated that it had well enough charge to reach the destination, and the "detour" amounted to a total of 2 miles.

    30. Re:CEO Switchout by icebike · · Score: 1

      Logs don't mean much in this case, unless they show the journalist purposefully took the car out on half charge and drove around much more than he's describing. These two are quite unlikely to have happened.

      I'm betting the logs show every bit of that level of detail and much much more.

      Probably a complete GPS track, State of charge no less than every 5 minutes), speed, rate of climb/descent, how much the lights were on, the strip heat, the air conditioner, the fans, everything. Why would you NOT but that level of logging in a smart car that depends on battery power?

      So the logs mean everything.

       

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    31. Re:CEO Switchout by hrvatska · · Score: 5, Informative
      From the reporter's account it doesn't seem like his route deviated in any significant way from what he had advised Tesla he would be taking. As noted in his reply to Musk's accusations,

      Mr. Musk has referred to a “long detour” on my trip. He is apparently referring to a brief stop in Manhattan on my way to Connecticut that, according to Google Maps, added precisely two miles to the overall distance traveled from the Delaware Supercharger to Milford (202 miles with the stop versus 200 miles had I taken the George Washington Bridge instead of the Lincoln Tunnel). At that point, I was already experiencing anxiety about range and had called a Tesla employee from the New Jersey Turnpike to ask how to stretch the battery. She said to shut off the cruise control to take advantage of battery regeneration from occasional braking and slowing down. Based on that advice, I was under the impression that stop-and-go driving at low speeds in the city would help, not hurt, my mileage.

      Before I set out from my home in suburban Washington, I informed Tesla that I intended to make a brief stop in New York and that I would spend the night in the vicinity of Milford rather than attempting to make it to Boston, which was theoretically possible with a full charge at Milford, although it was a bitterly cold night — and that clearly affects the car’s range. I added 185 miles of range at Milford, knowing that I wouldn’t need 242 or 265 miles before recharging the next morning.

      When I parked the car for the night at a hotel, the range meter showed 90 miles remaining, and I was about 45 miles from the Milford Supercharger. As I recounted in the article, when I awoke the next morning the indicated range was 25 miles. The rest of that story is told in the article, including a Tesla official’s counsel, which I followed, that an hour of charging at the Norwich, Conn., utility would restore much of the range lost overnight, which had disappeared because of what he called a “software glitch.”

      I don't see where the actual size of his detour (2 miles) or style of driving, as he described it, should have had a dramatic effect on the vehicle's range. It doesn't seem like the problem, at least according to his account, is between the seat and the steering wheel.

    32. Re:CEO Switchout by msauve · · Score: 1

      "He also says they have the car logs. That's gonna be interesting to look at."

      Assuming the reporter didn't sign something specifically allowing it, how would that not present a problem of disclosing private information (especially if there are GPS logs of the car's track, as implied by the article)?

      OTOH, when Musk says he didn't charge it fully, he provides no detail - if it was 70%, he may have a point. If it was 99%, he doesn't and is just spinning things.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    33. Re:CEO Switchout by immaterial · · Score: 4, Interesting
      This part concerns me:

      She said to shut off the cruise control to take advantage of battery regeneration from occasional braking and slowing down. Based on that advice, I was under the impression that stop-and-go driving at low speeds in the city would help, not hurt, my mileage.

      This demonstrates a distinct lack of understanding of basic physics: you can't magically get extra energy from regenerative braking, even if it were 100% efficient (which it certainly isn't). The reporter is an idiot. The supposed Tesla employee he talked to is probably also an idiot, though for all we know the reporter misunderstood something she was trying to explain (how many of us have had customers leap to startlingly illogical conclusions after an attempt at explaining something technical to them?).

      The other thing to note is that while the overall mileage of the drive is nearly the same, the detour involved much more city driving. That means slower driving, and that means running the car for a much longer period. If the detour through the city added an extra 30 minutes of running-time to the trip, that would have meant more energy use regardless of the nearly-identical distance. Especially if the reporter was running the heater (I'm curious if that was the case, but seems likely given the weather), since an electric vehicle probably doesn't produce waste heat and has to generate heat for the heater by further sapping juice from the battery.

    34. Re:CEO Switchout by blackraven14250 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Based on that advice, I was under the impression that stop-and-go driving at low speeds in the city would help, not hurt, my mileage.

      He's thinking that repeatedly cycling between 0 and 10 is going to help his mileage. Do you really think that anyone driving a hybrid would think this is the case?

      Why does a reporter get an exemption for being an idiot? Driving in NYC for 2 miles is a massive detour when you consider the weather - not only was he losing lots more charge in those 2 miles than in the next 50 of cruising with gradual changes in speed, he also likely had the heat on, which is just going to drain the battery even faster than before.

    35. Re:CEO Switchout by blackraven14250 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Two miles in Manhattan probably took him an hour to an hour and a half. Look at the Google estimates for the Delaware to NYC (2 hours 26 minutes) and NYC to Milford (1 hour 26 minutes) legs of the trip - it totals under 4 hours. He left Delaware at 12:24pm, and arrived in Milford at 5:45pm - that's more than 5 hours, and almost 5 and a half. He spent more than an hour in NYC, probably an hour and a half, with at least 30 minutes in pure stop-and-go hell, since he's in midtown right around the time traffic starts to build up.

    36. Re:CEO Switchout by dcollins · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Well I must say that 2 miles in Manhattan is unlike driving anywhere else. For example: I have two options to take a bus out of New York to get to Boston, each on opposite sides of the island -- the width being very close to 2 miles. Taking the bus starting from the west side actually adds about 1 hour to the overall trip, just trying to get out of Manhattan.

      "She said to shut off the cruise control to take advantage of battery regeneration from occasional braking and slowing down. Based on that advice, I was under the impression that stop-and-go driving at low speeds in the city would help, not hurt, my mileage. "

      I can't imagine how someone would think those situations to be comparable: highway driving vs. cross-town in Manhattan are practically the defining opposite points of the driving spectrum. "Occasional slowing down" is not the same as "stop-and-go" every block for 50 block-stoplights.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    37. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She said to shut off the cruise control to take advantage of battery regeneration from occasional braking and slowing down. Based on that advice, I was under the impression that stop-and-go driving at low speeds in the city would help, not hurt, my mileage.

      I don't see where the actual size of his detour (2 miles) or style of driving, as he described it, should have had a dramatic effect on the vehicle's range. It doesn't seem like the problem, at least according to his account, is between the seat and the steering wheel.

      See the big hint up there? If anyone can have such serious misunderstanding about how regenerative braking works and thought that doing stop-and-go driving would give your MORE mileage, that guy has no business test driving ANY car.

    38. Re:CEO Switchout by immaterial · · Score: 1

      It wasn't just two miles in Manhattan, either - two miles was just the total added mileage. It's unlikely the reporter stuck to the original route, got off the freeway and drove one mile out and then one mile back, and then resumed the original route - in fact, by the reporter's own admission he took the Lincoln Tunnel rather than the GW Bridge, so we know the route through Manhattan was significantly different and probably encompassed a lot more than just two miles of surface streets. Until we see the detailed GPS data (is it out there yet?) we don't know for sure how many of those miles was surface streets through Manhattan rather than freeway.

    39. Re:CEO Switchout by dogsbreath · · Score: 1

      This is like putting barely enough gasoline in your car for the planned journey and then taking a longer trip and wondering why you ran out of gas. The problem is between the seat and the steering wheel.

      I think you are too kind. The problem is between the ears.

      Reading the articles, my take is the car does what it says it does and the reporter decided to get cute and act dumb. 'Disingenuous' is the term that should be applied to the Times and the reporter.

      The Times is no stranger to concocted or manipulated stories. eh, anyone who is a reporter or a politician is automatically suspect in my books.

    40. Re:CEO Switchout by CanadianRealist · · Score: 0

      Here's an interesting bit from the linked article:

      Virtually everyone says that I should have plugged in the car overnight in Connecticut, particularly given the cold temperature.

      Then that same paragraph finishes with:

      ... cannot realistically expect all 20,000 buyers a year (the Model S sales goal) to be electric-car acolytes who will plug in at every Walmart stop.

      So the reviewer made an overnight stop at a Walmart in Connecticut? I'd say that if you have to exaggerate to that extreme to make you point, then you're pretty much admitting that you don't have point to make.

      The reviewer's own argument (at least this part) makes me believe Tesla is right.

    41. Re:CEO Switchout by retchdog · · Score: 1

      if the author is in fact a new yorker, he may have been influenced by some self-congratulatory advertisements the mta put up in the subway a few years ago, implying exactly that their new regenerative braking systems supply a net gain.

      not that this means much, of course. i'm just wondering if that might have been the source of this manifestation of his idiocy.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    42. Re:CEO Switchout by Predius · · Score: 1

      My Highlander Hybrid gets better milage in town, even in stop and go than on the highway. (30 city vs 25 highway). In my case it can do far more on just battery at low speeds. Weather or not the Tesla follows the same economy curve, no idea although I suspect it's close.

    43. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder if there were any security cameras along his detour that could verify the logs?

    44. Re:CEO Switchout by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Informative

      a two mile detour is hardly the make or break thing that Musk is making it out to be.

      An extra hour of running the heater, on the other hand, might make a significant difference. The heater eats up electricity at the same rate regardless of how slow the car is going.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    45. Re:CEO Switchout by Type44Q · · Score: 1

      I have yet to park a gas-powered luxury car with half the tank full for the night and find the tank empty in the morning, dimwit.

      The moral of the story is... gas thieves only target shitty cars? ;) :p

    46. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that Reporters are idiots...as a rule.

    47. Re:CEO Switchout by tftp · · Score: 1

      If Tesla won't publish the entire log, including speed, route, state of charge, how much was used for heat, then that would be your clue that they might not exactly be totally honest in their promotional material.

      Tesla cannot hold using heater against the driver. It is a required amenity in winter, at least to keep the windows free of frost. The reporter walked an extra mile by turning the heat off for half of the distance (where he started having range issues.) Tesla cannot possibly demand that customers do not use the heater in winter; that would be beyond ridiculous.

    48. Re:CEO Switchout by inglorion_on_the_net · · Score: 1

      The other thing to note is that while the overall mileage of the drive is nearly the same, the detour involved much more city driving. That means slower driving, and that means running the car for a much longer period. If the detour through the city added an extra 30 minutes of running-time to the trip, that would have meant more energy use regardless of the nearly-identical distance.

      Not necessarily. The energy per mile is governed by a complex equation. Time is certainly a factor, but so is speed. Lower speed means less drag. Some cars (e.g. the Prius) actually get better mileage in city traffic than on the highway. The EPA ratings for the model S are rather close: 38 kWh / 100 mi city vs. 37 kWh / 100 mi highway for the 85kWh model. I really wouldn't dare to predict what would have been more efficient for Mr. Broder's trip.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    49. Re:CEO Switchout by tftp · · Score: 1

      None of that "detour" thing matters because he made it to the Milford Supercharger just fine. The troubles started there.

    50. Re:CEO Switchout by EETech1 · · Score: 1

      +4 informative...
      No link-n-logs???

      Can we please see the data?

    51. Re:CEO Switchout by deimtee · · Score: 1

      That wasn't deliberately generous, it's just really hard to get that last little bit out.

      --
      I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
    52. Re:CEO Switchout by loufoque · · Score: 1

      You don't seem to understand that this car will lose its energy over time, for the simple reason that it needs to maintain the batteries at a certain temperature, which itself uses energy.
      So yes, even if you don't use it, energy is going to be spent. It's a real problem when compared to gas-powered cars.

    53. Re:CEO Switchout by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      That's not a bad idea.

      But I don't know about sending the bill back.

      If I were the NYTimes, I wouldn't run the ad (or any ad) without payment in advance.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    54. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I call bullshit. I've driven in Manhattan. I've also driven in Chicago, Atlanta, San Francisco, London, Bangkok, Singapore, and Seoul. Driving in Manhattan is VERY LIKE driving MULTIPLE PLACES ALL OVER THE WORLD.

      If you think Manhattan driving is so tough, try driving in London in rush hour. Manhattan is no big deal - get out into the world and learn a bit more.

      Also, that quote does not necessarily mean what you think it means - depending on time, it could easily not be stop and go for 50 blocks. If he took the FDR into or out of the island, for example, one would not be stop and go for 50 blocks at every signal.

    55. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do try to reread it when your raging hard-on for tesla and electric cars subsides.

    56. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who are you? tesla employee? e-car enthusiast?

      show the goddamn logs then!

    57. Re:CEO Switchout by bigtrike · · Score: 1

      Is your town Manhattan? Miles of stop and go traffic is a bit different from a mid-sized city or smaller.

    58. Re:CEO Switchout by icebike · · Score: 1

      But they can expect the user to understand that the range would be reduced accordingly.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    59. Re:CEO Switchout by tftp · · Score: 2

      But they can expect the user to understand that the range would be reduced accordingly.

      No, they cannot. Please tell me, how many miles should I deduct from the "remaining miles" indicator if I want to have +60F in the cabin, and it is +10F outside, and the speed will be 55 mph to the northwest, and the wind is 20 mph from the east, and there are three of us in the car (one is a dog of medium size.)

      Myself, I cannot imagine how to calculate that in my head. Those are all important variables, you cannot do without them. The analytical solution is probably impossible; CFD methods have to be used to build up lookup tables, and interpolate from there.

    60. Re:CEO Switchout by war4peace · · Score: 1

      From TFA:

      “We’re very sensitive to privacy, so these logs are only turned on and used with explicit permission from the customer and their signature. For media driving, we turn on logging, which tells us position, speed, the nature of the car, what somebody’s doing with the car in terms of charging, all that. The reason we do that is because we had a bad experience in the past with a show called Top Gear, which pretended our car ran out of charge and pushed it home. We looked at the logs and found that it had 50 miles of range left and they were just faking it. After that, we trust but verify; in this case, it seems we’ve had to do that again.”

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    61. Re:CEO Switchout by icebike · · Score: 1

      You don't have to calculate it. You can see the remaining range indicator in real time, and see in advance that you won't make it and seek a recharge instead of stubbornly pushing on until you run out of power in the middle of nowhere.

      What kind of idiot ignores the gas gage in a regular car just because the dealer said you would get er miles per gallon? Apparently the same kind of idiot that starts under charged, adds a detour, and insist on running out of power to prove a point.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    62. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why we won't see any logs, just jabs.

    63. Re:CEO Switchout by dogsbreath · · Score: 1

      Did. And I don't give a hoot for Tesla. Thanks for your opinion AC! 8->

    64. Re:CEO Switchout by tftp · · Score: 1

      Let's be practical. You departed from Milford (4) for Groton (5). The distance to there is 79 miles. The computer in the car said "Charge completed" and shows you 185 miles to empty. You need 79*2 = 158 miles. The margin is 27 miles. The reporter didn't even use heater on this leg. Note that the car itself failed to correctly forecast the trip, and after traveling only 79 miles he had 90 miles remaining from the original 185. He already "travelled" (virtually) for (185 - 90) = 95 "car miles" (as the car saw them.) Now the remaining charge is not enough to return! What can he do if there is no recharge arrangements? Should he turned around on the freeway and went back to Milford, where he has no hotel and no need to be?

      How can he EVER get to Groton in this car? Are you saying it's not possible? The car was charged as full as the computer considered "full" and the shown range was sufficient. How much should have the reporter added? He had 27 miles of reserve; should he have added 30 instead? 50? No, none of that would be adequate. First, the car saw the trip to Groton as 95 miles, so if he turns around in Groton and heads back he would need 2*95 = 190 miles of range. Then he lost (90-25)=65 miles overnight, so those need to be added as well: 190+65 = 255 miles. This is outside of the range of the car!!! It didn't have that much charge ever, even when brand new! Conclusion: this car cannot make it from Milford to Groton and back, not without an overnight charge... which was not available. Epic fail.

      I can understand that an owner of a $100K luxury car can, of course, knock on a few doors and ask for a place in someone's garage. Try that at 9pm or later in a place where nobody knows you. Chances are you will have to park your car at the local jail, while the police is sorting out your very suspicious story.

      Chargers for this car are far between. As the attempt of charging at Norwich shows, the low voltage charging is barely enough to compensate the self-discharge. You'd need to leave the car plugged in for a long, long time (like the whole night) to charge it, and even that might not be enough - you'd need a high voltage home charger.

      What are your options now? You are on a dark freeway, and you are miles away from any village or a town. You do not expect to find an outlet anywhere in those places, especially at night and in winter. Your only arranged accomodation - the hotel - has no outlets in the parking lot, and you cannot drag enough 120V power to the car even if you had a long extension cord. (What hotel will permit you to just drop it onto the roadway in any case?)

      I'm just explaining here that you will be flat out of options. Your car depends on superchargers to be in some way fit for the road - and you are already too far away from those. You went too far not because you couldn't do math, and not because you used a heater - but because your car first overestimated its abilities, and then it lost most of the remaining charge that, in theory, could carry you most of the way back to the supercharger.

      Apparently the same kind of idiot that starts under charged, adds a detour, and insist on running out of power to prove a point.

      There is no need to repeat Tesla's allegations. The detour occurred BEFORE the supercharging at Milford. What effect could it possibly have on car's performance after it was fully recharged (per car's computer) at the supercharger?

    65. Re:CEO Switchout by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      maybe he was referring to walmart having chargers. in that respect he should have made his stop at walmart.

      the real issue though is the 90miles->25miles range drop overnight in cold weather. electrics just aren't that great for winter(another issue is the car reporting charging complete at 90%).

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    66. Re:CEO Switchout by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Hybrid and full-electric cars are very different beasts.
      The electric motor in the hybrid is there to overcome the shortcomings of the ICE, which functions optimally only over a very narrow RPM range. Acceleration is better with electric motor, deceleration recharges the battery. On the highway, though, ICE is in its optimal mode, but the battery and the electric motor are dead weight.

      This is the reason a hybrid is so good in a stop and go traffic.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    67. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not realizing that stop and go will hurt mileage? Just how clueless can a human credibly be? If you were to estimate such things so close to the wire with internal combustion you would run out of gas at some point too. That the implications of running out are greater for the electric just makes it appear more boneheaded.

    68. Re:CEO Switchout by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      Too late, the writer got a lifelong free gas card from the petrol companies.

    69. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reporter didn't fully charge the car, took a long detour which he is pretending he didn't, and drove at higher speeds than told to (driving a petrol/diesel car at high speeds decreases your range there too).

      Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/100439335

    70. Re:CEO Switchout by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      A hybrid is only good in stop-and-goo traffic because you're not burning gas most of the time. You're unlikely to discharge the battery completely for short periods, and you always have the ICE to fall back on. The battery for a hybrid is likely near or at a full charge before you ever get into the city.

      Next time, try driving in Manhattan for a prolonged period of time - say, an hour and a half. Your mileage is going to be significantly worse than cruising on the open road, since your gas tank is going to have to be the main source of power instead of the conveniently-already-charged batteries. I drove a Honda CR-Z (hybrid) up until about 2 weeks ago, and the city was always the part of my trip that dragged my commute down under 40mpg, not the highway.

      Manhattan is exceptionally bad on mileage too - by the time you get up to 15mph, you're already stopping for the next light. It's efficiency hell for cars to drive around there when it's relatively less busy, let alone during congested hours.

    71. Re:CEO Switchout by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      However meaningless the "battery regeneration" idea is, surely slowing down would help conserve energy?

      Maybe they have to tell customers some voodoo bullshit rather than telling them to drive their super-duper sports car more sensibly?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    72. Re:CEO Switchout by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that stop-and-go driving at low speeds in the city would help, not hurt, my mileage.

      I'd say there's part of the problem right there. Does he think there are magic fairies in the brakes? Regeneration can only make stop and start driving less bad. It obviously can't be an improvement over stopping less.

    73. Re:CEO Switchout by msauve · · Score: 1

      "I don't see where the ... style of driving, as he described it, should have had a dramatic effect on the vehicle's range."

      He doesn't accurately describe his style of driving, though. Despite the author's claim that "Mr. Musk's logs may show I hit 75 m.p.h. for a mile or two during my trip," the NYT's own graphic shows otherwise.

      First leg - 114 miles in 1:24 = 81 MPH average.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
    74. Re:CEO Switchout by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 2

      . That means slower driving, and that means running the car for a much longer period.

      I don't think that makes sense in the context of an electric motor. An ICE has to idle while the car is stationary, and rev faster in lower gears when moving around slowly, but the electric motor only turns when propelling the car, and there is a single gear.

      The Tesla S carrying an 85kWh battery is supposed to use 37 kWh/100 mi on the highway, and 38 in the city, which is a difference of ~2.5%

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    75. Re:CEO Switchout by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      But they can expect the user to understand that the range would be reduced accordingly.

      No, they cannot.

      Yes, they in fact can. They can't expect the user to know how much it will reduce the range, however. On the other hand, he deviated from the route and then disingenuously complained about it only being two miles. Well, guess what? It takes power to run stuff. I know that if I run the A/C I will get less range from a tank of fuel...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    76. Re:CEO Switchout by stiggle · · Score: 1

      They said the same thing when TopGear tested one of their cars.
      They provided the show with a sports car and they drove it like a sports car and commented that it didn't have the range.
      Tesla said they were driving it wrong. TopGear said they were driving it like a sports car as thats what it was promoted as.

    77. Re:CEO Switchout by fishingmachine · · Score: 1

      30 vs 25 what? miles per gallon? gallons of electrons? of course you get better miles per gallon when your hybrid is using battery power more than gas power. the tesla is an all battery powered car.

    78. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The car was not fully-charged, and the journalist took a detour from the given route.

      "It's great as long as you never take a detour" isn't a great selling point for a car.

    79. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you do it with your gasoline care when you're running the A/C? That's right: you don't; you rely on the fuel gauge to give you a reasonable representation of your remaining juice.

    80. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting? hey, moderators, how about reading the fucking articles. They ARE going to publish them.

    81. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two miles through downtown Manhattan, per the reporter himself, which could very well have been 45 minutes of heat, radio, and stop-and-go traffic. It's not like he was able to maintain 55mph and blow through that two miles in a couple of minutes. And that's to say nothing about the time he spent showing the car off to the friend he stopped by to visit -- wouldn't you?

    82. Re:CEO Switchout by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 1

      > We can only speculate what is meant by "cleared." Did they clear the battery conditioning, so that he simply needed to continue with normal procedures to complete his trip? Or did they clear him in the sense that he could stop charging as well and should just head back, disregarding any future messages from the vehicle?

      He was on a shepherded trip in the EV, with Tesla personnel dancing in attendance and verifying that what was planned would work. There is not a lot of doubt that "cleared" in this context means "advised him that continuing would not result in any problems." Assuming anything less also assumes incompetence on the part of the Tesla personnel, since their purpose was to ensure that the trip showed Tesla in a good light.

    83. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's two ways you can think of his 'detour'.

      You can think of it in distance - he increased the distance driven by 1%. That shouldn't matter, should it?
      Or you can think of it in terms of time. He increased the duration of his trip by 37.5%. That shouldn't matte-wait, maybe that should matter when you're trying to test something right up to the failure point....

    84. Re:CEO Switchout by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      It was you, wasn't it???

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    85. Re:CEO Switchout by rs1n · · Score: 1

      > We can only speculate what is meant by "cleared." Did they clear the battery conditioning, so that he simply needed to continue with normal procedures to complete his trip? Or did they clear him in the sense that he could stop charging as well and should just head back, disregarding any future messages from the vehicle?

      He was on a shepherded trip in the EV, with Tesla personnel dancing in attendance and verifying that what was planned would work. There is not a lot of doubt that "cleared" in this context means "advised him that continuing would not result in any problems." Assuming anything less also assumes incompetence on the part of the Tesla personnel, since their purpose was to ensure that the trip showed Tesla in a good light.

      Again, even the word "continuing" does not give a clear picture. Continue in the sense of "pick up where you left off"? If this were the case, he'd have to ensure that the car was topped off. On the other hand, if continue means "ok, the conditioning is done, and we can probably even stop charging too" then you'd be right. If I was told "you're ok to continue" and I see that my gauge says "you're not going to make it" -- I would definitely bring this up with the support team to clarify what they mean by continue or cleared. "Should I still top off the battery?" "But what if my gauge says I'm short on distance?" All of this would have also been a part of my report -- especially if the support team specifically asked me to drive despite the gauge warning me otherwise, since this would be another shortcoming from Tesla. Now, not only does their car not drive the advertised range, their gauges also have issues. In my report, I would have mentioned how I was told to drive despite the gauge showing insufficient mileage, and that Tesla likely needed to tweak their sensors. However, the gauge was clearly fine, as the car did stop running just as the gauge had predicted. Going only off of what was originally written, my guess was that both the reporter and the support team should have done a better job of making sure the car would make it. Instead, what likely happened was that both sides probably assumed some level of competency of the other. And now neither side is willing to admit that they could have been better at evaluating the situation. That's just my hunch.

      There is clearly an issue for Tesla given that a user was unable to complete a planned trip. I'm not trying to defend Tesla. I'm trying to hold this reporter to a basic standard of objective and clear reporting.

    86. Re:CEO Switchout by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      PEBCASW? Problem exists between chair and steering wheel?

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    87. Re:CEO Switchout by makomk · · Score: 1

      As the attempt of charging at Norwich shows, the low voltage charging is barely enough to compensate the self-discharge.

      Yeah, and that's with a dedicated 240V charging point too - 120V may well have left the battery less full than when he started, especially judging from some of the comments on the Tesla forums about it!

    88. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what happens to the battery life while sitting in that kind of traffic and running the air conditioner due to high heat and humidity. I bet that sucks the battery a lot faster than running a heater.

    89. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Driving style is everything with electric and hybrid cars (and normal cars for that matter). Fast acceleration, riding up to red lights then stopping at the last few seconds accelerating then de-accelerating constantly instead of just holding the pedal. All of these things wreck gas/ electric mileage because they waste huge amounts of energy. I can drive the same hybrid car as my wife on the same route and I get 55-60 and she gets 38. That's quite a spread. The same is true with every other car- it's not what's propelling the wheels that matters it's how those wheels are propelled.

      If someone paid me (a lot of money or promised me exclusive access to some resource that would advance my career) to take the Tesla for a test drive and WRECK it's mileage , which in this case amounts to range, I could do it because having owned a car that gives me instantaneous read-out on energy use, I know where to find the bad, the really bad and the fucking awful.

    90. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK - so after all of this; If you can afford to buy "The very best"
      electric car. It will, if driven optimaly, be useful for in town driving.
      However it becomes problematic if used on the highway, or over
      long distances, even in town. As most people cannot afford the
      very best of automobiles my conclusion is the "typical" range needs
      to double and the cost reduced 75%. Good luck with that!

    91. Re:CEO Switchout by Byrel · · Score: 1

      You know the same things affect endurance in standard cars as well, right? Windows-up vs. down, wind, air-conditioning/heating all have sizable effects on range, and you just get a feel for how it drives in your area. It's really estimating by neural network, but it works.

      Of course, range is a bigger issue due to fewer fueling stations for a Tesla, but the estimation of range is actually easier (electricity doesn't vary in octane, for instance.)

    92. Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      National Geographic - Tesla Model S : youtu.be/1OiG8uB6Cic

    93. Re:CEO Switchout by Dahan · · Score: 1

      He mentions that he turned the heater off in an attempt to reduce energy usage.

    94. Re:CEO Switchout by tftp · · Score: 1

      You know the same things affect endurance in standard cars as well, right?

      Of course. Heater might be not a problem, but A/C would be, and headlights, and some power-hungry accessories. But, as you imply, most gasoline cars have twice the range of the Tesla. Any gasoline car could easily make a 160 miles trip without refueling, and none of the fuel would be lost ovenight (except in a ghetto :-)

      but the estimation of range is actually easier (electricity doesn't vary in octane, for instance.)

      I disagree. You buy the same fuel and you get about the same performance. Admittedly, the modern diluted gasoline is not as good as the pure one, but that is politically driven, and it is common to the large area; it's not something that varies from station to station. A tankful of gasoline is a known quantity.

      On the other hand, an electric charge is hard to measure, especially when it is stored not in a single capacitor but in billions of molecules. There is no mechanism by which you can reliably tell how much juice the battery has left. You only have indirect measurements, such as the electromotive force and the internal resistance of the cell. And you also have the records, how many coulombs went in and were taken out. You cannot shove a dipstick into the battery and look at the level; a gas tank allows you that, if you need to. (You are required to do that on airplanes.)

      On top of that, the battery has unpredictable charging and discharging patterns. When you fuel a gas car you know that once you are done the tank is physically full (the level reached the cutoff tube in the handle.) When you fuel an EV you cannot be even sure if the battery is fully charged; even the definition of "fully charged" is debatable. Look at the reporter's numbers - he got "remaining miles to empty" all over the place, from 240 to 185, after a charge at the supercharger, all under computer control. This variability is not good.

      Then there is yet another factor. The battery has self-discharge. It may be a huge current; combined with thermal issues, the reporter's car lost 65 miles of range just after being parked for 8 hours. This is not easy to take into account because people are not used to care for their cars that much. A gasoline car will not lose energy - not overnight, and not even after being parked at the airport for two weeks. (An EV would be scrap after two weeks without charge, as other Tesla owners found out after their Roadsters got bricked.)

      There is yet another small factor. Battery's capacity is a function of the discharge current. If you drive faster you get far fewer miles than if you drive slower, or with the wind, or downslope. This is an issue that is independent from losses of efficiency due to drag or due to suboptimal mode of the engine. A gas tank will deliver power regardless of how much of it you want, whether it is a drop per minute or a gallon per minute. A battery doesn't work like that, and those losses are harder to calculate.

      Experience of this reporter proves it. I am sure the guy is perfectly capable of driving a gas car. But he failed with this one, because the car has too many quirks. You have to make caring for this car into your second, if not the first, goal in life. Only then it will be usable. You cannot run an EV with the same lack of care that we practice with gas cars. An EV is a very fragile toy, and for that reason it is not very well suited for majority of drivers. If I may use a computer analogy in a discussion about cars, an IBM/370 mainframe is not a good alternative to a smartphone, even if it is faster. A mainframe requires trained operators to run it. So is this Tesla car.

    95. Re:CEO Switchout by Checklist · · Score: 0

      Starting to sound like smartphones-in order to save battery turn off everything-don't do this don't do that. It's a joke and how are the government going to cope with no fuel revenue-I KNOW lets put it all on electricity. How are you going to cope with all the demand- I KNOW let's put up a million useless wind turbines and blight the rest of the scenery. This should go down a bomb

    96. Re:CEO Switchout by Byrel · · Score: 1

      If I could, I would mod you up. That was very insightful. Thanks!

  2. Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So, nobody can read NYT's article (without registering/logging in), but everyone can read Musk's rebuttal. That's going to make the debate fairly one-sided in the public's mind.

    1. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Rockoon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, if the logs to show that he didnt fully charge the battery.. then he didnt fully charge the battery.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    2. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's odd, because I seemed to have been able to view the article when I clicked on the link in the story. Unless you are viewing a lot of NYT articles, then they may ask for a subscription, that's how I understand how it works.

    3. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by CityZen · · Score: 5, Informative

      Delete your nytimes cookies and then you should be able to read the article.

    4. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anaerin · · Score: 2

      Apparently, the logs also showed he took a lengthy detour through Manhattan, rather than a direct route.

    5. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Niac · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And it totally makes sense that to drive a hundred grand luxury car that you'd have to take only the direct routes, not the ones you may actually want to take. This is a gigantic failure of useability.

      --
      http://gabrielcain.com/
    6. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by LordKaT · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I wonder if there was a software glitch telling him the car was fully charged while it wasn't.

      As for driving through Manhattan - yeah I know, it eats up fuel; but, it's within the supposed range. In the writers defense, nobody told him that city driving would be worse for the car. Hell, the popular assumption with regenerative braking is that it's actually better because you'll regenerate more power as you brake.

      The NYT article seems pretty fair, from a consumers standpoint. Admittedly, driving through Manhattan - as a life-long New Yorker - gives me fucking nightmares, but who's to say some guy driving to Boston from South Carolina, wouldn't like to make a brief drive through Manhattan. After all, it's within the range guidelines.

    7. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Well, that's one honest thing that could be written in a review. Its quite another to lie about how the reviewer tested the car, given such poor results.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    8. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by cgimusic · · Score: 1

      Sure but it is still something you expect to be mentioned in the article.

    9. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by NFN_NLN · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And it totally makes sense that to drive a hundred grand luxury car that you'd have to take only the direct routes, not the ones you may actually want to take. This is a gigantic failure of useability.

      The main downsides to electric cars are:
      - Range
      - Refueling time (charging)
      - Cost/Maintenance of the batteries

      These limitations aren't new. If they severely impact you then an electric car is not suitable at the moment; end of story.

      Also, a semi has great towing capacity but the city mpg is terrible.

    10. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      Why does he need to charge the battery? Just bring an exercise bike and a pair of jumper cables with you wherever you go!

    11. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by NFN_NLN · · Score: 4, Insightful

      the popular assumption with regenerative braking is that it's actually better because you'll regenerate more power as you brake.

      You're fired. Pack up your shit and get out.

    12. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by quarterbuck · · Score: 1

      The reporter says in a blog post that he charged the battery until the charger said "charging complete". Tesla says that it is not fully charged battery since battery can be charged further by setting a fuel economy mode on and leaving it charged for 20 more minutes. The battery was 90% charged. If this was an FAA test, this would be recorded as "Pilot unfamiliarity with craft", not "Pilot error".
      There is also the detour - NY times reporter says he took a two mile ride through city traffic. Having ridden the routes the reporter is talking about, this again is probably something a normal driver would do - stop for a sandwich or just see some city on the way. The traffic is pretty bad from Long Island going into the city, so mostly anyone would stop after driving around an hour.
      I think the problem with the report were not bad reporting, but procedural. The reporter tried to test a car in a "normal use" scenario, but did not familiarize himself with the car (as a normal user would). That said, this is a newspaper review, not a federal test conducted in test environment. So I would trust the reporter on this one.

      --
      http://slashdot.org/submission/1062723/Cheap-mobile-data-plan?art_pos=2
    13. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by tphb · · Score: 1

      He did charge the battery. To the point where the care said "Charging Complete"

      It turns out, there's a special "extended range" mode that will put the battery at 100% instead of 90%. It reduces battery life.

      Most normal people would consider "charging complete" to mean, you know, charging complete.

    14. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by fredprado · · Score: 1

      Oh, you can take long detours, as long as you have enough battery charge for that. You need to manage your battery charge in the very same way you have to deal with your gas tank in combustion engines.

    15. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The weight of all those logs must have used the power.

    16. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      So, nobody can read NYT's article (without registering/logging in),

      I'm not logged in to nytimes, and the link in the summary worked fine.

      Plus, in many of these cases, you can google the article title and get the full article that way (through a link to the original site). It's a not so secret secret. (Heck, I saw the host mention it on the Press Here TV show.)

    17. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      City mileage has traditionally been worse than highway, despite the far higher resistance at highway speeds, because braking saps away so much energy. Regenerative braking takes away much of the downside to braking, this making city mileage better than highway. So yes, as the grandparent said, regenerative braking makes city driving better than highway driving in terms of efficiency.

    18. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by quarterbuck · · Score: 1

      Well, that is not that wrong an assumption.
      Driving on interstate at interstate speeds (I-95, without blocking others) involves driving at higher speeds. Wind resistance increases quadratically with speeds, so you are spending a lot more on drag on interstates compared to driving in the city. On the other hand you lose some energy to breaking. Regenerative breaking efficiency is about 50%, so depending on how often you break and how fast you drive on interstate, it is possible to have better efficiency in the city than on interstate.
      You also have to consider that any time you break at high speeds, your recovery efficiency goes down. Slowing down using breaking is when regenerative breaking works best.

      --
      http://slashdot.org/submission/1062723/Cheap-mobile-data-plan?art_pos=2
    19. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      And the article said that he did that. And the article also said that the range indicator said he had plenty of range left when he parked it for the night. And when he woke up 2/3's of the projected miles had disappeared in a puff of smoke over night.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    20. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by starless · · Score: 1

      Apparently, the logs also showed he took a lengthy detour through Manhattan, rather than a direct route.

      According to the reporter in a subsequent followup:
      Mr. Musk has referred to a “long detour” on my trip. He is apparently referring to a brief stop in Manhattan on my way to Connecticut that, according to Google Maps, added precisely two miles to the overall distance traveled from the Delaware Supercharger to Milford (202 miles with the stop versus 200 miles had I taken the George Washington Bridge instead of the Lincoln Tunnel)
      http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/12/the-charges-are-flying-over-a-test-of-teslas-charging-network/?hp

    21. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It doesn't matter how much you pay for a car or what its source of power is, if you plan a route that takes almost a full tank/charge to get to, then take a detour to some place without a source of power, then you are going to be in trouble. Whether it is because you decided to take your solar powered car through a long tunnel, or because you decided to take a detour in your hundred grand luxury car driving to Vega and ignored the "last gas station for 100 miles" sign, you're going to have a bad time.

    22. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes it less worse, but not quite better in this case. Both EPA and Tesla's range and efficiency numbers show that the Tesla S gos further on highway than typical city driving.

    23. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by arkenian · · Score: 1

      but who's to say some guy driving to Boston from South Carolina, wouldn't like to make a brief drive through Manhattan. After all, it's within the range guidelines.

      Speaking as someone who drives from washington to boston on a semi-regular basis, I go to great pains to avoid "drive through Manhattan" and everyone else I know who does this feels the same way.... In general, though, if what you want is a car to drive from washington to boston, an electric car is not yet a smart choice. If what you want is a car to drive 10 miles (or even 50) to work every day and go grocery shopping . . . it could be a great choice.

    24. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by sphealey · · Score: 1

      - - - - - It turns out, there's a special "extended range" mode that will put the battery at 100% instead of 90%. It reduces battery life.

      Most normal people would consider "charging complete" to mean, you know, charging complete. - - - - -

      Agreed. The idea that drivers will spend their time deciding what "mode" their vehicle is currently operating in, particularly when that mode is (a) invisible to the driver (b) reportedly reduces life of the key vehicle component, isn't a very good advertisement for all-electric vehicles.

      sPh

      I personally think that to the extent we still have personally driven automotive vehicles in 2032 they will look like today's Chevy Volt, except with a small diesel instead of gas. Pure electric isn't going to make it for many reasons, but auxiliary load (especially HVAC) is the big one.

    25. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you're retarded. The inefficiency isn't in breaking, it's in accelerating from a standstill.

    26. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Catbeller · · Score: 4, Funny

      "So, nobody can read NYT's article (without registering/logging in), but everyone can read Musk's rebuttal. That's going to make the debate fairly one-sided in the public's mind."

      And who's fault would that be, Mr. Murdoch?

      And as for damage, Tesla's stock price dropped five dollars, from what I hear. Who reads the NYT? Stockbrokers and finance people do.

    27. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Dahan · · Score: 1

      Two miles is hardly a lengthy detour.

    28. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by PhxBlue · · Score: 2

      If you've ever driven in Manhattan, you'd understand why.

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    29. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      Two miles in Manhattan can take hours, especially if there is a bridge or tunnel involved. I've never lived anywhere so small that felt so big. :)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    30. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by BradleyUffner · · Score: 1

      Wow, you're retarded. The inefficiency isn't in breaking, it's in accelerating from a standstill.

      There is inefficiency in regenerative breaking too. If you used X energy to get up to speed you can never recapture X energy during breaking, you will only ever get back less energy. Some of the energy will escape as noise, heat, and other forms.

    31. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

      The standstill is an effect of braking.

    32. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      So, nobody can read NYT's article (without registering/logging in), but everyone can read Musk's rebuttal. That's going to make the debate fairly one-sided in the public's mind.

      You can't figure out how to get into the NYT site without paying?

      Turn in your geek card.

      Oh. Wait.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    33. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      Why does he need to charge the battery? Just bring an exercise bike and a pair of jumper cables with you wherever you go!

      I'm missing something. Care to draw a circuit diagram?

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    34. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by hawguy · · Score: 1

      And it totally makes sense that to drive a hundred grand luxury car that you'd have to take only the direct routes, not the ones you may actually want to take. This is a gigantic failure of useability.

      Every car has its constraints, you wouldn't try to drive a Ferrari across a muddy field, so when you buy an electric car with limited range, you drive within the limits (with a comfortable cushion). Just because a car is expensive, doesn't mean it's practical for all situations, even a $400,000 car can be stopped in its tracks by a simple speed bump.

    35. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The same way", meaning not the same way at all because there's petrol stations fucking everywhere.

    36. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That doesn't have any effect on a electric car. Two miles is two miles. The motor isn't running when your not moving.

    37. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who reads the NYT? Stockbrokers and finance people do.

      Sure, but this is the target group for marketing this expensive toy.

    38. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      when you buy an electric car with limited range, you drive within the limits (with a comfortable cushion).
      Well, surely the electric car would go ahead and show you the range on the conservative side, in case of detours, traffic snarls, cold weather, rain, etc?

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    39. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Slowing down and speeding up is what uses the most gas in a combustion engine, and the same applies to the electric. Maintaining a speed is much more energy-efficient, regardless of 50% energy coming back (and that's only for a few seconds as you brake, remember).

    40. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Zerth · · Score: 4, Informative

      Two miles is two miles.

      202 miles driving with a detour through the city at 5 mph is not just 2 miles longer than 200 miles of highway driving.

      The motor isn't running when your not moving.

      But the heater, the lights, and the stereo system are running, plus regenerative braking isn't magic.

      Stop and go traffic for an hour or two in the winter with the heater at full blast could easily drop tens of miles from the total range.

    41. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by loufoque · · Score: 1

      It does changes the way you drive downhill.

    42. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by fredprado · · Score: 1

      As long as there are enough electric charging stations that is irrelevant.

    43. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Delete your nytimes cookies and then you should be able to read the article.

      Incognito mode. Just saying...

    44. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Still if you can get even half of the energy needed to reaccelerate from it from the stop out of it that's quite an improvement in efficiency.

      The pedant in me just has to say, too many people use the word "break" when they really should be using brake.

    45. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I think he just assumed a generator on the exercise bike. But if you just had a regular bicycle you could probably ride it to your destination faster than you could put on enough charge to get to your destination.

    46. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Smauler · · Score: 1

      There aren't. It also takes longer, so it is not irrelevant.

    47. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by tgd · · Score: 1

      Tens of miles? Way more than that. I don't have a Tesla or know its numbers, but by way of comparison the Chevy Volt's heater is ~6kw. The car typically gets 4 miles per kWh, so an hour of full tilt heat will cost 24 miles in range. Physics is physics, so I doubt the efficiency of the Tesla is much higher or the heater any smaller. And I believe the Tesla battery is actively temperature controlled like the Volt -- so you use some limited power overnight, as well, to keep it ""warm".

    48. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by fredprado · · Score: 1

      Well it is natural to suppose the marketing plan for the car includes the necessary number of charging stations. If you claim it does not you should show evidence about it.

    49. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      You can't figure out how to get into the NYT site without paying?

      I get one of my Chinese pen pals to do it for me.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    50. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Imagix · · Score: 1

      the popular assumption with regenerative braking is that it's actually better because you'll regenerate more power as you brake.

      Let's apply a little logic here. Regen braking recovers some of the energy from slowing down the vehicle. So you get X power back by slowing from 60 mph to 40 mph. How much energy does it take to go from 40 mph back to 60 mph? I can pretty much guarantee > X. So stop-and-go driving would be a net loss. Regen braking becomes more useful if you are going downhill so that you recover energy from the braking, and gravity is supplying the energy to accelerate you again.

    51. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the popular assumption is that you are always going downhill, it seems logical.

    52. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 1

      He knew he didn't fully charge the battery. However, the range indicator gave no indication that he would have any problem getting to his destination until it was too late to easily correct.

      1) The battery indicator in the morning indicated a drastically different available range than the night before.

      2) The range indicator did not (apparently) adjust for observable driving conditions (the aggressive driving Tesla complained about).

      There's enough fault to go around:
      - the reporter, for concluding that stop-and-go driving would improve range
      - the Tesla personnel, for failing to consider that the reporter's conclusion is not unreasonable for the advise given.
      - the vehicle (and thus indirectly, Tesla) for both of the problems noted above.

      IMO, Tesla should have pulled the vehicle back when the first problem was observed and gone over the data then and there. But that too would have been a PR fiasco, so they tried to put a brave face on it, and ended up with a worse one.

    53. Re:Unexpected consequences of paywalls. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The stock did not drop $5. It dropped $2.

  3. Maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Maybe there was no problem with the car at all -- just a problem with the brown envelope.

  4. He forgot to charge the car....... by iserlohn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    WTF? Isn't it common sense to fully charge an electric car before embarking on a journey to test the car's range? This guy should be fired from the NYT.

    1. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      From what I read, he did not "forget" to charge the car, he just used the fast-charging option until the car computer told him "you've got enough juice to cover your planned journey".

      Otherwise, the article is on par with my experience with hybrids and all-electric vehicles -- the electric motor/battery underperforms. In another 10 or 20 years and a breakthrough or two in batteries or cold fusion, maybe the electric car will be a comparable offering, but currently it is good only to show off.

      Which is why Tesla CEO is whining at every opportunity, he needs the media exposure for his half-baked products.

    2. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Kenja · · Score: 4, Informative

      From what I read, he did not "forget" to charge the car, he just used the fast-charging option until the car computer told him "you've got enough juice to cover your planned journey".

      The claim by Tesla is that after doing so, he did not stick to his planned journey. Taking alternate routes, going above the speed limit, etc.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    3. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF? Isn't it common sense to fully charge an electric car before embarking on a journey to test the car's range? This guy should be fired from the NYT.

      The guy obviously had an ax to grind, and its not like the NYT hasn't had issues telling the truth in recent years.

    4. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a pretty lame claim to make about a car. I do detours on a quarter-full tank all the time, and I have yet to need to call the towing service to take me to a petrol station. The claim by Tesla amounts to this: "the only way to drive our cars is slowly, without heating and along a route that has a charging station every 2 miles, so that you can always push your car to one". For $200k there are better options.

      But the marketing is cool.

    5. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by makomk · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, that's what Tesla want you to assume anyway. The detour, going above the speed limit etc. were apparently on the first leg of the journey which was hairy but not really the problem. The real problem was that he then went and gave the car enough charge to make the planned next leg with some to spare if it wasn't for the car losing the majority of its charge overnight, an issue Tesla Motors apparently neglected to mention. That left him unexpectedly stranded with insufficient charge to reach a recharging point...

    6. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is your experience ?

      Bet you couldn't pry the keys to any model Prius from their owners hands.

    7. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by OhANameWhatName · · Score: 1

      WTF? Isn't it common sense to fully charge an electric car before embarking on a journey to test the car's range?

      It would be common sense if the reporter wasn't biased. But there's no chance that the NYT is biased right? After all, there aren't other external entities which fund their business model that would have an outside influence is there?

      After all, the NYT gets all of it's funding from subscriptions ... right???

    8. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I drive a hybrid Lexus, which I got instead of the regular version because of a government tax break. Not a bad car, but the battery is only a dead weight.

    9. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the rebuttal link posted elsewhere the reporter says the battery was at 90%, not fully charged, though the readout said 'charging complete' (for the expected trip).

    10. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Usually because they are bad at math or love the environment, but yes - they do seem pretty loyal.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    11. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      "Otherwise, the article is on par with my experience with hybrids and all-electric vehicles -- the electric motor/battery underperforms."

      Underperforms? Tesla Model S is much snappier than most high-end "sport" cars. Performance is most definitely not a problem with batteries. Range, on the other hand, still is.

    12. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The reported range dropped overnight because HE FAILED TO PLUG IT IN. Which the manual tells you do. So he disregarded the manual. Then he got in a car reporting 32 miles of range and drove it 51 miles until the battery was empty. Would a reasonable person do that? No.

    13. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Isn't it common sense to fully charge an electric car before embarking on a journey to test the car's range? This guy should be fired from the NYT.

      Fired? Really? I would hate to have you as my manager.

      Notice that the CEO of Tesla only claims to have hard numbers, he certainly doesn't disclose any of those numbers.

      “It showed in fact [Broder] had not charged up to the maximum charge in the car,” Musk said. “It’s like starting off a drive with a tank that’s not full.”

      Musk said he and his team had explicitly told Broder and the Times that in order to do this trip, the car needs to be fully charged, cannot take detours, and drive at a reasonable speed.

      Musk told Bloomberg TV. “He did not charge the car to full capacity – not even close..."

      So at what level did he start the car at? 99% 98% 70% Somehow, I doubt that it was 70%, otherwise Musk would have disclosed that number already.

      And what's with this "reasonable speed" nonsense? Later in the article, he says that the driver exceeded the "speed limit", not that he exceeded a "reasonable speed". A "reasonable speed" is rarely the same as the "speed limit". Case in point.

      A motorist also can be cited for impeding traffic if he or she is traveling at the speed limit but traffic is flowing much faster, Crosby said. [source]

      The CEO of Tesla has the logs. If he wants us to believe him, he better stop the outrage, and actually show us the logs. Then, we'll be able to ascertain how much of the car was charged, if the speed was reasonable, or if there was even a detour to begin with (which the New York Times reporter denies).

      Absent the log made public, I will assume that Tesla is the one lying.

    14. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, and it would have been fair to note that....but there had to be some miscommunication between him and his Tesla staff advisors...because he knew that he was taking off in the morning with a battery that was telling him it couldn't get him to the next charging station....at that point...he should have plugged in his car at the hotel or some other slow-charging place and not taken off until after lunch...instead of earlier in the morning. The drama of running out before he reached the next station seems hyped up...ok, he couldn't have made the trip using the fast-chargers, even if he had fully charged at the last one (extra 25 miles), but unless he really wanted to run out and sit there for dramatic purpose, he should have just said it failed to live up to the challenge, then been a reasonable person and waited until the meter said he could finish his trip, noting that he had to use means other than the fast-chargers. Then he should also note that a reasonable person would have plugged it in at the motel overnight and not run into the problem, so that someone using a combination of fast-chargers and overnight slow charging when they're not driving anyway (taking time to sleep like a normal person), would have been OK.

    15. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Then he waited 12 hours and let the battery discharge itself.

    16. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by tftp · · Score: 1

      He wasn't supposed to plug it in overnight. There are no charging facilities in Groton. Does the car come with a 1,000 feet extension cord? Oh, by the way, you cannot use an extension cord to charge an EV. You have to park right next to the external outlet. Can you find one on a wall of a hotel, in darkness, especially if the outlet isn't there to begin with? Snow banks may prevent you from parking anywhere close to the building; you may be unable to even walk to the wall (there might be bushes under the snow, or flower beds, or whatever.)

      The reporter should have carried a gasoline generator in the car. That is the truly essential component of a modern EV, as it appears.

    17. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      The reported range dropped overnight because HE FAILED TO PLUG IT IN. Which the manual tells you do. So he disregarded the manual. Then he got in a car reporting 32 miles of range and drove it 51 miles until the battery was empty. Would a reasonable person do that? No.

      yeah because it's totally expectable for the range to drop more than half if you park it for a night.

      the thing is, tesla failed to mention to the reporter(they assumed he would't be spending a night anywhere! because that would burnnnn them) that the batteries need to be heated up and as such couple of nights in he cold and he's in deep trouble even if he doesn't drive anywhere.

      it's a car for mexico, not arctic.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    18. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He did what the NYT wanted to the point of absurdity. Advertising revenue from traditional car manufacturers vastly exceeds that from Tesla.

    19. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately though, the reasonable persons are heavilly outnumbered by the horde of zombies out there. If the test proves anything at all, then it's that driving a Tesla is not foolproof.

    20. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      "Otherwise, the article is on par with my experience with hybrids and all-electric vehicles -- the electric motor/battery underperforms." Underperforms? Tesla Model S is much snappier than most high-end "sport" cars. Performance is most definitely not a problem with batteries. Range, on the other hand, still is.

      The word "performance" does not just relate to acceleration and top speed.

      The performance of a battery includes how long it holds a charge, how long it takes to recharge, and so on, just like when you see a review of a laptop or phone and the battery's performance is judged.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    21. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      WTF? Isn't it common sense to fully charge an electric car before embarking on a journey to test the car's range? This guy should be fired from the NYT.

      Why?

      Most readers of NYT want their existing beliefs confirmed to them, not to be challenged by new ideas in any way. This guy reviewed an electric car and came to the conclusion that they lack range and longevity and are unreliable. That is exactly what everyone already knows about electric cars, so the guy did his job and wrote an article that the readership liked reading. Why fire him?

      For profit news media is not their to be informative, it is their to entertain you so you keep buying the product. Sometimes that coincides with being informative, sometimes it does not. Granted there are some news stories that they have to cover even if they are unpopular, but those are hard news pieces, not reviews of luxury items.

      In this case I do not find it all hard to believe that the guy doing the review wanted to make sure he got the car to run out of juice as that was an important part of the story he wanted to write: that electric cars still lag behind the gas fuelled counterparts and this is the possible result. I think he is broadly correct in this point in that they have shorter range on a full charge, as batteries are heavier for the energy they store than gas is.

      Tesla would have been constantly applying pressure to makes sure the car did not run out of gas by the side of the road. He needed this to happen though as it was a "feature" he wanted in his article. Of course he could have driven it in a way that did not happen, but he wanted it to happen to make his article interesting to read and entertaining.

      Tesla were probably busting his balls though to stop him having an interesting feature in his article where the car ran out of charge. His review would have just been the same bland crap as all the others where the shorter range of the Tesla was mentioned, but without a nice real world example for people to easily understand.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    22. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to me that the lesson here is that actually Tesla underestimates the range of their cars, if he could drive 51 miles when the car reported only 32 miles of range.

    23. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess a resonable person would bring an extension cord with their luxury coup to plug it in at a hotel every night. This is new york, not fucking alaska.

    24. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reported range dropped overnight because HE FAILED TO PLUG IT IN. Which the manual tells you do. So he disregarded the manual. Then he got in a car reporting 32 miles of range and drove it 51 miles until the battery was empty. Would a reasonable person do that? No.

      Read the manual for an IC car sometime. Do you do everything in that?

    25. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      The whole car isn't supposed to be used in winter.
      For winter use a retrofitted webasto (or similar) for heating the batteries would be a total must.

      but elon wants to sell it as a winter car.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    26. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by tftp · · Score: 1

      The whole car isn't supposed to be used in winter.

      We've taken great pains to ensure our car works very well in cold," Musk said. "In fact, our No. 1 Tesla Roadster owner owns four cars in northern Norway, where it's permanent midnight during the winter. Incredibly cold obviously, and he uses it as his daily driver, so the car is actually designed to work very well in cold. We have an intelligent thermal control system that's actually able to shunt heat from the motor into the battery pack and in cold weather will actually close shutters in the front of the car to keep the car insulated. We've taken great pains to ensure that the car works very well in the cold, which is why we're so incensed by this ridiculous article."

    27. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by RealTime · · Score: 1

      Oh, by the way, you cannot use an extension cord to charge an EV.

      This is not actually true. The Level 1 "emergency" charger (120V 8A) that came with my Mitsubishi MiEV works just fine on an extension cord. The gauge of the extension cord has to be reasonable for the length of the cord itself, though. The charger works at the end of a 100-foot extension cord if that cord is 10 gauge (these are readily available at major home improvement stores). I have used a 12 gauge extension cord that was 25 feet long with no ill effects (voltage drop, etc.) as well.

      To keep from losing existing charge due to climate control of the battery pack, the Level 1 charger would have worked just fine. It certainly isn't a good choice for charging for range, though. (The MiEV only has a nominal 62 mile range, and the Level 1 charger needs 22.5 hours to charge it to that range from empty.)

      --

      Yesterday it worked; today it is not working; Windows is like that...

    28. Re:He forgot to charge the car....... by tftp · · Score: 1

      Extension cord is not recommended for Volt. Other EVs may or may not work, depending on what they need and how their built-in chargers are constructed.

      Since this Tesla has a pretty long range, and a large battery, I suspect that the voltage drop on a cord would be too much. Some power supplies may become unstable because of that. I had a device that failed in any extension cord, and worked right only when plugged directly into the wall. (But that was, of course, a bad design.)

      A pair of #10 wires will give you 2V drop at 100' under 10A, and 3V drop at the same length under 15A. You can be sure that an EV charger will suck all it legally can out of the outlet; the breakers there are typically 15A, so I'm afraid 10A is all that one can draw.

      Outside of the voltage drop, another problem may be in the impedance of the cable. 60 Hz is a pretty low frequency, but still the long cable will be a transmission line with distributed inductance and capacitance. If the TL is not matched to the source and destination then it can present random impedances to the source and to the sink, all the way from infinity to a dead short. This also can cause instability of the charger. But the cable must be pretty long for those effects to become measurable at this frequency; a quarter wave piece will have to be about 930 miles, ignoring the velocity factor. Power distribution grids have to take this into account all the time, but most homeowners only have cables that are somewhat shorter.

  5. Barbara Streisand Effect? by milbournosphere · · Score: 2

    I hadn't read the review until Musk started talking about it. This alone made more news than the article. In the end I don't think there will be a large effect on sales; those who can afford to buy a Tesla will buy one whether or not it runs a little shorter in the cold. That said, if the logs reflect that the car wasn't fully charged, then Musk does have a valid reason to complain.

    1. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      leaning towards Musk not having a valid reason. Tesla gets pretty pissy about any negative PR -- recall the debacle between them and Top Gear, which amounted to nothing more than Tesla being crybabies.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    2. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by milbournosphere · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Let me clarify: I do think he over-reacted. That said, not fully charging an electric car's battery before doing a range test is somewhat irresponsible of the reviewer, and it's not hard to see why Tesla might not be happy with the results of the test. Perhaps the NYT should fully charge the car over night, then re-run the test.

    3. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That said, if the logs reflect that the car wasn't fully charged, then Musk does have a valid reason to complain.

      Except the NYT article never claims to fully charge the battery. He says exactly how long he charged it for and what the expected range displayed with each charging. Nothing Musk claimed to have discovered in the logs is inconsistent with the story I read. Now, I agree, trying to take a road trip in a Tesla is a stupid idea, but the guy did follow what the gauges said and the advice he was given as best as I can tell. Of course, battery/range gauges don't work at all well compared to gas/range gauges. We know that, but did the journalist?

    4. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by div_2n · · Score: 1

      They're going to publish the log data which should prove interesting, but apparently he didn't charge the car completely. For a range test. If the log shows he didn't charge it all the way, then I'd call that quite a valid reason. It's borderline libel.

    5. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      At $101,000 there's a very targeted market for this car... namely to the people who think it's cool and have more money than they know what to do with. You can land a very nice bmw, benz, or lexus at this price range that's been established for a lot longer in it's design and features... as well as reliability.

      Also, a 1/2 ton electric battery under the cockpit creeps me out a bit, not a pretty way to go if shit hits the fan.

    6. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah its nothing like having 16 gallons of explosive fluid under your butt.

    7. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wasn't a range test though; or at least it wasn't supposed to be. If you read the original article, the intended route should have been comfortably within the range of the car.

    8. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not about whether they can sell cars (that is part of it). It's about whether they can sell the company/technology. That's the real cash for an entrepreneur like Musk; otherwise profits get reinvested in the company (except in the case of Apple).

    9. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Overnight charges before a short trip are unreasonable. What if I need to use the car, "oh I can't drive my 101,000 dollar car tonight...it has to charge for 8 hours before I drive 265 miles."

    10. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by c0lo · · Score: 2

      At $101,000 there's a very targeted market for this car....

      The highest price for model S is $87,400. The lowest priced model for which the range is still defined (60kWh battery) is $62,400. Me thinks you are using the prices for the Roadster.

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    11. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by sonnejw0 · · Score: 1

      You may not have heard about it, but plenty of other people did when Tesla's stock price plummeted 2.5% moments after the review was uploaded to New York Times's website. The damage was immediate. In other words, Tesla lost $100 Million in capital in a matter of minutes because of the New York Times's review. That could be a devastating libel claim, but in the mean time, Tesla has to deal with $100 million fewer dollars.

    12. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by c0lo · · Score: 1

      Yeah its nothing like having 16 gallons of explosive fluid under your butt.

      What's explosive in diesel fuel, precious? (or do you often use fertilizer as a fuel additive?)

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    13. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by filthpickle · · Score: 1

      They couldn't prove damages because of the episode. I thought that even Clarkson came out and said he wished the episode had gone differently. Top Gear is a great show, the second best car show behind Leno's garage (seriously). But, the bits they do aren't exactly reality based...it is pure entertainment.

      Having said that....this seems like Tesla are being crybabies.

    14. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, battery/range gauges don't work at all well compared to gas/range gauges.

      Why? Aren't the batteries and electric motors a lot simpler to characterize, compared to some nonlinear effects in gas engines? There is a rather small difference between city and highway driving for the Tesla S, but most gas cars have quite a difference. In my experience gas distance gauges have been pretty bad other than a very rough guess, and it would seem difficult to make such a gauge for an electric car do worse. Either way, one should assume such things will need a 20+% buffer in case you change what you are doing on the way in terms of speed, heating (or AC for gas car).

    15. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by vux984 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Overnight charges before a short trip are unreasonable

      Meh, my Porsche has a rated range of about 350 miles. That's really not all that much further than the Tesla S. And according to what I average, with my driving style its closer to 317.

      Yet, I don't worry much about making "short trips" of a couple hundred miles even if the tank is only half full when I set out, for the simple reason that I am really rarely more than a couple dozen miles from a place to fill up, and there is pretty much always a gas station before any large stretches of highway.

      That is really all the issue here with the Tesla. Its not the range so much that is a problem, but the availability of places to refill. If I can quick charge a Tesla S for 200 miles pretty much anywhere then I'll never have to do an overnight charge to get the 265 absolute max.

      I'm not sure how ubiquitous fast-charge stations are for the tesla or electric cars in general in new york... or anywhere else for that matter. But if they can get even a good fraction of the penetration that regular gas stations have, the tesla's range is already good enough for most people. And its only going to get better.

    16. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you even understand how stocks work? While the owners of Tesla's stock may have (on paper) lost money, the company didn't loose anything since the stock that lost value was already a sold stock.

    17. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by dubbreak · · Score: 2
      Quite right. I noticed that as well. Of course TFA has the following line:

      Feeding the 416 horsepower motor of the top-of-the-line Model S Performance edition is a half-ton lithium-ion battery pack slung beneath the cockpit; that combination is capable of flinging this $101,000 luxury car through the quarter mile as quickly as vaunted sport sedans like the Cadillac CTS-V.

      You'd think the NYT could at least get the pricing right.

      --
      "If you are going through hell, keep going." - Winston Churchill
    18. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by foobsr · · Score: 1
      Tesla being crybabies

      You beat me to it.

      For those who do not recall: "An English court has once again told Tesla Motors to take a hike and dismissed the automaker’s latest libel charge against the BBC, producer of the wildly popular (and equally irreverent) program Top Gear.

      Tesla Motors sued the BBC in March, arguing Jeremy Clarkson and his Top Gear cohorts defamed the company by claiming the Roadster achieved a paltry 55 miles of range on the show’s test track. That is significantly less than the 200 miles or more Tesla claims for the car." ( http://www.wired.com/autopia/2012/02/tesla-vs-top-gear/ )

      Also interesting: "Tesla Motors' Devastating Design Problem"

      Quote: "When a Tesla battery does reach total discharge, it cannot be recovered and must be entirely replaced. Unlike a normal car battery, the best-case replacement cost of the Tesla battery is currently at least $32,000, not including labor and taxes that can add thousands more to the cost." ( http://jalopnik.com/5887265/tesla-motors-devastating-design-problem )

      Not yet the time to buy one ... :)

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
    19. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by larry+bagina · · Score: 2

      A $100 million drop in TSLA's market cap has no effect on the money in their bank account.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    20. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Catbeller · · Score: 1

      You have no data on reliability comparisons. This Tesla just came out.

      And electric cars should have significant reliability advantages over petrol engined cars. No oil. No moving parts. No dirt. Sealed compartments. Solid state components.

      Now if we could simplify the thing. I don't need power sunflower seed crackers. I need a basic runabout.

    21. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      You've been watching too many movies. Gasoline is more "flammable" than "explosive". The simple innovation of shutting off the fuel pump in an impact prevents most fires.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    22. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      They weren't doing a maximum range test. They were testing whether they could drive between charging stations in a manner consistent with how regular users would use the cars. Tesla warns that charges above 90% (the level the reporter charged to and that shows "Charging Complete" in the UI) will reduce your battery life. Furthermore, the UI showed plenty of range to get between stations at that level of charge. In spite of Elon's whining, he has also essentially admitted that the charging stations are too far apart on the East Coast (due to lower efficiency of the battery in the cold and more stop-and-go traffic in that region).

    23. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2

      But right now it's more like boating or flying - "use 1/3 of your fuel coming, 1/3 of your fuel going and keep at least 1/3 of fuel in reserve". In the air or on the water, running out of fuel is at least incredibly inconvenient, usually rather dangerous.

      So, it's a completely different mind set. This will likely improve over time, but for now you're going to have pretend that you are an intrepid explorer, wandering the wilds of dark America.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    24. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Golden_Rider · · Score: 1

      They're going to publish the log data which should prove interesting, but apparently he didn't charge the car completely. For a range test. If the log shows he didn't charge it all the way, then I'd call that quite a valid reason. It's borderline libel.

      As I understand it, he DID charge the car completely, as in "the display said charge completed". What he did not use was the special option, battery damage causing "100% charge, long range, do not use all the time" charging option,

      But that was not the problem anyway, what caused him to be stranded was that the car battery decided to lose over half its charge overnight due to low temperatures, which caused the range to go from "can easily make it to the recharge point" to "cannot make it to the recharge point at all".

      I'd like to see more real life tests like this, with real life problems, because those show best that electric vehicles simply are not a good replacement for a standard car yet except for VERY specific situations (like only driving less than 20 miles a day AND having a guaranteed recharge point at your place of work).

    25. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I agree completely.

      The infrastructure to range issue is absolutely a very important consideration when evaluating whether the car is right for you today.

      But my point was rather that the real improvement needs to come from the infrastructure side rather then the car. The car itself has, perhaps not great, but adequate range.

    26. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by citizenr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You may not have heard about it, but plenty of other people did when Tesla's stock price plummeted 2.5% moments after the review was uploaded to New York Times's website. The damage was immediate. In other words, Tesla lost $100 Million in capital in a matter of minutes because of the New York Times's review. That could be a devastating libel claim, but in the mean time, Tesla has to deal with $100 million fewer dollars.

      Tesla didnt lose shit. Stock exchange speculators did.

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
    27. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by BadgerRush · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure about this nyt thing, but in the top gear debacle, Tesla was 100% correct to complain. Clarcson pushed a Tesla to the garage pretending it had run out of juice wille it still had half full batteries, that is highly anti-etical.

    28. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That said, not fully charging an electric car's battery before doing a range test is somewhat irresponsible of the reviewer, and it's not hard to see why Tesla might not be happy with the results of the test. Perhaps the NYT should fully charge the car over night, then re-run the test.

      That said, to the normal user, when the light says "Charging Complete" that would mean it is fully charged. Apparently with Tesla, "complete" means "partly done". Not to speak of which, any vehicle whose range can drop by 50% because you parked it overnight, probably isn't up to snuff to be used in the environment you're in.

      I think the Tesla is a very neat vehicle. For people who live in California, Florida, and other places where it doesn't get cold.

    29. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And electric cars should have significant reliability advantages over petrol engined cars. No oil. No moving parts. No dirt. Sealed compartments. Solid state components.

      No moving parts???? The only vehicle I know of that has no moving parts is a toboggan. But those have real limitations about where you can go (only on snow, only downhill).

      But it should be more reliable. Unfortunately, the state of the art of battery technology isn't that great, as Boeing is finding out.

    30. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In other words" you don't have a clue, I mean not even in the ballpark, about how stock markets work, do you? Tesla loses none of its capital if it price falls. Not $100M, not 1 cent. There's some long term impact if and when they next make a public offering, whose magnitude is unpredictable. But we can try.... There was a 2.5% fall. Let's multiply this by the population of the united states in humans, assume that is a value in deci-euros, and convert into $ based on the Sept 11 2011 exchange rate. Not sure exactly what that gets, although it's no less arbitrary than your computation (and as it turns out, almost surely closer to expected truth.)

      Seriously, you shouldn't comment on financial matter without at least the merest beginning of an understanding. Tesla does not have to deal with $100 million fewer dollars. Nor $10M. Not $1M. The stock price of tesla has no impact on tesla until if and when it makes another public offering.

    31. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      I don't need power sunflower seed crackers. I need a basic runabout.

      Well, for a basic runabout there's always the Leaf... of course if you ever adopt a parrot you'll be sorry about not having sprung for the powered seed crackers.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    32. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No the base price for the Model S Performance edition is 87,400. Adding options to that is going to make the price increase.

    33. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by adolf · · Score: 1

      The highest price for model S is $87,400.

      $87,400 base, according to your link. But then there's options (also according to your link):

      Fancy paint (which TFA alludes to it having): $1,500.
      Panoramic glass roof: $1,500.
      21" wheels: $3,500.
      "Tech package": $3,750.
      7.1 Dolby: $950.
      Rear-facing seats: $1,500.
      Paint armor: $950.
      Dual chargers: $1,200.

      == $102,250.

      Drop the dual chargers, or any other ~$1,000 option, and $101,000 becomes a perfectly presentable round figure for what a car like this might cost.

    34. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do a dozen re-runs, see if it was a fluke, I'm betting on the Tesla.

    35. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by c0lo · · Score: 1

      No the base price for the Model S Performance edition is 87,400. Adding options to that is going to make the price increase.

      Are those options going to increase the range? If not, mentioning them is irrelevant, you will go to the same distance as for the base price (I can sell you a Corolla with solid gold steering wheel for half a million, is it relevant for how far you'd go on a full tank?)

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    36. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by c0lo · · Score: 1

      (I keep forgetting the nerds need to be pedantically precise or speculative, but not necessary relevant or common-sensical).

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    37. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The highest base price is $87,400 but like most luxury cars, additional options can easily stretch prices into the six figure range.

    38. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      No, you're a fucking idiot.
      They didn't claim they only drove it half as far as Tesla told them it would go.
      They believed Tesla's range claims, and rather than fully drain the car's battery (which is a bad fucking thing, and would have required pushing or towing the damn thing through the rest of the track), they simply pretended they ran the rest of the laps. They then showed exactly what would have happened, had they run the additional laps.

      They didn't say the Tesla's range was any shorter than Tesla said the range would be.

      ALL they did was show what would have REALISTICALLY HAPPENED had they run the car til it died.

      Tell me, what's the problem there?

      It sure looks to me, given this story, that the problem was that Top Gear should have ran it until it died -- as it likely would have been much shorter than the range given to them by Tesla's engineers.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    39. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      lmao. I knew those idjits telling me the batteries for one would only run ~10k were idjits.

      So in summation: You'll have to re-buy 1/3 of your car before too many years are up (rich people won't keep them that long). You can't use it all the time, because it takes a long while to charge. You can't go too far, because you can't actually completely charge the battery (no shock there, all Li-ions only charge to 90%). AND, you can't NOT use it for too long, or the battery will just leak charge and kill itself.

      Fantastic!

      (Still do not understand how people don't get that Top Gear illustrating what would happen had they driven the car to its max range as given to them by Tesla's engineers isn't Top Gear lying about the Tesla's abilities. I don't recall them once saying that it went one mile shorter than Tesla's engineers believed it would!)

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    40. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by adolf · · Score: 1

      (I keep forgetting the nerds need to pick apparently-random figures, but not necessarily apply any sense of reality to any comparison applied thereof.)

    41. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not Streisand Effect.

      Streisand Effect is attempting to cover up information, and the resulting controversy about doing that disseminates the information more widely.

      This is Tesla / Elon Musk disagreeing publicly with a statement. No attempted cover up, just them telling their side of the story. Big difference.

    42. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      leaning towards Musk not having a valid reason. Tesla gets pretty pissy about any negative PR -- recall the debacle between them and Top Gear, which amounted to nothing more than Tesla being crybabies.

      Giving Jeremy Clarkson an electric car to test was about as sensible as giving him a Sinclaair C5. You know he's going to take the piss out of it.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    43. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      In the air or on the water, running out of fuel is at least incredibly inconvenient, usually rather dangerous.

      Nice understatement, something I never thought I'd say on the internet.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    44. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The amount you save on fuel would more than pay for a rental car every month for those long trips. Or better still a train/airline ticket to save yourself having to drive for 6+ hours.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    45. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      But right now it's more like boating or flying - "use 1/3 of your fuel coming, 1/3 of your fuel going and keep at least 1/3 of fuel in reserve".

      Anyone who lives in New York or any other place with nightmare traffic is already in this situation. You can easily get stuck on a road idling your engine for hours so as to not freeze while something is cleared away ahead of you. Or in some cities, you can easily spend hours mostly idling in traffic, then burning up fuel (or battery) playing stop and go. You only get a portion of braking energy back with regen so it applies to EVs too even when it's not cold or hot and you don't need the heater or AC.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    46. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try using carsdirect.com for a price, the performance model which he was driving has a target price of $94,900, so if you add some options you'll be at the $101,000 real fast.

    47. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by dubbreak · · Score: 1

      Quite right, I came to >102K with all the options added in.

      --
      "If you are going through hell, keep going." - Winston Churchill
    48. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Ironically if you gave Jeremy Clarkson an electric car that performed like a BMW M3, had the range of a BMW M3, looked as good as a BMW M3, could be recharged as quickly as filling the fuel tank on a BMW M3 and cost the same, he'd recommend it in an instant.

      He's not unreasonable, stupid fuckwit car companies expecting people to drive like pensioners in their $50k car and still only go less than 300 miles are unreasonable.

    49. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The $87.400 figure is before options.

    50. Re:Barbara Streisand Effect? by div_2n · · Score: 1

      Oh the lying liars and the lies they tell:

      http://www.teslamotors.com/blog/most-peculiar-test-drive

  6. Well naturally... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a ridiculous article for a ridiculous car.

  7. Heater by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This was on boing boing a few days ago and one conclusion was that the Tesla charging stations are spaced at almost the maximum range of the car but the car can't get that range in cold weather when the cabin heater is being used. In an electric car there is not enough parasitic heat loss to heat the cabin so the energy comes from the batteries.

    1. Re:Heater by blackC0pter · · Score: 2

      This is similar to the issue with ICE (internal combustion engine) where if it is really hot outside and you run the AC really high, you will drain the battery more. I think people need some more education as to the limitations of battery powered cars. It is probably not common knowledge that the heater in an all electric car uses the battery extensively vs. just blowing heat off of the radiator. Also, people need to shift their expectations based on the architecture of their vehicle. Some ICE engines need to be kept warm during extreme colds at night otherwise it can be very difficult to start them in the morning. Li-ion batteries do not like conditions outside of normal operating temperatures and charge rates; operating outside of those ranges will affect capacity and performance. In the end, the easy answer is probably for Tesla to set more conservative numbers for range when it is really cold or really hot outside.

    2. Re:Heater by adolf · · Score: 2

      This is similar to the issue with ICE (internal combustion engine) where if it is really hot outside and you run the AC really high, you will drain the battery more.

      Can you tell me more about this problem?

    3. Re:Heater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was on boing boing a few days ago and one conclusion was that the Tesla charging stations are spaced at almost the maximum range of the car but the car can't get that range in cold weather when the cabin heater is being used. In an electric car there is not enough parasitic heat loss to heat the cabin so the energy comes from the batteries.

      For initial placement, at-max-range isn't a bad compromise if you're building out a free (!) recharging infrastructure. It's certainly kind of sucky now, but as they get "base" coverage down, they can start bisecting the chargers on the most used routes at half-range distances (and then bisect again, ...).

      Tesla is trying to build The Future(tm) in a way, and a few teething problems aren't unexpected. And if you want to by on the leading (or bleeding) edge as an early adopter, then you should expect a few hiccups. Personally I'm happy with my 2003 Golf TDI, but am looking with interest at what they're doing.

    4. Re:Heater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gp is incorrect- running the AC really high will not drain the battery as the compressor in the AC is driven mechanically by the ICE. Running the blower/ventilation fan may drain the battery since that motor is driven electrically.

    5. Re:Heater by blackC0pter · · Score: 2

      Oops. I meant to say draw more electricity from the alternator which would in turn use more fuel. Thanks Hitler! :)

    6. Re:Heater by adolf · · Score: 2

      Oops. I meant to say draw more electricity from the alternator which would in turn use more fuel.

      Can you tell me more about how this works?

    7. Re:Heater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I've yet to see a car with an electric driven A/C... but I'm always interested to hear about it. Normally the A/C is driven by the serpentine belt, or some other accessory belt, which is driven by the engine directly. Flat out the compressor will use about 10 hp, which is why on a very small car you can feel the performance difference with it on.

      The blower motor uses the battery. The current the blower motor uses (20 A or under, normally) is far below the maximum output of all alternators I've ever seen. It's even below the output of a lot of generators used on really old cars. The alternator does use some fuel, however, it's rather efficient. The blower motor would put a 1/3 hp demand on the alternator, and, assuming the alternator is even 50% efficient, that's only 2/3 hp demand on the engine. Even small cars tend to have hp ratings in the triple digits now. :)

      Gas engines have to be kept at least minimally warm mainly due to the viscosity of the oil used, something that affects everything that requires lubrication. And, of course, they need to be warm enough that the fuel isn't frozen, but -40 is around when that happens (interestingly enough, a gasoline car could have propane run through the fuel injectors at that point instead). At ~ -25 C and below, you cannot start a Tesla *at all* until you wait for the battery heater to warm up the battery pack (which will take about 1 hour when you're getting close to -40). Warming the battery pack also drains it of some energy, of course, so you'll want to warm it and then drive to somewhere to charge it. Diesel engines are different and are much harder to start when they get this cold (although not necessarily impossible).

      Heat in gas cars also comes from the heater core, which is separate from the radiator, although it does use the same heat source (the coolant) and is a little mini-radiator itself. This heat is waste heat, so it's a freebie, although if you blast your heat on full when you first start a cold car, it will take longer to warm the engine, and the engine doesn't run efficiently until it's at its proper operating temperature, so silly use of the heater could have a (very small) effect on range, I suppose. This is why very cold carberuated engines tend to run like crap until they are warm, but fuel injection engines run quite well--the computer compensates for the temperature difference by making the fuel supply richer.

    8. Re:Heater by blackC0pter · · Score: 2

      Damn, wrong twice in a row. Although, I can say your are not wasting your days as I appreciate the corrections!

    9. Re:Heater by adolf · · Score: 1

      It is probably not common knowledge that the heater in an all electric car uses the battery extensively vs. just blowing heat off of the radiator.

      Please tell me more about this car that warms the passenger compartment by just blowing heat off of the radiator.

    10. Re:Heater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, wrong twice in a row. Although, I can say your are not wasting your days as I appreciate the corrections!

      Can you go into detail on the mechanism of this issue?

    11. Re:Heater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your still a moron, its belt driven from the engine

    12. Re:Heater by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Please tell me more about this car that warms the passenger compartment by just blowing heat off of the radiator.

      I had one of those once but then I got a newer car that didn't have holes rusted from the passenger compartment to the engine bay.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    13. Re:Heater by tftp · · Score: 1

      I've yet to see a car with an electric driven A/C... but I'm always interested to hear about it.

      Prius has an electric A/C, as well as power steering and braking. The ICE operation is entirely optional, as it has to be because the car can remain in EV mode up to 42 mph.

    14. Re:Heater by tftp · · Score: 1

      Please tell me more about this car that warms the passenger compartment by just blowing heat off of the radiator.

      All cars made in 20th century use this method. The heater core is connected to the liquid cooling system; technically it is a second radiator, smaller and closer to the firewall. It is bypassed with an automatic valve to help with the warm-up of the engine block.

      Hybrids like Prius also use this method; but Prius has additional electric heaters that can provide heat instantly, primarily for defrosting the windshield as soon as you start the car. Traditional cars deny you the heat for about 5 minutes, and if the windshield fogs over it's just sad (Rain-X time.)

    15. Re:Heater by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Actually, electrically-driven air con is beginning to be a thing. It can't happen soon enough for my taste, because the magnetic clutches are bitches requiring magical tools. Also electric power steering. ABS is already electric. Etc. Bigger alternators are coming.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    16. Re:Heater by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I don't know about the Model S but the Nissan Leaf has a system where it will warm the cabin up while plugged in, ready for use the morning and without draining the battery at all. It's really nice, you get into a warm car with no need to wait for heating.

      Even without this feature the heat does at least come on instantly with an EV. No need to wait for the engine to warm up.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    17. Re:Heater by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      This is similar to the issue with ICE (internal combustion engine) where if it is really hot outside and you run the AC really high, you will drain the battery more. I think people need some more education as to the limitations of battery powered cars. It is probably not common knowledge that the heater in an all electric car uses the battery extensively vs. just blowing heat off of the radiator. Also, people need to shift their expectations based on the architecture of their vehicle. Some ICE engines need to be kept warm during extreme colds at night otherwise it can be very difficult to start them in the morning. Li-ion batteries do not like conditions outside of normal operating temperatures and charge rates; operating outside of those ranges will affect capacity and performance. In the end, the easy answer is probably for Tesla to set more conservative numbers for range when it is really cold or really hot outside.

      Some old ICE cars have the opposite problem though. My mates old Fiat Panda would over heat if you got stuck in traffic on a hot day unless you put the in car heater on to take heat away from the engine. I remember many a hot July day driving back from uni with all the windows open and the heat on full blast.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    18. Re:Heater by swb · · Score: 1

      I think this is fairly common advice for driving up long mountain passes in the summer -- if your car engine starts to rise, turn on the heater to high to help shed engine heat through the heater/passenger compartment.

    19. Re:Heater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, wrong twice in a row. Although, I can say your are not wasting your days as I appreciate the corrections!

      Your are? You mean 'you are not'? ;-)

    20. Re:Heater by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, it apparently is a common thing on the Priuses and similar ilk, but that's a hybrid car, not a strictly ICE car... ;)

      Makes perfect sense to me, too: Aside from the magical tools problem (which means that when the AC clutch goes all shitty and starts noisily filing itself into oblivion, you just ignore it until it turns quiet), it's bound to be more efficient even with the extra energy conversion steps just because the compressor speed will be independent of engine speed.

      To me, electric AC makes more sense than electric power steering. I like the concept enough that I will look into hacking it into my old BMW when/if 12V incarnations start showing up in junk yards. I can eliminate the parasitic drag of an entire serpentine belt by doing so.

    21. Re:Heater by deadweight · · Score: 1

      We have a fleet of electric cars in Annapolis that take people around town for free that are financed by local bars and restaurants. I was talking to a driver and they told me the heat KILLS the range. They use little propane camping heaters in cold weather.

  8. Re:Musk to NYT by gajop · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the actual interview, Elon Musk mentioned the NY Times reporter failed the following three things:
    1) Didn't have a full battery
    2) He took detours
    3) He went above the speed limit
    And gee surprise, your battery ran.

  9. Streisand effect by volkerdi · · Score: 1

    The NYT review has now been seen by at least an order of magnitude more people than would have had any awareness of it had Tesla's CEO made no comment about it at all. The vast majority of Telsa's previous reviews have been of glowing, fanboy type. Now they've completely countered those reviews by causing this article to become the most prominent one on the Internet.

    In the digital age, when the press gets something wrong (especially in an opinion piece) it's just usually better to walk away.

    1. Re:Streisand effect by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Unless they completely screwed you over, and you have evidence to prove that. I'm not saying that Tesla is correct, but if they're telling the truth I'd do the same thing regardless of the Streisand effect. NYTimes screwing up a review is a big deal. If they did, that should be exposed.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    2. Re:Streisand effect by tftp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unless they completely screwed you over, and you have evidence to prove that.

      Being right has nothing to do with [not] being stomped into the mud. One necessary condition here is the ability of the audience to comprehend your proof.

      In this case, though, I think Tesla is wrong. The reporter drove the car exactly per instructions, and he was frequently on the phone with Tesla. He charged the car also per instructions. I do not know if he used the mode "Kill my battery but give me 10% more range" - but no sane person would be even trying to find this mode unless it is preset. If Tesla had to use this mode, on a preplanned trip, why didn't they preset it before delivering the car to the reporter?

      Tesla is also haggling about a 2 mile "detour" in NYC, about 200 miles away from the failure point and before the last supercharge. This is ridiculous. Tesla instead should explain this:

      1. Why the sequence of supercharges was yielding shorter and shorter remaining range at the end of the charge? ("Full" - 242 - 185 - 216.) Who is in charge of the charge here?
      2. Why the charge meter and the odometer do not agree? (In other words, if the range meter reports 100 miles to empty it is correct only if you don't drive?)
      3. Why the charge dropped from 90 miles to 25 miles overnight?
      4. Why the "battery conditioning" that was supposed to improve the range made it worse? The missing (90-16)=74 miles of range would cover the whole segment between Norwich and Milford, probably even without a charge at Norwich.
      5. Why the low voltage recharge is so pathetic? You'd have to set up camp near a 120V outlet if you want to charge the car.

      All in all, I see that the reporter did all that he could to help the car to take this easy trip - but the car still failed. Lame, literally. Nobody should pay $100K for a car that can't take a road trip. EV manufacturers should lower their estimated range by measuring it not in ideal conditions but in real conditions, by physically driving the car - at night, in rain, in snow. Then the manufacturer can stand by these numbers - and journalists wouldn't be using them as an easy punching bag. EV makers are lying, all of them; they think puffing the range up helps them. But in reality the negative PR hurts them more. Be honest, say that the car cannot cover more than $m miles and nobody will take you to court. Those are expensive toys, and people who buy them have resources.

    3. Re:Streisand effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the charge meter and the odometer do not agree? (In other words, if the range meter reports 100 miles to empty it is correct only if you don't drive?)

      Have you looked closely at the range indicator on a gas car? Some of your other points are fair, but anyone who trusts the range indicator on any vehicle beyond as a very rough guess is going to get into trouble. They're accurate if you drive the same speed... not so much if you stop.

    4. Re:Streisand effect by tftp · · Score: 1

      Have you looked closely at the range indicator on a gas car? Some of your other points are fair, but anyone who trusts the range indicator on any vehicle beyond as a very rough guess is going to get into trouble.

      The indicators may be nonlinear. This depends on the shape of the tank. I know because I own a car with a "guess gauge" like that.

      However even a pretty bad gasoline level indicator is repeatable. If it shows 2 last bars you can drive 50 miles, for example. (It took you 150 miles to consume the top two bars - nonlinearity in effect.) If it shows full then the tank is pretty full. In a city I refuel at 3 bars remaining, on a road trip - at 4 bars (I get hungry by that time, and I like to have fuel just in case.) Very few people suffer range anxiety with gasoline cars because the gas gauges are pretty good and because when the gauge starts blinking at you you still have a few miles left. It only takes a few minutes to fully recharge your gas car, and there is no penalty for full charge - in fact, all charges are to the brim if you use the automatic cutoff. In worst case, if you didn't pay attention or did something else stupid, all you need is to call AAA and a truck will show up with a can of gas, and you can be back on the road for a moderate fee. Your car will not have to be towed with locked wheels, tearing the rubber and twisting the drive shafts, and you will not have to end up at a weird location just because that's where the charger is.

      Regardless, in this case the reporter had no choice. The range indicator was all over the place anyway, seemingly randomly. Sometimes a short charge gives more miles, sometimes a longer charge gives fewer miles, sometimes a parked car loses 74 miles overnight. (Where did that energy go? Into heat? That's a lot of energy; not only it didn't move the car, it also was paid for and then wasted.)

      For all practical purposes, the reporter did not need the range indicator because his trip was preplanned by Tesla and monitored over the phone all the way. He should have been able to sail through and never have a worry. But many things went wrong, on all levels. The trip was poorly planned, using ideal numbers instead of realistic ones. The car had "a glitch" that wasted energy. The advise from Tesla was inadequate. I'd say the reporter did OK - for a typical car driver who doesn't care about technology and just wants to go from A to B. The reporter did better than that, actually - he sacrificed his comfort, he called Tesla every hour for an advice, he sat idly for an hour and waited for the low voltage charge... none of Regular Joes would do that, ever - the car would be sent back as a lemon. We are used to reliable vehicles; EVs reopen a very old page of history when every car trip was an adventure that had to be painstakingly planned. Very few common folks will accept that, even if they can pay $101K for the car.

    5. Re:Streisand effect by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      The indicators may be nonlinear. This depends on the shape of the tank. I know because I own a car with a "guess gauge" like that.

      That's not a range indicator, that's a gas gauge. Range indicators are on newer cars, and tell you the number of miles you have left based on the time since your last fillup, gas left, and almost never take into account conditions like speed and stop-and-go conditions. My guess is that the Model S doesn't have a battery charge indicator, which is analogous to a gas gauge, but does have a range indicator.

    6. Re:Streisand effect by tftp · · Score: 1

      My guess is that the Model S doesn't have a battery charge indicator, which is analogous to a gas gauge, but does have a range indicator.

      It appears that it has both. The remaining charge is shown as the green portion of the battery symbol.

      Range indicators are on newer cars, and tell you the number of miles you have left based on the time since your last fillup, gas left, and almost never take into account conditions like speed and stop-and-go conditions.

      I haven't seen those. Not sure what the value of them would be because you drive more conservatively if you are on last drops of fuel than when you have a full tank. Range indicators are actually a liability because the car manufacturer gives you a specific promise (miles to empty) but cannot guarantee it (such as if you are approaching a mountain pass.) Gas gauge can be as accurate as they want it to be, and if it shows 2.3 gallons left then that's what is left - and you can use that fuel in any way you want.

      In this case the range indicators were off a bit, as many EV owners report. It's not unique to Tesla - you can't measure the charge of a battery directly, you have to integrate incoming/outgoing currents and then use voltage under some load as a fixed reference. The reporter failed because the car's power system started dropping charge left and right from the first day. One sign of trouble was the diminished range after the second charge, at Milford - it took longer than the first one and left the car with 185 miles of range. The reporter had to cover 180 miles from that point (to Norwich and back, with no chargers in between.) This would be a no-go event for me; but what can you do if you are committed already? Do you turn around and go back because your $101,000 shiny red car can't make it from the charger to the next town and back? 80-90 miles is a laughable distance for a car; you can easily cover it even on a horse.

      The car still would have made it; the range indicator was tolerable at the hotel in Groton (90 miles remaining after driving 79; off by 16 miles.) Perhaps those 90 miles could be covered with a 1 hour low voltage unplanned charge in Norwich.

      But here another sign of trouble struck - the battery in the morning lost 65 miles of range, and after the failed "conditioning" attempt lost 9 more. The reporter had to cover 90 miles when the range indicator claimed only 16. This was not doable, and the reporter should have called the tow to the hotel to make his life easier. Clearly the "network" of chargers is too sparse, and the car is not sufficiently bug-free (reliable) to travel between existing chargers. The self-discharge rate is simply atrocious. The reporter haven't experienced it before because he was driving continuously. It may be a bug, something that Tesla swept under the carpet assuming that the car will be charging all night anyway. This one wasn't.

    7. Re:Streisand effect by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Why the charge dropped from 90 miles to 25 miles overnight?

      Because the battery needs to be maintained at a certain temperature even if not used.
      Did you even read the article?

    8. Re:Streisand effect by tftp · · Score: 1

      I read all articles. How do I "maintain a certain temperature" of a car that is parked outside? Do I have to warm it with my body, for example? Do I need to park this car in a heated garage? If so, this was never mentioned to the reporter. On the other hand, a "software glitch" *was* mentioned by the Tesla rep. Did you even read the article?

    9. Re:Streisand effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the low voltage recharge is so pathetic? You'd have to set up camp near a 120V outlet if you want to charge the car.

      Eh? Of course low voltage recharge is pathetic. It takes an enormous amount of energy to move a modern car at speeds people consider acceptable. Hint: 1 hp is 746 W. How many watt-hours do you think are in a Tesla with a 300-mile-range battery pack?

    10. Re:Streisand effect by tftp · · Score: 1

      How many watt-hours do you think are in a Tesla with a 300-mile-range battery pack?

      About 86 kWh per the article.

      If we stick to 15A, 120V RMS then a standard outlet is providing us with 1.8 kW. A charge of 1 hour would deliver exactly that, 1.8 kWh - even assuming that there are no losses anywhere (which can't be.) To fully charge the car you'd need 47 hours, or two days. If the battery keeps losing charge as it did overnight then you cannot even keep it topped off at low voltage.

      This makes your comment true, of course - and it makes any prospects of low voltage recharge (at those Wal-marts, and at unlocked outlets elsewhere) pretty much useless. You have to have a high power charger for the car, or else it does not go anywhere. The conclusion of this reporter's road test, and of this simple calculation, is simple: EVs cannot be sold (for road trips, at least) unless a network of charging stations is in place. But there are many rural locations where there is simply not enough power to feed a charger with. A 86 kW charge over one hour requires, for example, 480V and 180A. A single supercharger station is said to provide 100 kW of power.

    11. Re:Streisand effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your bullet points are not accurate enough to defend your credibility. The reporter did not take the planned route. Tesla did not have a military strike team to stop him. That Tesla tried to help in spite of the reporter taking actions indistinguishable from deliberately sabotaging the trip to generate a story only indicates the attitude of customer support.

      Why did the reporter suddenly change his plan and stop overnight when there was every indication that the trip would have been successful if he had just stuck with his original plan? Because a story of a successful run wouldn't have been so "controversial".

  10. Imagine that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another member of the media says that a Tesla is not perfect so Musk gets upset.

    I am sure there is a vast conspiracy trying to keep Tesla down.

    (Really, its not the fact that electric cars are very range-challenged, its not!)

    1. Re:Imagine that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, same thing as those ignorant darkies. Always someone elses problem.

  11. That'll Teach Tesla by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next time, they'll outright buy a good review on Slashdot, as opposed to leave in the hands of some 'journalist' at some fly-by-night organization where they say whatever they want about you.

  12. Not yet idiot-proof enough by CityZen · · Score: 2

    A car (or any high tech product) designed and built by engineers is not suitable for the masses, at least on the first revision. You need a bunch of "real people" using it before you can figure out all the "user interface issues". And I'm not trying to be an elitist; it's just that everyone does "think different(ly)", so this needs to be taken into consideration, which doesn't usually happen when there's only a like-minded group of people working on the project.

  13. Re:Musk to NYT by Synerg1y · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Well shit, I can't buy this car, I do all three of these daily in a normal car... and the only reason I would ever wait for a battery to charge on a car would be while I'm swapping it out for a fully charged one... we're not there yet (+ these batteries cost like 2k?), nor do I own a car with a battery.

  14. What'd he do wrong? by Chronus1326 · · Score: 1

    A car company telling you how to drive it? I wonder what on earth the instructions were that the guy 'drove wrong,' What'd he do, gun it out of every red light....? Hahahahah he used the heat!? This is like when that city switched from Incandescent traffic lights to LED traffic lights, and wondered why the signals suddenly started getting covered in snow...never happened before. No heat from LED's, and no engine w/ water cooling. LOL

  15. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who doesn't go over the speed limit? It is pretty much a given that everyone goes five miles over the speed limit on average.

  16. The EPA calls them estimates for a reason. by WillgasM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Have you ever read how EPA estimates are done? You put a car on a dyno and run it through some fanciful schedule for what a "trip" should consist of. Too many hills, some extra wind, or a heavy foot will heavily skew real-world numbers. If your car gets 50mpg, what sane person would pump one gallon of gas and set out across the desert for the next gas station, 50 miles away. I get the iPhone joke, but if you're trying to max the car's economy, you very well could be driving it the wrong way.

  17. Tesla Redux by technical_maven · · Score: 2
    1. Re:Tesla Redux by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      There are always at least two sides to every story

      But sometimes they're just the right side and the wrong side.

      You can offer an alternative view of Pol Pot or Hitler's activities, that doesn't mean they're not 99.9% wrong (getting the trains running on time or whatever).

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  18. A little information by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 5, Informative

    Lithium batteries really don't handle cold temperatures very well at all -- one of the many reasons that aircraft have continued to use good old fashioned Nickel-cadmium or lead-acid batteries (until the Dreamliner came along).

    When they're too cold, they neither take a full charge, nor do they deliver their rated capacity or maximum current.

    I would say that, given the weather on the East Coast of the USA during the drive, this played a significant factor in the lack of range encountered -- but I acknowledge that it may not be the only factor.

    Perhaps another factor is the enhanced need to heat the passenger compartment. Unlike a regular IC-powered car, there's very little "waste heat" in an EV so perhaps over-zealous use was made of the electric heating - thus producing further heavy drain on the battery and reducing range.

    The problem (for Tesla) is that people don't want an EV that comes with a long list of "don'ts" and "cautions" in respect to power management and the effects of low/high temperatures on range. They just want a car they can unplug, jump in and drive -- with an unqualified guarantee of a known range. That's effectively what they get now with their IC-powered cars and that's what they want from any replacement.

    1. Re:A little information by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Electric cars that need frequent recharging *could* work, if you can get about two hour's driving out of the battery for about as much charging time as it takes to drink a cup of coffee.

      I wonder how they're going to fit electric vehicle charging stations every 150 miles or so on all the little twisty mountain roads around here?

    2. Re:A little information by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      I read the NYT article a few days back, and as I recall, he turned the heater off entirely partway through his trip, then spent the rest of the trip with feet that were freezing. Despite that, he still didn't make it.

    3. Re:A little information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember IC cars come with their own "don'ts" and "cautions". Really hot weather? Turn off the AC and turn on the heater to keep the engine from over heating.

    4. Re:A little information by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Remember IC cars come with their own "don'ts" and "cautions". Really hot weather? Turn off the AC and turn on the heater to keep the engine from over heating.

      I haven't had to do that since I last owned a 1980s Fiat.

    5. Re:A little information by westlake · · Score: 1

      Perhaps another factor is the enhanced need to heat the passenger compartment. Unlike a regular IC-powered car, there's very little "waste heat" in an EV so perhaps over-zealous use was made of the electric heating - thus producing further heavy drain on the battery and reducing range.

      Over-zealous?

      For a luxury sedan being tested in a Northern winter?

    6. Re:A little information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "... an unqualified guarantee of a known range. That's effectively what they get now with their IC-powered cars and that's what they want from any replacement."

      Ask the next 100 people you see how far they can go on the amount of fuel in their car right now and I bet you'd get zero correct answers. Even if you were to specify a full tank you'd be lucky to get 30% within 10 miles unless you happen to be somewhere with an engine hoist where everyone knows their valve timings.

    7. Re:A little information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The problem (for Tesla) is that people don't want an EV that comes with a long list of "don'ts" and "cautions" in respect to power management and the effects of low/high temperatures on range. They just want a car they can unplug, jump in and drive -- with an unqualified guarantee of a known range. That's effectively what they get now with their IC-powered cars and that's what they want from any replacement.

      Speak for yourself. I have a Model S down payment, the cash on hand to pay for my 85kWh version when its ready, and this article doesn't dissuade me one bit. But I'm a technically competent, reasonable person. YMMV.

      Yes, your "average Joe" may complain "but but my gas car doesn't do that!". We had a great run with petroleum. But its almost gone (oil, not natural gas), and all the benefits we enjoyed? Those are going to be history. We adapted to the quirks present with ICEs and gasoline, we'll adapt to the quirks of electric vehicles.

    8. Re:A little information by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      IBM has a project with the goal of making a battery that enables a more or less regular car to go 500 miles on a single charge. And apparently they are getting close to that mark. Call it 250 miles in cold weather, traffic jams, and detours; even that will cover 99% of our driving needs. But such a car is still going to suck if you can't recharge it in the time it takes to drink a cup of coffee. Because there will always be that 1%

      That 1% is the reason my friend called me silly for buying a convertible. Sure, it's a fun ride for 99% of the time but won't be any good when we have to move a piece of furniture. Simple solution: get 2 cars. One for everyday use, one for the 1% trips. And in the future, perhaps even the near future, that second car won't be necessary anymore, because we will have convenient car rental: the kind where you book a car for the next day, and find it in your driveway the next morning. The thing will have driven itself from the rental lot to your home by itself, and will return itself the same way. That is what I think will be the first revolution of self driving cars: car rentals. And that will in turn revolutionize electric cars by taking care of that 1% of our trips that cannot be served by an electric vehicle.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    9. Re:A little information by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      That's incorrect. Cold lithium batteries _appear_ to hold less charge because the rate of chemical reaction falls down with the temperature. If you reheat the battery then you'll get your 'disappeared' charge back. Charging is not affected at all, though it'll take more time.

      A bit of theory - the current provided by the battery depends on the difference of concentration of reactants (i.e. how much unreacted lithium you still have) _and_ on the temperature. So you might still have plenty of "fresh" unreacted lithium in the cold battery, but rate of reaction is not enough to keep up the current.

    10. Re:A little information by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      You guys must have much better drugs that we do...

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    11. Re:A little information by adolf · · Score: 1

      That 1% is the reason my friend called me silly for buying a convertible. Sure, it's a fun ride for 99% of the time but won't be any good when we have to move a piece of furniture. Simple solution: get 2 cars. One for everyday use, one for the 1% trips.

      For those 1% of trips, I just rent something from U-Haul, Home Depot, or Enterprise, or have the furniture/lumber/whatever delivered. It's already far more convenient for me to use conventional rentals than to buy, insure, license, and maintain a vehicle that I only ever intend to use 1% of the time. And I can pick the type of vehicle that would be best for the job: Whether I need a van or a trailer, a large box truck or a glorified church bus, it's easy and comparatively cheap to rent what I need when I need it.

      And in the future, perhaps even the near future, that second car won't be necessary anymore, because we will have convenient car rental: the kind where you book a car for the next day,

      I don't need the vehicle to deliver itself: Even if I'm by myself, leaving my car at the rental place isn't a problem (I can't drive both of them at the same time anyway).

    12. Re:A little information by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      That is certainly true... if you are driving something built 30 or 40 years ago!

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    13. Re:A little information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tesla use heated batteries to avoid this issue. In fact they have AC too to prevent overheating. I think I read that they claim the energy used for temperature control is less than the loss of using the batteries at the wrong temperature.

      Normal cars suffers from the same issue as well. A fully charged battery gives only 50% on a cold winter morning compared to a hot summer day. Add that cold lube oil is too thick and restricts internal movements in the engine and you get why the car can't start when it's too cold.

    14. Re:A little information by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      Embed ground-level power supply rails into the pavement. ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ground-level_power_supply )

      In general terms, the idea is to break up the supply rail into short segments, and only energize the segment that's directly below the vehicle at that instant in time so there's no electrocution risk.

    15. Re:A little information by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Ask the next 100 people you see how far they can go on the amount of fuel in their car right now and I bet you'd get zero correct answers

      The computer on my car is pretty accurate, as long as I keep to roughly the same driving system. I wouldn't necessarily trust it to within 10 miles but I trust it to within 30...

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    16. Re:A little information by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      But its almost gone

      It's not yet half gone. There's still plenty of petroleum remaining and probably enough to last well into the 21st century or even the early 22nd with unconventional sources.

    17. Re:A little information by bfandreas · · Score: 1

      A while back(10 years or so) Shai Agassi had this brilliant idea:
      1) Agree on an easily removable common battery pack
      2) Exchange your empty battery pack for a full one at the next petrol station
      3) Profit

      I assume this never really got anywhere since I've never heard anything of it ever since.
      But this is such a blindingly obvious solution to the "it takes too long to recharge" problem that I wonder why we are wasting time with anything else? Instead we mill about in hybrids that still are powered by an internal combustion engine(and in case of the Prius an inefficent one at that). Electric engines are BRILLIANT! You get loads of power out of a thing that's relatively small and you get it at all revvs.
      If the Tesla Roadster had been done properly(with easily exchangeable battery packs) I would have bought one in a heartbeat. Based on the Elise? Powered by a plucky little electric engine? Goes like stink? DO WANT! Harder to live with than an Elise? Ummm, yeah. Maybe next time.

      --
      20 minutes into the future
    18. Re:A little information by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      The difficulty with replaceable battery packs is that you have to design some sort of connector that can handle a couple of hundred amps at a couple of hundred volts, and be safely disconnected and reconnected by unskilled people (possibly using some sort of special machine like a pallet jack) while it is soaked with salty muddy water.

      Why not just get a Lotus Elise? They're not *that* expensive, and if you want better economy and better performance then you can bin the wheezy little petrol puttputt and put a proper diesel engine in there instead. There really are no good cars made with petrol engines these days, and I'm surprised that Lotus cripple their cars with them.

    19. Re:A little information by tgd · · Score: 1

      Lithium batteries really don't handle cold temperatures very well at all -- one of the many reasons that aircraft have continued to use good old fashioned Nickel-cadmium or lead-acid batteries (until the Dreamliner came along).

      When they're too cold, they neither take a full charge, nor do they deliver their rated capacity or maximum current.

      Which is why most EVs - the major exception being the Leaf -- actively maintain heir battery temperature.

    20. Re:A little information by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      That 1% is the reason my friend called me silly for buying a convertible. Sure, it's a fun ride for 99% of the time but won't be any good when we have to move a piece of furniture.

      That is the giant SUV/pickup drivers' excuse that always gets trotted out when people criticise giant SUV/pickups.

      "But one day I might need to carry two dirt bikes, a jetski and enough camping equipment for a month, and I can't do that in a fucking Smart car."

      Either that, or it turns out they're some sort of ultra-macho carpenter who regularly carries two tons of wood to work.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    21. Re:A little information by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Otherwise you'd have to drive around in a huge pantechnicon all the time, because once every few years you need to move house.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    22. Re:A little information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um.. No one that regularly keeps their gas tank sitting on low is surprised when they run out. It's literally the price they pay for rolling the dice on whether they can make it to the next gas station or not. Why should it be different when the gas is electricity? Granted it's less of an issue when gas stations are more ubiquitous, but it's the same fucking problem.

    23. Re:A little information by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Lithium batteries really don't handle cold temperatures very well at all -- one of the many reasons that aircraft have continued to use good old fashioned Nickel-cadmium or lead-acid batteries (until the Dreamliner came along).

      When they're too cold, they neither take a full charge, nor do they deliver their rated capacity or maximum current.

      Which is why most EVs - the major exception being the Leaf -- actively maintain heir battery temperature.

      which is why he lost so much charge during the night. without that he would have made it. the detour doesn't really matter into the equation at all - it's this stop that tesla is referring as detour probably if you were to push them, and that he didn't charge like he was supposed to during the stop.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    24. Re:A little information by bfandreas · · Score: 1

      Well, the alternative is equally unpleasant. Wait a couple of hours until your car is fully charged. Or fast-charge potentially cutting battery life short.
      If charging your car is even an option wherever you keep it.

      I once drove a rented Elise up and down some serpentines in Switzerland. That kind of hairpin madness where 30km/h is plenty.
      Got the fright of my life. That was truly scary. I know now why Imprezas are so common over there.

      Truth is, the Tesla Roadster woud propably also scare me.

      --
      20 minutes into the future
  19. I actually RTFA.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article sounds identical to the problems of charing a cell phone.
    The car contains many lithium ion packs, right? Is this a parallel problem? ie, assuming you could get a massive amount of power to them, how fast would they charge? You would need to be using 1000's of volts (with all the dangers that entails), but surely you could get the charge time down to a reasonable time? Otherwise you could use 100's of volts with a 6" thick cable. Either way, people want to be 100% charged (real 100%, not pretend 100%) in 15 minutes.

  20. Re:Musk to NYT by c0lo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So the Tesla is only suitable for people who:

    1) can be certain of a full charge every time they leave the house; 2) never take detours, or get forced into detours by road construction; 3) never go above the speed limit;

    Given that, I'm absolutely shocked that this isn't already a mass-market blockbuster - it's clearly suitable for all the common use cases!

    To be fair, if you do start with a non-full tank, drive longer distances or raise the RPM (by driving it at higher speeds) to a fuel-driven car engine, you can expect that you may not be able to reach the next petrol station (i.e. what you describe is, in principle, not specific to electric cars). The difference is in the advertised range.

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  21. Re:Musk to NYT by gajop · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This isn't about your daily car usage, it's a test to verify the car's range, and failing to do all three should have one marked as an idiot (or malicious).

  22. Electric Cars just simply aren't there yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Energy densities aren't there for the storage.
    We're still going to rely on Coal to charge the silly things- until someone wises up and realizes that Wind and Solar isn't going to be filling the bulk of the power and decides that something like Liquid Salt Low-pressure Thorium reactors are the bees-knees in power.

    So...they're less effective than internal combustion engine based vehicles AND they cause more carbon to be dumped into the environment. Great green move, gang!

    When you can get higher energy densities and can honestly rid yourself of the coal fired and stupidly designed nuke reactors, THEN it'll be green and be "the" answer for things. Right now, not a single Hybrid or EV is even remotely green. They all contaminate the environment worse than the things they're supposed to replace.

    1. Re:Electric Cars just simply aren't there yet. by inglorion_on_the_net · · Score: 1

      Bonus points for mentioning Thorium, but...

      So...they're less effective than internal combustion engine based vehicles AND they cause more carbon to be dumped into the environment.

      Where did you get that from?

      They all contaminate the environment worse than the things they're supposed to replace.

      [citation needed]

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
  23. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    The battery array in a more standard electric car are far more than $2k. Closer to $12-20k.

  24. Re:Musk to NYT by mattack2 · · Score: 2

    We may not be there yet for individuals, but there is at least one taxi company doing this, swapping out batteries.

  25. Re:Musk to NYT by Nerdfest · · Score: 1

    With Tesla being a public company, it could be considered criminal.

  26. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is pretty much a given that everyone goes five miles over the speed limit on average.

    Then everyone should be fined.

  27. Re:Musk to NYT by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

    I can tell you with pretty good certainty exactly how much further my car can go based on the gas guage. Clearly there isn't that same capability with this car and the battery. No shock tho... how many times do you see laptops that take hours to get to 50% and then 30 minutes the next 50?

  28. Perhaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He wasn't holding it right.

  29. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    To be fair, you're never more than about 5 miles from a gas station in most areas of the northeast - can't say the same of EV charging stations.

    To be fair, refueling your gas/diesel engine takes about 10 minutes - can't say the same of EV charging stations.

    To be fair, running the heater in cold weather will not trash your gas engine's range - can't say the same of EV charging stations.

    To be fair, leaving your internal combustion engine out in cold weather overnight won't cause you to lose approximately 2/3 of your remaining fuel - according to the article, can't say the same of EVs.

    These are all engineering, infrastructure, and design problems that ARE specific to electric vehicles, and which need to be solved if they want their products to catch on in the mass market and compete with gas-powered vehicles. If they want them to be the exclusive toys of the rich who have time & money to waste, then great, keep telling people "you're driving it wrong." If you want to challenge the existing motor vehicle industry, you have to offer a compelling reason to buy your alternative product. So far, other than "wow it's super expensive," there doesn't seem to be too much to recommend the Tesla.

  30. Re:Musk to NYT by LordLimecat · · Score: 5, Funny

    nor do I own a car with a battery.

    Do tell? Do you have to start it lawnmower style?

  31. Re:Musk to NYT by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 2, Funny

    So reviews should verify theoretical device usage instead of real device usage? Why doesn't Elon Musk write his own reviews then? Oh wait, he's trying to do that now.

    --
    by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
  32. I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let's consider this...

    NY Times has a flawless ride, everything goes well, the result? An article like all the rest...nothing noticeable. It's not like the Tesla S is unknown anymore.

    NY Times can push things hard to try to make for a failure, now we have a controversial article on a new technology. That'll sell. And that's really all those old paper rags care about.

    1. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NY Times can push things hard to try to make for a failure, now we have a controversial article on a new technology.

      Aren't testing and reviewing supposed to push things to the limit? Why would you test something only within some boring spec? "I tested the Tesla S and it drove well from my home to the grocery store and back, for a total of 8 miles."

    2. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pushing the car to its limit is not a problem. Pushing a car to its limit and then lying about it is.

    3. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by JBMcB · · Score: 1

      Car said it could go the distance. Rep said it could go the distance. CEO of the company said it would run within parameters in cold weather.

      It didn't.

      --
      My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
    4. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by oztiks · · Score: 1

      Read the CBS TFA. The logs stipulate a different version of those events.

      Its amusing how some people cant get past this fact that if you drive a computer car it will report accurately exactly what took place.

      I'm almost sure if the logs told a different story Tesla would take that information on board and own up the issue, they are advertising conditions in the logs that say otherwise... where are the sysadmins on /. to back me up on this?

    5. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Pushing the car to its limit is not a problem. Pushing a car to its limit and then lying about it is.

      if pushing it over the limit is as simple as leaving it overnight and coming back...

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    6. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      if the logs told of a massive detour we would have the logs..

      but taking another bridge out of manhattan.. anyhow the detour wasn't the real problem. the batteries using heating during the night stop in order to no fail totally was the problem.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    7. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the reported ignored the instructions for the car. So its meh both ways.

    8. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      That'll sell. And that's really all those old paper rags care about.

      Yeah, unlike all the high quality, absolutely objective journalism you get on the internet.

      "I wrote about how cool the Tesla is on my facebook page, that's a far more reliable source than some smelly old dead tree newspaper."

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    9. Re:I am going to side with Elon Musk (Melon) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That'll sell. And that's really all those old paper rags care about.

      As opposed to these new fangled blogs who've never ever done anything controversial to drum up page views aka selling?

  33. Re:Musk to NYT by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 0

    The problem was that the car was telling him that he had plenty of miles to go when he parked it for the night. I would expect the car to give me a reasonable approxiamation of the range I have left, which is what the car says it's doing, instead of some BS PR number, even if I didn't charge it up 100% or decided to drive through the city.

    --
    by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
  34. Blaming the press?? by briancox2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The fastest way to look overly-sensitive and closed minded is to blame the press. It's just about the worst PR move you can make.

    What they should have done is issue a press release that they were working closely with the reporter to find out what anomolies may have occured so they can improve the design if needed. They are in serious need of a new PR firm.

    --
    We should learn what we need to know about issues, before we decide what we need to feel about them.
  35. "Real World" conditions by EmagGeek · · Score: 0

    Elon Musk should be releasing range figures that are based on how people actually drive in everyday life, not the range that results from "following our driving instructions to the letter," because that is not real life.

    Let's not forget that Tesla has already sunk $500M in taxpayer money down this rathole and still doesn't have a product.

    It's only a matter of time before Tesla joins the ranks of A123, Solyndra, and Satcon.

    1. Re:"Real World" conditions by Raistlin77 · · Score: 1

      And how do you propose he gets his hands on those figures? Do you record your exact fuel economy, maintain full GPS tracking logs, and keep track of exactly how quickly you accelerate and how fast or slow you drive every mile in your car? No, you don't, and neither does the rest of the world.

      The best Tesla can do is guesstimate, same as every other car manufacturer. When was the last time you got the MPG that your car's manufacturer promised? If you answered anything other than "never", either you're lying or you live in some wacky parallel universe where all roads run downhill.

    2. Re:"Real World" conditions by inglorion_on_the_net · · Score: 1

      Let's not forget that Tesla has already sunk $500M in taxpayer money down this rathole and still doesn't have a product.

      WTF? I'm guessing you're ignoring the fact that they've sold and delivered more than 2400 of the Roadster since 2008 and are currently selling and delivering the Model S?

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    3. Re:"Real World" conditions by tftp · · Score: 1

      Do you record your exact fuel economy, maintain full GPS tracking logs, and keep track of exactly how quickly you accelerate and how fast or slow you drive every mile in your car? No, you don't, and neither does the rest of the world.

      I own a Prius, and I watch the mileage. Owners of high efficiency cars tend to do that. There are forums where they compare notes and discuss their numbers. Tesla would have no problem whatsoever in collecting the data if they pay the owner a $1 (or something) for 100 miles of submitted tracks. The software can remove portions of tracks that the owner considers private; submissions will be cryptographically signed all the way from the car to the PC and to the Interweb. Trivial to implement, and creates more interest in the car's doings.

      When was the last time you got the MPG that your car's manufacturer promised?

      I'm still getting it, though the gasoline is diluted with ethanol these days.

    4. Re:"Real World" conditions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That you think that selling 2400 cars in 5 years can even make a profitable business, let alone pay back a huge debt obligation, is just testament to your complete and utter idiocy.

    5. Re:"Real World" conditions by Byrel · · Score: 1

      When was the last time you got the MPG that your car's manufacturer promised? If you answered anything other than "never", either you're lying or you live in some wacky parallel universe where all roads run downhill.

      Actually in three different cars with manual transmissions I've driven. I commuted about 55 miles each way in primarily flat, highway driving, and could repeatably beat the EPA figures in Fall and Spring. The best was a Saturn SL2 with a manual, which could easily beat the manufacturer by 4-5 mph. Of course snow/ice/AC and all bets are off.

  36. Re:Musk to NYT by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    No, the problem is, the alternative route, likely exceeded the "real device usage" guide.

    Realize they were doing drives that were very long, toward the maximum of the vehicles range.

  37. Cry baby, hell! Top Gear faked the failure by Catbeller · · Score: 2, Informative

    Tesla got a copy of the script for Top Gear - written before they drove the car - and it had pre-planned a battery disaster. That was the major beef - it was a fix, a fraud. (Top Gear is not a auto review show - it is entertaiment) I think that on trial the matter of the fake-drained script simply wasn't considered. The judge simply ruled that the TV show was a known bender of facts and that the show, even doctored as it was, didn't hurt Tesla - no libel, no financial harm. He simply ruled that the audience knew it was fake, more or less.

    And here's Jalopnik: http://goo.gl/AdRdN

    Of course, Top Gear admitted the car they pushed wasn't out of batteries but that it was done for effect and that it is completely true that the car would have run out at 55 miles of track time. Producer Andy Wilman defended their actions by basically saying "Duh, it's a television show" and accusing Tesla of trying to use them for press.

    From Treehugger: http://goo.gl/ILrHB

    ...

    As Mike posted in November, however, it was looking unlikely that Tesla could actually prove that any substantial harm had been done, and indeed that's how it ended up, with the judge throwing out the lawsuit arguing that TV viewers are savvy enough to know that not all is as it seems. Jalopnik has a pretty decent summary of the rejection of the Tesla lawsuit (complete with gloating Top Gear fans in the comments):

    The judge today dismissed this as unreasonable as motorists are aware that cars will perform different under different conditions, such as being on a racing track.

    Justice Tugendhat also made mention that what Tesla appears to want is a legal ruling saying Top Gear is a bunch of lying liars who lie, but that "rectification of inaccuracies is not a function of the courts unless that can be achieved in the course of proceedings properly brought to enforce a recognized course of action."

    Of course what is legal, and what is moral, are not always the same thing. And the Top Gear script writers and presenters had made up their minds to highlight the shortcomings of the vehicle, even before they got their hands on the thing. ...

  38. Tesla hates reviews by Charliemopps · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is at least the second time Tesla got a poor review from the media and then went on the attack. Remember Top Gear? These guys are making a shitty product, and seem to attack every news outlet willing to let the public know.

    1. Re:Tesla hates reviews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not as bad as GM. Once they were bought by the government the NTSB started bashing their big competition Toyota. After years of bashing the head of the NTSB admitted it was all false. At least Tesla isn't using the government to try and prevent a competitor from selling products.

    2. Re:Tesla hates reviews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the product really shit or are the reviewers expectations unrealistic?

      A new product or one made for a niche audience doesn't necessarily need to conform to traditional designs. There are going to be some advantages here and some advantages there. That doesn't mean there are no disadvantages. It's like comparing a custom built computer to one off the shelf. Sure it'll cost you more although if that custom built computer runs GNU/Linux better today and works at all tomorrow it's worth every penny because comparatively the other probably won't. This is what drives me nuts about all the morons who are too cheap and condescending to companies like System76. System76 sells crap. The hardware isn't the problem so much as the chipsets the company ships not being good choices for GNU/Linux. But otherwise I'd expect an increase in price for that additional benefit to me over a piece of shit Windows laptop I get from Walmart, Frys, Staples, Newegg, Dell, etc.

    3. Re:Tesla hates reviews by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What Top Gear does can hardly be considered serious reporting, or even serious car reviewing.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    4. Re:Tesla hates reviews by psperl · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking, the Model S is one of the best reviewed new cars ever.

      Motor Trend 2013 Car of the Year
      Automobile 2013 Car of the Year

      Just as importantly, Elon Musk is a truly great man who has not historically been caught spewing unfounded claims. Consider his eventual vindication about Tesla and SpaceX. People said his rockets were too good to be true (cost vs. capability) and wouldn't work. Now he just needs to scale up production, which he is doing, to corner the entire non-secret space launch market.

      People said Tesla wasn't going to ever release a car. Then the Roadster was released. Then people said Tesla wasn't going to release the Model S before going bankrupt. Remember when Elon bet that journalist $1,000,000 that the Model S would be released on time? Yeah, he won that.

      I'm suprised people haven't stopped criticizing this guy and got on board. If Elon Musk didn't exist, we wouldn't have PayPal, Tesla, or SpaceX. This is just one guy we are talking about! He revolutionized three separate industries by the time he was 40!

    5. Re:Tesla hates reviews by digitalhermit · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I love the Top Gear show, but they're more a comedy show than a proper car review show. As far as Tesla was concerned, Google the lawsuit and you'll understand why Tesla turns on all logging. They caught Top Gear in a bit of a lie.

    6. Re:Tesla hates reviews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Top Gear is entertainment, not news. They blatantly staged the "out of juice" incident.

    7. Re:Tesla hates reviews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is at least the second time Tesla got a poor review from the media and then went on the attack. Remember Top Gear? These guys are making a shitty product, and seem to attack every news outlet willing to let the public know.

      Um.. really? Top Gear? The automotive world's Ted Nugent? The show that put a Prius head to head with a BMW M3, drove them both like sports cars and then complained that the Prius' mileage claims aren't all they're cracked up to be?

      Yeah, they sound like real journalists.

    8. Re:Tesla hates reviews by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      A new product or one made for a niche audience doesn't necessarily need to conform to traditional designs.

      i stopped reading after this sentence. yes, it does, because the car is being marketed as a car for the masses. that's why the reporter tested it in typical driving conditions and that is why tesla approved every aspect of the test including the route and when the test would take place.

    9. Re:Tesla hates reviews by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Top Gear is essentially a scripted comedy show using cars for props. When they praise a car, it's because the script said to praise it long before they had one delivered. When they slam a car, it's because the script said to slam it also long before they actually laid eyes on one.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    10. Re:Tesla hates reviews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except they *didn't* catch them in a bit of a lie. They had no logging at the time, so really nobody will ever know why the range was so bad. The law suit was dismissed, which means they're in fact not guilty.

    11. Re:Tesla hates reviews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What Top Gear does can hardly be considered serious reporting, or even serious car reviewing.

      Are you telling me that a Ford Fiesta would not have saved thousands of lives at Omaha Beach? /me runs to get a lawyer

  39. Since when did we trust users? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ok, so since when did Engineers start trusting users?

    Last I checked, the user was the biggest point of failure in any system. Tesla has to account for the fact that people are not going to follow instructions. This is actually a better real-world test than you might think because people don't always read directions.

    1. Re:Since when did we trust users? by oztiks · · Score: 1

      I am with you on this but I don't see how it can be fixed though. Think of the problem

      Idiot user decides to charge car just enough to get to said destination. Idiot user then (whose in control of the car) abandons the instructions given via the computer.

      Of course Tesla can put stronger alerts / warnings in the car to ensure the idiot user knows that in fact they are an idiot but it wont solve the situation at the end of the day.

    2. Re:Since when did we trust users? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I think the only idiots in this story are the fucking Elon Musk fanboys who come out of the woodwork whenever his name is mentioned.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    3. Re:Since when did we trust users? by oztiks · · Score: 1

      TBH never really had anything to say about the guy but his Car is pretty sleek, I don't think I'd ever say no if i was offered one :)

  40. Fuck off, Elon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd rather have a yugo than one of your overpriced cuntmobiles.

  41. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    everyone goes speed limit + 5. average speed is speed limit + 5.

  42. NYT reporter fails at basic comprehension by rs1n · · Score: 4, Informative
    The reporter was told to (re)condition the battery. From the article:

    After making arrangements to recharge at the Norwich station, I located the proper adapter in the trunk, plugged in and walked to the only warm place nearby, Butch’s Luncheonette and Breakfast Club, an establishment (smoking allowed) where only members can buy a cup of coffee or a plate of eggs. But the owners let me wait there while the Model S drank its juice. Tesla’s experts said that pumping in a little energy would help restore the power lost overnight as a result of the cold weather, and after an hour they cleared me to resume the trip to Milford.

    Looking back, I should have bought a membership to Butch’s and spent a few hours there while the car charged. The displayed range never reached the number of miles remaining to Milford, and as I limped along at about 45 miles per hour I saw increasingly dire dashboard warnings to recharge immediately. Mr. Merendino, the product planner, found an E.V. charging station about five miles away.

    My questions are:

    1. When they cleared you to go, was that with respect to the conditioning of the battery? That is, did they clear you insofar as the battery conditioning was concerned, or did they say something to the effect of "ok stop charging and just go regardless of any other warnings/messages" ?
    2. If the display range never reached the number of miles remaining to Milford, why the fuck did you not call the support team back and point this out to them? Instead, you ignored a very clear message regarding your inability to reach Milford, and then proceeded to complain when that became a reality
    1. Re:NYT reporter fails at basic comprehension by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      When they cleared you to go, was that with respect to the conditioning of the battery?

      tesla approved the route and when the test would take place. the reporter was in regular contact with tesla and even called about the battery level to ask them what to do.

    2. Re:NYT reporter fails at basic comprehension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed.....and this was a guy that points out he has a degree in electrical engineering...

    3. Re:NYT reporter fails at basic comprehension by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      The more people like you try to defend Tesla, the more ridiculously unrealistic their cars start to look.

      I doubt the average user is going to get a hotline through to Tesla technical support. And if they do need to, that in itself shows how far from being mature products they are.

      If these are just tests, they should have done them before the cars went on sale to the public.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    4. Re:NYT reporter fails at basic comprehension by rs1n · · Score: 1

      The more people like you try to defend Tesla, the more ridiculously unrealistic their cars start to look.

      I doubt the average user is going to get a hotline through to Tesla technical support. And if they do need to, that in itself shows how far from being mature products they are.

      If these are just tests, they should have done them before the cars went on sale to the public.

      I'm not defending Tesla. What I am asking for is that reporters be a little bit more honest and not get so carried away in writing a sensational article to get more readers. All we have so far is this reporter's word whether Tesla's vehicle is as advertised. How are consumers supposed to make informed decisions if the reporter fails at his job? It's fine to pick and choose your words to make headlines, but at least proof read your own writing so that there aren't holes so large you can drive a truck through. I'm not a reporter, but I have the common sense to ask basic questions. If the reporter supposedly did make some hoopla about the distance gauge showing less miles than the distance to Milford, _and_ Tesla still instructed him to drive on, don't you think that would be in the article? That would make bigger news than the fact that the car fell short of advertised performance. Instead, he writes (and in the following order) that:

      (1) he was "cleared" after having been asked to condition the battery
      (2) he drove the vehicle even though the distance gauge showed that he would not make it

      If there was some dispute with respect to (2), don't you think that would have been included in his article?

  43. Posting to undo bad moderation by Immerial · · Score: 2

    Slipped on the pulldown menu and choose redundant by mistake :P

  44. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since I'm not rich enough to afford one of these, yet I still have two cars, I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that I wouldn't expect people to use their electric luxury car for long trips. Hell, we take our less-efficient car (minivan) on trips because it is more comfortable. It seems to me that the Times was looking for a way to fail the car to make their story better. Most of us would probably commute in this thing.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  45. Re:Musk to NYT by Dahan · · Score: 1
    And in the actual rebuttal, the reporter mentioned that:
    1. The car displayed "Charging Complete", and its reported range estimate was sufficient to reach his destination
    2. The detour in question was only two miles long
    3. He may have gone above the speed limit for a mile or two, but that was probably before he stopped to charge at Newark. His problems came after that. And surely driving below the speed limit for 100 miles mitigates the excess energy usage caused by going above the speed limit for one mile.
  46. Estimated range by zwede · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I used to have a 2005 BMW. Whenever I filled it up it would show 330 miles to empty. Yet after 200 city miles the tank would be dry. Amazingly the car was not able to see the future and know how many lights I'd have to stop at. What a crap car. I'll write a scathing article about it.

    1. Re:Estimated range by Tokolosh · · Score: 1

      Buy a Mercedes.

      --
      Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
    2. Re:Estimated range by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After writing that letter, buy a Volt.
      My local TV/Radio/Newspaper tells me the Volt is incredible!
      Mere coincidence they share common ownership and advertisers?

    3. Re:Estimated range by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I used to have a 2005 BMW. Whenever I filled it up it would show 330 miles to empty. Yet after 200 city miles the tank would be dry. Amazingly the car was not able to see the future and know how many lights I'd have to stop at. What a crap car. I'll write a scathing article about it.

      I expect your car had a tolerably accurate fuel gauge that warned you when you were down to your last gallon or so.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    4. Re:Estimated range by deadweight · · Score: 1

      BMW uses a running average of MPG in the last X minutes and fuel remaining. I had 50 miles on the computer and 25 miles on the GPS to a gas station. I kind of forgot I had to CLIMB A STEEP MOUNTAIN at one point and the miles-to-go dropped fast. I was on *1* when I got to the station and the car took 14.6 gallons. IIRC the tank holds 14.6 gallons!

  47. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Goodness, that's pedantic. He means "if you AVERAGE up EVERYONE's speed, it will be about 5 over". It's not the most well-constructed sentence, but most native speakers should be able to figure out what he was saying.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  48. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    I don't know where you are from, but in the US you almost never get pulled over if you stay below 10-over-the-limit.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  49. Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Whose fault it is is somewhat irrelevant. Do you want a car that you have to remember to plug-in overnight and which you have to carefully plan your trips to ensure that you can get to the next refuelling station? Even if you fully understand how they work and their limitations you can easily make a mistake by forgetting to plug it in and suddenly you can't drive to work the next day because it takes several hours to charge.

    1. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by WaywardGeek · · Score: 1

      At a super-charging station, you get most of a charge in 30 minutes, just enough time for a quick breakfast or lunch.

      --
      Celebrate failure, and then learn from it - Nolan Bushnell
    2. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Do you want a car that you have to remember to plug-in overnight?

      Do you want a car that won't start just because you forgot to turn the headlights off overnight?

      Do you want a car that won't start just because you lost your key?

      Do you want a car that won't drive sideways just because the rear wheels are fixed?

      Do you want a car that can only travel on the ground?

      Do you want a car that spews noxious nitrogenous and greenhouse-inducing exhaust? That even spews exhaust at all?

      Do you want a car that stops just because you ran over some sharp detritus?

      I could go on, but perhaps you get the point that we have learned to put up with a lot of bullshit from our cars. Slightly different bullshit is slightly different.

    3. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whose fault it is is somewhat irrelevant. Do you want a car that you have to remember to plug-in overnight and which you have to carefully plan your trips to ensure that you can get to the next refuelling station?

      Do you want a car that you have to carefully pay attention to how much gas is in the tank so you don't run out before you make it to the next gas station? Sure, today, in your town, gas stations line the highways. If you run out, you only have to walk half a block to get gas. It wasn't always that way when horseless carriages first came about. Even today in some of the more remote stretches of highway in the states, you might well run out of gas before the next station if you start your trip with only half a tank.

    4. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Dunbal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A more obvious one: do you want a car that you have to remember to fill up with gas?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    5. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A more obvious one: do you want a car that you have to remember to fill up with gas?

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

    6. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      It wasn't always that way when horseless carriages first came about.

      real convincing. i can't wait to get back to the convenience of the horseless carriage times.

    7. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by haruchai · · Score: 2

      Not every day unless you do one hell of a lot of driving, way above the average.
      Besides there are a lot more electric plugs than there are gas stations, even if most will charge relatively slowly.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    8. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You misunderstand. YrWrstNtmr is obviously a trucker. How else can he claim to be able to drive 1,855 miles in between fill ups unless he's driving around in an 18-wheeler with 2 massive 200 gallon tanks? ;)

    9. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by pla · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      A 20 gallon tank at 14MPG (aka a typical pickup) or an 11 gallon tank at 26MPG (typical passenger sedan) both have a comparable total range. You don't, however, generally drive 300 miles a day (or if you do, you know the location and hours of every gas station on the way), so you wouldn't need to "top off" your EV any more "daily" than you would that same pickup or sedan.

      That said - Every night, you park your car somewhere in the vicinity of conveniently available grid power. In exchange for five seconds of plugging it in every night, you never need to stop at a gas station in the cold rain and then need to go inside to see the clerk when the stupid damned machine can't read your credit card or the ticket printer breaks.

      Do I sound too much like an apologist there? Hey, the Tesla S costs way too much and I don't have one. But I won't hold things against it that apply to any vehicle on the road. Cars take a certain minimum level of basic care and feeding, whether you feed them dead dinosaurs or uranium electrons, to function properly. Simple as that.

    10. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Do you want a car that you have to remember to plug-in overnight

      You've never lived in a really cold climate, have you?

      (Hint: It's called a block heater, and good fucking luck getting your car started at -40 when you forgot to plug in overnight.)

    11. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by farble1670 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you want a car that spews noxious nitrogenous and greenhouse-inducing exhaust? That even spews exhaust at all?

      where do you think that electricity comes from that charges your car? the electricity fairy? just because you aren't burning the coal in your back yard doesn't mean it's not being burned.

      granted, it's better to have pollution coming from a relatively small number of coal plants than millions of semi-regulated automobiles, but it's naive to see this as pollution-free.

    12. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Kaenneth · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you're in a position the get tax credit/deductions for your transportation expenses, can you isolate that portion of your electric bill used to charge your car?

    13. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Windowser · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You've never lived in a really cold climate, have you?

      (Hint: It's called a block heater, and good fucking luck getting your car started at -40 when you forgot to plug in overnight.)

      What brand of car do you buy ?
      I live in Montreal and I never plugged a car in my life. Well, except that old Nissan that refused to start under -25 unless I plugged it for an hour.
      and I've owned a lot of old cars.

      I currently own a Subaru and the day it refuse to start because it's too cold is the day I will go shop for another one.

      Stop buying cars built for California

      --
      Avoid the MS tax, always buy I.B.M. PC's (I Built-it Myself)
    14. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Provocateur · · Score: 2

      I've made arrangements at the Bat Cave so that it notifies Alfred to leave the car plugged in overnight.

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
    15. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Silas+is+back · · Score: 1

      Do you want a car that you have to remember to plug-in overnight and which you have to carefully plan your trips to ensure that you can get to the next refuelling station?

      That's probably what people said to Bertha Benz when she took the Benz Motorwagen for a long ride in 1888. Pioneers don't have it easy.

      --
      this sig is useless
    16. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      Some people have solar & wind directly at their home. Some others pay extra to make sure their power company buys the same amount of clean power as the customer consumes.

      Yes, some people charge their car without pollution.

      To your point, though: Li-Ion batteries are not made of fairy dust, but some downright awful shit. I don't know if that offsets the air pollution or not.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    17. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. The car keeps logs, including how much it was charged. Take those logs and you have exactly the amount you bill is.

    18. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by estitabarnak · · Score: 5, Informative

      Right, the power needs to come from somewhere. But electricity transmission is significantly more efficient than gas transmission, there's the difference. A non-trivial amount of gas is used to drive gas to a station so you can get it. Last time I checked, the EPA estimates that electrical transmission is 10% more efficient than taking gas to a gas station.

      Doesn't change the fact that coal is shitty, but you can't really polish a turd.

    19. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you want a car that you have to remember to plug-in overnight and which you have to carefully plan your trips to ensure that you can get to the next refuelling station?

      I'm just going to go ahead and guess you have a smartphone that requires you to do the exact same thing, and that you gave up a landline for it, one which requires you to do none of them, and that you'd get violent before having to give up the former and go back to the latter.

    20. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Kharny · · Score: 1

      Good for you, destroying your car for no good reason......

      --
      Make a man a fire and he will be warm for a day, set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life
    21. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have driven over three hundred miles on many days, and in none of those cases did I know the location/hours of every gas station along the way.

      When it got below a quarter tank, I stopped at the first advertised gas station and refilled it. There were always symbols on interstate exit signs indicating gas was available near the exit, and there were always such stations within 50 miles of each other. On some occasions, these signs clearly indicated that the nearby station in question was the last one for the next 100 miles.

      Gas stations seem to be much more numerous and closer together than charging stations, as far as I can tell.

    22. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes I do. Because it takes less than 5 minutes to fill it up with gas and I have my choice of thousands of conveniently located filling stations.

    23. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of us do try and use renewable energy such as solar power. Though, in that case, the production of the cells is a dirty process. And lets not forget the production of the car's batteries too. You really cant win, but I'd prefer those one time production pollutants instead of the continual mobile ones.

    24. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by cmay · · Score: 1

      A lot of people get electricity from nuclear.

    25. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Jeremi · · Score: 1

      just because you aren't burning the coal in your back yard doesn't mean it's not being burned.

      Doesn't mean it is being burned, either. Some of us have access to clean electricity (solar/wind/nuclear/hydro/etc). As time goes on, that access will grow (if only because the ancillary costs of coal power will make it uncompetitive).

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    26. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      People seem to do okay with recharging their cell phones, they just get into the habit of plugging them in before going to bed.

      For electric cars, it's similar; you just get into the habit of plugging it in when you get home.

      Even if you do that every day, it still takes less up less of your time than driving to the nearest gas station, possibly waiting in line for a pump, paying with your credit card, and pumping the gas. It's much cheaper too.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    27. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you want a car that you have to "plan" your emergencies based on it being charged enough to make it to hospital? And, yes, you could call an ambulance, but coming from someone with a 1 year old child in the house: sometimes waiting for an ambulance is just not an option, especially when the normal response time is 20+ minutes for them to get on scene and you can make it to the hospital using reasonable speeds at 20 minutes.

      I think these cars are a great idea, but until they can either charge faster at home or provide enough distance per charge to always have enough left over for that emergency, I think I'll stick with a hybrid.

    28. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 2

      As I understand it, the Tesla can get up to 300 miles on a charge. So you probably don't have to plug it in every day.

      The problem is that if you run out of gas, you curse and call AAA. They'll stop by and give you a gallon of gas, which will probably get you to the nearest gas station. From there you can add more gasoline and go on your merry way. Maybe a half-hour of inconvenience, depending on where you are.

      If you run out of electricity...? Can you charge your car off of another car's engine? How long would it take to get you someplace where you could plug in your car? How long would you have to wait to get a full charge off, say, a 110v outlet (the most commonly found)?

      There are still lots of unknowns to the electric car. Of course, I'd still give my left testicle for a Tesla Roadster.

    29. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      Unless your car is just charged wirelessly in your garage. Then there's no remembering other than where your house is.

    30. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by cjjjer · · Score: 2

      I live in Winnipeg and this past month we saw -35c to -40c at night (-50c with the wind). Most 6+ cylinder cars that are outside and don't get plugged in pretty much don't start. Myself I have a 6 cylinder high output engine (high compression) and even parked in the garage one day it barely started, took 3 attempts to get it going. Most 4 cylinder cars with good batteries usually don't need to be plugged in at those temps, might run without oil for a couple of seconds but it will start.

    31. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Yeah, one of the bosses at my workplace has had his car run out of fuel more than once in the past few months. Just too busy and optimistic about his car's range I guess.

      Charge the Tesla like you'd recharge a power hungry smartphone.

      Maybe some day we'd have hydrocarbon or alcohol fuel cell cars...

      --
    32. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by loufoque · · Score: 1

      How does the Tesla S cost way too much?
      Its price is in the same range as similar gas-powered cars.

      And it isn't an even particularly expensive range. We're only talking about 50-80k here. A Ferrari, for example, is 200-300k.
      An Audi S8 (the most expensive Audi sedan) is 120k.

      Yes, it's certainly more expensive than entry-level 10-20k cars. But it never aimed to be in that market.

    33. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "but it's naive to see this as pollution-free"

      That is, until more renewable energy sources come online.

    34. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Well, you could do what you do right now for your home office:

      1) estimate
      2) install a sub-meter and keep track of the kilowatt hours that way.
      3) have another electrical connection installed
      4) if you have a non-home-based office, then just charge your car at work

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    35. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Passenger cars generally have 14-gallon tanks. I've never driven a car with an 11-gallon tank. I agree with you, but it should be noted that the S falls short of the range of nearly every gas-powered car.

    36. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where do you think that electricity comes from that charges your car? the electricity fairy? just because you aren't burning the coal in your back yard doesn't mean it's not being burned.

      granted, it's better to have pollution coming from a relatively small number of coal plants than millions of semi-regulated automobiles, but it's naive to see this as pollution-free.

      That's only somewhat relevant. The natural gas required means that we're spending electricity to get and transport the gas, then also burning it in addition to the prior expense.

      Additionally, the electric car paves the way for a clean future. When everyone is using thorium, solar, wind, and geothermal energy sources, it will be clean. With fossil fuels, no matter where the electricity comes from, it's still going to pollute.

      Not to mention this means that we no longer need separate infrastructure for oil and gas, we can instead focus on upgrading and expanding our power infrastructure.

      I think that widespread adoption of electric cars will drive down pollution, even taking into consideration that the energy it uses still comes from coal.

    37. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean, like the car companies' access to clean electricity? Or more specifically, the battery companies' access? And the battery disposal organization? As time goes on, the reclamation costs associated with the battery packs and their replacements will grow (if only because the sheer amount of hazardous materials in batteries will increase due to the increase in battery production).

      Fixed it for you.

    38. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Yes, some people charge their car without pollution.

      I like how those solar panels and windmills arose assembled from Mother Earth with nary a pollutant involved.

      Wind especially is a nightmare, as anyone who has been to the old windmill farms in Hawaii and California can attest. Leaving acres and acres of rusting / leaking giants for the future to behold is not what I would call an environmental kindness.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    39. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Coal plants put out all kinds of nasty shit, including mercury, nitrous oxide and, believe it or not, radioactive particles. There is far more radiation released into the environment every year by coal plants than nuclear plants. The fact is that burning coal to boil water, spin a turbine, generate electricity, transport the electricity hundreds or thousands of miles through various transformers and distribution equipment, put it through a rectifier, then store it in a battery for discharge into a motor is less efficient use of energy than just using exhaust gases to drive a piston.

    40. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by bmo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is that if you run out of gas, you curse and call AAA. They'll stop by and give you a gallon of gas, which will probably get you to the nearest gas station. From there you can add more gasoline and go on your merry way. Maybe a half-hour of inconvenience, depending on where you are.

      Half an hour, you say? HAHAHAHAHA!

      I can tell you right now that I *know* that you've never had to call AAA.

      Ever. In your entire life.

      Because it's alway45 minutes and up to "whenever the tow truck driver gets to you" even in an urban, civilized area. It's not laziness, it's just that there are so many people with AAA cards and not enough tow drivers.

      --
      BMO

    41. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's pretty fucking funny since the CEO was screaming that the journalist caused the failure by not filling up until full and only for 49 minutes.

    42. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by YouWantFriesWithThat · · Score: 0

      it takes 2 days to fill a tesla via a home power connection. there is no 'conveniently available' chargers that fill it faster unless you live in a very select area. do the damn research.

    43. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't, however, generally drive 300 miles a day (or if you do, you know the location and hours of every gas station on the way).

      The hell I do. I assume that there will be a gas station at least within 50 miles along the highway and just start driving.
      And if I do run out of gas AAA will bring a gas can that will instantly get me moving again.

      I like electric cars, and we should all be using them for short-range daily driving, but there are weaknesses.

    44. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by luckymutt · · Score: 1

      Like my phone....crap, the battery is dead every morning because I never consider I should plug it in at night!!!!
      What crappy phone!!!!
      My gas-powered phone was so much better.

      Seriously, once you own one, plugging in your car will be as routine as plugging in your phone...only a lot less often unless you commute 125 miles each way to work.

    45. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by slugstone · · Score: 0

      Yes, you maybe near a power grid. But remember you have to plug in to that power grid. Most people I know do not park the car in the garage. So now you have to string a orange cable to the car in the wet rain. If you want a five seconds plug, then your orange cable has been laying in a puddle of water. There some fun. So how far is your 110 volt outlet to where you park your car? 20 feet for me.

    46. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Depends on where you live.

      Here in LA, I've never waited 45 minutes. I'd say a half-hour was the worst. But it's a car culture out here. The one time I was with my Mom and the car broke down in rural New Hampshire, you're right--it was easily an hour and probably more before the guy finally showed up. I just waited in the car and played Marathon on my laptop (hooray for warm-running laptops!) until the driver showed up, so I don't remember how long it took.

      So fine. It might take two or three hours before you're back on your way. I'll give you that. I'd still be curious as to how long it would take to charge up your Tesla (at a standard 110v outlet) so you could finish a trip of, say, 100 miles and how would you get your car to said outlet. If I have to wait two hours for the tow truck to tow me to an outlet and 3 hours to get enough juice to finish my trip, that would be bad.

      Again, though, I still want a Tesla Roadster.

    47. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by maxdread · · Score: 1

      You're right because it's impossible to have a 240v outlet to plug into when at home...

      9 hours for a full charge

      You can further drop that to 5 hours.

    48. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Gas stations seem to be much more numerous and closer together than charging stations, as far as I can tell.

      And how long did it take to build up all of that infrastructure? It didn't happen overnight. Same is true with charging stations. As more electric vehicles are in use more charging stations will be built. Right now in Oregon there are charging stations all along the I-5 corridor and before long you will be able to travel i-5 from the Mexican border to the Canadian border without having to worry about finding a charging station. Check out the West Coast Green Highway site for more information.

    49. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Maybe with a 110 volt extension cord. But you can easily install a 220 volt charging station in most houses that will charge it overnight.

    50. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by war4peace · · Score: 1

      If that happens (forgetting to plug it in), I bet it won't happen more than twice. Afterwards, you'll surely remember :)

      --
      ...gis sdrawkcab (usually not responding to ACs; don't bother posting as AC)
    51. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I could go on, but perhaps you get the point that we have learned to put up with a lot of bullshit from our cars. Slightly different bullshit is slightly different.

      umm.. the difference between the 'bullshit' in dealing with an electric car vs gas is that with the gas car, the problems are *mitigatable*. All the stuff you mentioned (aside from exhaust) is inherent in both vehicles. With the items that differ:

      1. exhaust can be mitigated with technical marvels that are attached to the engine to cause more complete combustion and fewer side products (exhaust heat recirculation units, catalytic converters, thermo-electric coating.

      2. leaving the lights on can be mitigated with portable batteries and jumpstarts.

      3. with lack of gas, there are things called GAS CANS. you can go to the nearest station and fill up your car with enough energy to have it go several miles.

      Whereas with an electric car, you forget to charge, and you are STUCK. It doesn't matter where - in the middle of nowhere, at your house, in freezing weather, anywhere. You simply need to get somewhere to a charging unit.

      This is a HUGE drawback of all-electric vehicles and the article nailed it, and Elon Musk can do very little about it.

    52. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by YouWantFriesWithThat · · Score: 1

      the journalist was faulted for not plugging it an at a hotel. do you think that they have 240 that he could have plugged into?

    53. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      When the electric car batteries deteriorate to the point they need to be replaced (estimated as when they've lost about 20% of their range) they still have a lot of life left in them. They can still be used as stationary batteries for grid storage or other uses. I would think they'd have to drop well below 50% of original capacity before they need to be recycled.

    54. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by maxdread · · Score: 1

      Don't know, he probably didn't ask.

      However that has nothing to do with the comment of yours I was replying to.

    55. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by drkim · · Score: 1

      A more obvious one: do you want a car that you have to remember to fill up with gas?

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      Another difference is, with a gas car, $42. With an all electric, free.

    56. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't own a cell phone, do you, Bond?

    57. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Its weird that we have to set off explosions in our vehicles to make them move.

    58. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      For the price of a Tesla S, you could have a BMW instead. Who in their right mind would take the Tesla S over the BMW?

    59. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by smellotron · · Score: 1

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      Well hey, that makes the electric car pretty similar to my laptop, my phone, my coffee maker, my lunch box, my underwear, my teeth, and everything else that seems to be fine when cared for on a daily basis. What was the problem again?

    60. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Askmum · · Score: 2

      My car runs 900 to 1000 km (560 to 620 miles) on one filling of gas. It then takes me 5 minutes to fill up and I'm go to go for another 900 to 1000 km.

      A Tesla (or any current electric vehicle) can run 265 miles (that half that distance) and takes 1 hours to charge if you have the superfast charger (that's still 12 times longer).
      So, best case: refueling takes 24 times longer. That's a big change in your car habits. Worst case it will take 100 times longer. That makes an electric vehicle only useful for short trips. Short being "less than the range of one charge".

    61. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      that's pretty fucking funny since the CEO was screaming that the journalist caused the failure by not filling up until full and only for 49 minutes.

      and it was an article to test that supercharging and supercharging to supercharging stop capability.

      and true.. he didn't fill it to full, he filed it to "complete"

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    62. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by theVarangian · · Score: 1

      Depends on where you live.

      Here in LA, I've never waited 45 minutes. I'd say a half-hour was the worst. But it's a car culture out here. The one time I was with my Mom and the car broke down in rural New Hampshire, you're right--it was easily an hour and probably more before the guy finally showed up. I just waited in the car and played Marathon on my laptop (hooray for warm-running laptops!) until the driver showed up, so I don't remember how long it took.

      So fine. It might take two or three hours before you're back on your way. I'll give you that. I'd still be curious as to how long it would take to charge up your Tesla (at a standard 110v outlet) so you could finish a trip of, say, 100 miles and how would you get your car to said outlet. If I have to wait two hours for the tow truck to tow me to an outlet and 3 hours to get enough juice to finish my trip, that would be bad.

      Again, though, I still want a Tesla Roadster.

      The Tesla Sedan probably does not have to be plugged in daily if you are a commuter, but the cars most people can afford are of the charge once a day variety. That kind of electric car still makes sense for a lot of people and excuses like "Bbbut .... I'll have to charge my car once a day" that you hear from some people are just lame criticisms. The Tesla and full electrics do have their shortcomings and the slow charging is one of them. I suppose one could dump a small generator and a can of gas in the boot for emergencies but you'd better include a warm coat or something if you live in cold climates. Another point for the average citizen is that there is no infrastructure and not everybody lives in a house with a garage. How are you going to charge your car? What if you live in an apartment building on the 6th floor with no parking garage and no private parking space? I am also interested in the issue of heating since and its effect on range since I live in the arctic region and have the heater going full blast most of the winter. I have talked to people who have operated electric cars up here and their biggest gripe was always that the heater sucked and if you turned it up it affected range. Basically the Chevy Volt built in generator concept and pluggable hybrids make more sense to me than this Tesla Sedan. I'd only buy one if I was a commuter and wasn't ever planning to not take any long trips outside of regions where there are supercharge stations.

    63. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Do I sound too much like an apologist there?

      Yup

    64. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by DrXym · · Score: 1

      These cars go (give or take) 200 - 250 miles between charge. Unless you live a stupid distance from work, it's more like once or twice a week. Depending on where you live, it might also be more convenient to simply plug your car in on the way into the house than take a a 15 minute detour to the nearest station.

    65. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by taiwanjohn · · Score: 2

      I would. And with a long waiting list it would seem I'm not alone. By all accounts the Model S is every bit as "up-scale" and luxurious as any BMW or Mercedes. Oh yeah, and then there's that whole 2013 Motor Trend Car of the Year thing... Who in their right mind would want a BMW when they could have a Tesla for the same price?

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, you're not using enough of it. --AC
    66. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The main difference is that with a petrol or diesel powered vehicle, I can make unscheduled, unplanned trips whenever I wish without having to worry about where I will next refuel it - if I need fuel, I just pop to the nearest station, which there will be a plethora of within 100 miles unless you are seriously out in the sticks. Refueling takes 5 minutes, and I'm back on my way to my unplanned destination without issue.

      One day I get to work and my phone rings - its my father, he's had a heart attack. He lives 250 miles away. I need to drive back home, grab a bag with a few essentials in it, and drive to the hospital. I don't want to have to stop at my house for hours to recharge my vehicle, or stop en-route for an hour to top it up etc etc.

      Electric vehicles are still crippled by the fact that you cannot ever have an unplanned excursion of any length in one.

    67. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by cyclomedia · · Score: 3, Informative

      I commute and when home I tend to walk/cycle around town so my car spends 22 out of every 24 hours parked. At weekends it might sit there from friday night to monday morning untouched. If I plugged it in at home and at work then I'd never need to worry about it.

      Problem is that that's the opposite of liquid fuelled cars, people are used to charging during their journey. It's a complete mental shift, and we all know how good humans are at that, I'm honestly surprised no one attacked the Tesla with a pitch fork, the bastard demon magic car!

      --
      If you don't risk failure you don't risk success.
    68. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      You don't, however, generally drive 300 miles a day (or if you do, you know the location and hours of every gas station on the way),

      Huh? Unless you're driving to a very remote location, you don't need to. Regular gas stations are plentiful enough that you can find one on the spot as soon as the needle gets close to empty.

      However, with more exotic fuels (or electricity...), sure, you do have to plan for this in advance...

      That said - Every night, you park your car somewhere in the vicinity of conveniently available grid power. In exchange for five seconds of plugging it in every night

      Except when on a trip away from home, where you might not have a garage or no easy access to a power outlet from a space where you can park your car...

    69. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by bentcd · · Score: 2

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      It really is impossible to explain to a gas car owner what a fantastic, beautiful world it is to live in where your car always has a full "tank" every morning when you come into your garage. Yes I need to take five seconds to plug it in once a day when I come home to make this world possible. I do not have to visit a gas station at all, ever, for any reason.

      It is a different world. I am not a poet and I do not have the words to fully make it justice. It has to be lived.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    70. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "Do you want a car that you have to remember to plug-in overnight and which you have to carefully plan your trips to ensure that you can get to the next refuelling station?"

      Check the AAA, every single day there are thousands in the US on the sides of the streets who are unable to reach the next refueling station with a gas powered car.

    71. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      A more obvious one: do you want a car that you have to remember to fill up with gas? The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      Most people (at least outside the US) don't commute a hundred miles plus each way to work every day, and so a range of 265 miles would be enough for most people to last a week.

      I'm in the UK and commute about 150 miles a week. If they weren't so expensive I'd have a hybrid/electric car tomorrow.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    72. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      Me? I don't think the BMW interior is nearly as nice and I've never much liked the drive. That goes for a lot of cars, tesla has done well making sure everything is both unique and high quality. I just wouldn't get it yet as the range and charging access isn't there.

    73. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The charging stations measure it, but most don't have a way of printing it off for record keeping. The car's computer will also have a log.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    74. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      You drive it every day. Remembering to plug it in at home is not especially arduous. You're going there anyway.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    75. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's not laziness, it's just that there are so many people with AAA cards and not enough tow drivers.

      It's just that AAA doesn't care enough to retain enough tow companies to get their members towed in a timely fashion.

      While we're on this subject, anyone out there know of a good plan like AAA for roadside assistance that isn't totally conservative? I don't like giving them money.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    76. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, the point of the matter is that if the charge before the journey isn't enough then it is only possible to recharge it at a few select places.

    77. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      For the price of a Tesla S, you could have a BMW instead. Who in their right mind would take the Tesla S over the BMW?

      I would, assuming it fit with my lifestyle. BMW has forgotten how to make a reliable car. Only 5 series now hold any value, and they don't hold much. I could keep my Mercedes-Benz 300SD for making long trips, as it refuels quickly and gets over 400 miles of range.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    78. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      I like electric cars, and we should all be using them for short-range daily driving, but there are weaknesses.

      This is where plug-in range-extenders come in. Most of the time they're an electric car, but if you run out of charge, a small efficient petrol starts up as an on-board generator. Then you get home, plug the car in, et voila, a normal electric car again in the morning.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    79. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      And how long did it take to build up all of that infrastructure? It didn't happen overnight.

      Of course it didn't - it grew alongside the increase in car ownership. However, now ownership is close to saturation, and the liquid fuel infrastructure is well-rooted, the required infrastructure for electrics just isn't getting the investment it needs.

      It's a chicken-and-egg problem.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    80. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      People seem to do okay with recharging their cell phones, they just get into the habit of plugging them in before going to bed.

      For electric cars, it's similar; you just get into the habit of plugging it in when you get home.

      It's much easier with phones though, since they fit on a bedside table or a shelf :)

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    81. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      Another difference is, with a gas car, $42. With an all electric, free.

      Who's your electric supplier? Mine keeps charging money.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    82. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      Its weird that we have to set off explosions in our vehicles to make them move.

      True, but it's better than using a giant kettle.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    83. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      Check the AAA, every single day there are thousands in the US on the sides of the streets who are unable to reach the next refueling station with a gas powered car.

      If only there was some kind of gauge that tells you the fuel level. It could go next to the speedometer.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    84. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This epitomizes the fundamental flaw in the sales philosophy of electric cars. It's that flawed assumption people are concerned about their average driving. They're not. They are concerned about out-of-ordinary driving. It is the reason the sales numbers for electric vehicles are so abysmal.

      Lets say you had extra errands to run in a day, somebody went to the hospital, you had to make some detours, or you got stuck in for 2 hours and it was 100 out so you had the choice blast the AC or ruin the interior with sweat. If you are lucky you only have to sit at a "high speed" charging station for an hour before making it home. According to Tesla's own stats it would take 2 full days to charge to max from a household outlet.

    85. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Binestar · · Score: 1

      Sure why not? Just run whatever charge port you're using through a kill-a-watt type device to meter it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kill_A_Watt While I'm not sure the Kill-A-Watt device itself supports it, if you can afford a Tesla and high speed charger install, you can afford a meter on that install.

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    86. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      It's impossible to explain to an electric car owner the beauty that exists in the world outside of their commute to work and urban/suburban living. Or the freedom granted when you can recharge in the middle of a 500 mile trip into the mountains or carry an extra 250 miles of range in the trunk for the cost of three gas cans. I suggest a trip around lake Geneva with a stop at Mont Blanc.

      It's something I suggest trying, you can't really describe with words how little those 10 minutes it takes to refill matter when you realize how nice it is to be able to just do it.

    87. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you want a car that spews noxious nitrogenous and greenhouse-inducing exhaust? That even spews exhaust at all?

      ...you forgot the sulphur and mercury that are also spewed by the coal-fired power station that charges your Tesla.

      Oh, wait, you were talking about an IC car? Your power is generated by unicorn farts and skittles you say? My mistake, carry on.

    88. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by 16Chapel · · Score: 1

      When was the last time anybody said "wow, look at that BMW"? Just sayin'.

    89. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Bazzible · · Score: 1

      Next thing you know, they would expect to have a little light that also says "Low Fuel", because the fuel gauge is too hard to understand.

    90. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by bentcd · · Score: 2

      It's impossible to explain to an electric car owner the beauty that exists in the world outside of their commute to work and urban/suburban living.

      Heh. You must have not read up on the range of Tesla's cars. I regularly make several hundred km trips in mine, and that is at a time when there is not yet any infrastructure built out specifically to support them. When I need to charge I currently do so from outlets that exist for other reasons entirely - once we start seeing EV-specific quick chargers where they're actually needed a wonderful world is set to become even greater still. :-)

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    91. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by dywolf · · Score: 1

      if you bought the car, you bought the responsibilty of proper usage and care too.

      "I tried hooking up my camper to my Geo Metro like i used to on my truck, but it jusdt wouldnt work"
      "i cant find the start key on my new macbook"

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    92. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by dywolf · · Score: 4, Funny

      The main difference is that with a [horse], I can make unscheduled, unplanned trips whenever I wish without having to worry about where I will next refuel it - if I need fuel, I just [let him rest and eat some oats out of my bag, or grass off the ground], which there will be a plethora of [in the immiediate area] unless you are seriously out in the [desert]. [Resting the horse] takes 5 minutes, and I'm back on my way to my unplanned destination without issue.

      One day I get to work and my phone rings - its my father, he's had a heart attack. He lives 250 miles away. I need to [ride] back home, grab a bag with a few essentials in it, and [ride] to the hospital. I don't want to have to [find some petrol] to [refuel] my vehicle, or stop en-route [at the general store] to top it up etc etc.

      [Horseless carriages] are still crippled by the fact that you cannot ever have an unplanned excursion of any length in one.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    93. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by unrtst · · Score: 1

      Electric vehicles are still crippled by the fact that you cannot ever have an unplanned excursion of any length in one.

      IMO, there will need to be significant change to expected norms (I know there's a better word for this, but I can't think of it). Everyone seems to be debating the extremes without considering doing those things differently.

      For this example, unplanned excursion that's far enough away that the tesla is inconvenient, one could simply rent an ICE car for that short period of time. There are a whole lot of people who can back this up as a very workable solution (see New York City). Fully electric cars solve the daily commute problem quite well. Excellent public transit systems can do the same thing, but for that to excel it has to be in a dense city. Both result in the same scenario: lots more people that don't have cars they can take on long trips. You can buy a cheap car and keep it in storage (which, in NYC, would be exceedingly expensive), or simply rent a nice shiny late model car whenever you do need to make a long trip.

      Please don't confuse the above examples. I'm not claiming electric cars would be great for everyone in NYC to own. IMO, the infrastructure wouldn't handle it well. But that has nothing to do with the point... there are lots of people without cars, and they get by just fine, with a lower impact on the environment than just about anywhere else.

      Gas vehicles don't solve every problem either, but we're used to them, their issues, and their benefits. What if you had to travel 2 miles to work every day within Manhattan, and deal with parking and nothing but stop-and-go traffic? Guess what? There are very easy and readily available solutions for that already (subway, taxi, bus, or be rich and buy a spot at each end).

      I'd much rather see someone do a review of the telsa as their day-to-day car. Even if you have to drive 50miles to work (and 50 miles back) every day, it *should* handle it just fine. Where's that review?

    94. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by faedle · · Score: 2

      Except if you live on the west coast, you already have a plethora of places to charge your EV (California has the Tesla charging stations, and Oregon and Washington have the West Coast Electric Highway). Additionally, at least here in Oregon, there are plenty of places to plug in an electric vehicle in parking lots.. public EV charging stations are everywhere if you know where to look.

      ILI Bend now, not exactly an urban center. Yet my employer has an EV charging spot. So, your scenario isn't an issue: I'd have parked the EV in the electric spot and plugged it in before I went in to work. Your vehicle would have at least gotten a partial charge, and it's not entirely unlikely the destination hospital has an EV parking spot.

      Plus, your comment sounds a little like this to this observer:

      "These internal combustion cars will never catch on. I mean, where do you buy gasoline? There aren't very many places that sell it here in 1895 outside big cities. With a horse, you never have to worry about it being ready to ride!"

      Yes, the infrastructure isn't as complete as the gasoline refueling infrastructure. No, it's probably not a solution for everybody, some people will still need internal combustion engine vehicles for some time. But EVs are the future, and all your problems are really red herrings at the end of the day.

    95. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      Until charging stations are more ubiquitous and charging is faster, electric vehicles might do best in 2-car households so you have a gas-powered car as needed.

    96. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

      paying with your credit card,

      Credit card? Cash baby! You get the benefit of a lower cost per gallon and not able to be tracked where you've been.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    97. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Chickan · · Score: 2

      Of course electric cars are not suitable to drive across the country at a drop of a hat, neither were regular gasoline cars when they came out 100 years ago. AAA used to have maps indicating how much extra fuel you would need to carry to get from one city to another, as there were often not enough refueling stations in between. Most households have more than one car, so keep a regular gasoline car around if you are worried random unplanned trips. For planned trips, rent a car/van for the week if you have to. Electric cars solve the needs of 99% of the trips taken everyday, don't spend your time fretting about the 1%.

    98. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wouldn't get the call cause your cell died and you forgot to charge it.

    99. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by dargaud · · Score: 1

      My iphone-dependant colleague has to recharge his twice a day. I'm sure he'll remember it for his car.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    100. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      I know 100k gets me 300 mile range when I haven't ridden in a sedan with less than 450 in a long while. And I know I regularly go for trips that involve 1000 miles, which on a standard outlet and a full charge you definitely cannot charge for (max 30 mi/hour for 700 miles is 23.5 hours of charging at best). And that assumes when you are off in nature you can find an outlet (and I don't need a gas station as gas canisters are simple, portable, and easy to prep before hand)

      I prefer not to plan my trips around finding outlet power, and I can see from your comment that if you don't, you limit yourself to a microcosm of the world where outlets are easy to come by.

    101. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      I'll put it the simplest way possible on that: our electric grid would melt in an hour. That's one of the problems with fully electric cars, our infrastructure isn't designed to provide the energy we are currently drawing from gas to power our vehicles... water heaters & furnaces yes (but limited), cars no.

    102. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by gordo3000 · · Score: 1

      By the way I can't wait for autonomous, electric vehicles. I frankly would love them especially for getting around town, but right now I couldn't take them in most use cases so I can't imagine burning the money yet.

      But when I see this stuff going on along with googles car, and several other amazing projects, I am really looking forward to what will be. But I think when I'm off in the mountains ill always prefer a gas car at least until huge range and power become possible

    103. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Medievalist · · Score: 1

      Right, the power needs to come from somewhere. But electricity transmission is significantly more efficient than gas transmission, there's the difference. A non-trivial amount of gas is used to drive gas to a station so you can get it. Last time I checked, the EPA estimates that electrical transmission is 10% more efficient than taking gas to a gas station.

      Yep, and electric motors are more than 50% more efficient than gasoline engines - most of the gas engine's energy is being wasted as heat.

      And pollution mitigation and valuable element capture is far more economical at a power plant than at a million tailpipes - the coal plants that Reagan did not exempt from pollution controls sell the pollutants that they extract from their stacks, which is not feasible for automobile owners.

      Doesn't change the fact that coal is shitty, but you can't really polish a turd.

      You sure got that right! However, keep in mind that using electricity is like using a well-understood API or software layer - think, for example, of the Internet Protocol, which is able to run over many different media (including carrier pigeons and lasers). In my area, electricity is generated by natural gas and hydro - there's no coal in the mix, locally - and many electric car enthusiasts use solar power to charge their cars. That's the beauty of electricity - if I build a windmill tomorrow, I can cut down on my grid power consumption right away! Electric cars are a technology worth pursuing in order to allow true fueling diversity and get us off the petroleum teat.

      Unfortunately or fortunately, depending on your point of view, the energy density of gasoline is astoundingly high. Even Lithium-Ion can't compete when you measure miles per unit of weight (and hydrogen's a complete joke - containment weight is high, energy density is low, and you have to make the hydrogen since hydrogen gas does not occur in nature like wind, sunlight, and plants do). This is unfortunate in that it makes it hard to get people away from gasoline, but fortunate in that it sets a high standard, so people like Musk are forced to innovate like crazy in order to compete.

      Most of the complaints here remind me of my Aunt, who only drives red cars. All other cars are chromatically inferior, in her opinion, and therefore undriveable.

    104. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Well yes, if you're crossing the Antarctic or perhaps just going for a month-long trip across the great Australian outback, then you'll go with a gas guzzler every time.

      In the US though, with Tesla now aggressively building out their supercharger infrastructure it won't be long before you can take a Tesla basically anywhere in the contiguous states and never need to worry about having a superfast chargeup within a reasonable distance. And for overnight charging of course, any old outlet will do.

      Unfortunately I'm stuck in backwards Norway with little in the way of quick charging infrastructure yet, so I have to make do with what I can find. :-)

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    105. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Krau+Ming · · Score: 1

      Gas lobbyist: "Hey buddy, unless your non-gas car magically unplugs itself in the morning, that's another 5 seconds. That's 10 seconds total EVERY DAY...possibly 70 seconds per week! TOO MUCH!! BUY GAS!!"

    106. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it isn't an even particularly expensive range. We're only talking about 50-80k here. A Ferrari, for example, is 200-300k.

      Yes, only. Let me guess-- you're a rich brat, aren't you?

    107. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would rather plug the car in in my garage, go inside and be done with it every night than stand there in freezing or boiling weather waiting for the tank to fill once a week.

    108. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol. I love this response. So awesome. Moral of the story: think.

    109. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by t1oracle · · Score: 1

      Nonesense. If driving like an idiot left the NY Times stranded than the simple solution is to not be an idiot. If the problem is the car's fault then it's a different matter entirely. Although even if that were the case it could still be a fixable issue.

    110. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe with a 110 volt extension cord. But you can easily install a 220 volt charging station in most houses that will charge it overnight.

      ...because most people in metropolitan areas live in houses. Yeah. Oh, wait...

    111. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Yes,
      I want a car that I can plug in. My cost of electricity is 7.4 cents per kwh. I live at home and there is nothing wrong with, at the time of parking the vehicle, I plug it in. So, I can drive about 200 miles to and from work, to the mall and the supermarket for about $2.00 / day

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    112. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      ... plus the time spent waiting in line when all the charging stations are full

    113. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Osiris+Ani · · Score: 1

      Credit card? Cash baby! You get the benefit of a lower cost per gallon ...

      Oh, yeah, there are some gas stations that charge more for using a credit card... just not anywhere near where I live and work. Aside from that, my credit card pays me 4% back when I use it at a gas station.

    114. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Do you want a car that spews noxious nitrogenous and greenhouse-inducing exhaust? That even spews exhaust at all?"

      Coal powered cars probably generate more CO2 than gas powered, once you account for power transmission losses.

    115. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Cederic · · Score: 1

      $50k? That's three times the price of the average car, which incidentally will also do 3-400 miles every time you fill it up.

      The only people I know that drive a $80k car have a dual-income where both partners earn approximately three times the national average. So fuck yes, it costs way too much.

    116. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by loufoque · · Score: 1

      No. $50k is not three times the price of an "average car". It's three times the price of a low-cost car.
      That's about the price of an Audi, BMW or Mercedes.

    117. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get that you like electric cars because you are willing to do the extra planning to handle unexpected situations. You don't even mind the the price you pay. Fine. If there are enough like you electric cars will have at least a niche market. Everyone's happy.

      Many drivers want to have their car ready for just about any trip in any direction without thinking about refueling (I guess unless you're driving across the Mojave desert - and even in that case there are probably gas stations sufficiently close together that you don't have to worry too much). The question is can electric cars as they are now have a big enough market.

    118. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by dl_sledding · · Score: 1

      it takes 2 days to fill a tesla via a home power connection. there is no 'conveniently available' chargers that fill it faster unless you live in a very select area. do the damn research.

      Actually, if you bought the Tesla, you would probably have the quick charger installed in your garage. If you choose to call a private garage a "very select area", so be it. Otherwise, son, you do your damn research before you start pissin in everyone's Cheerios.

    119. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and if you run out of juice somewhere other than your garage? like the fucking journalist did in this story? what then, fanboy?

    120. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Most of the cars I see are not BMWs, Audis or Mercedes. Most people don't spend more than their annual pre-tax salary on a car. Most people do not earn $50,000 a year.

      Breaking news: "average car"s ARE low-cost fucking cars.

    121. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wind chill does not matter to the ambient engine block temperature of a car sitting overnight. Wind will cool down a warmed-up engine faster, but it has nothing to do with a cold start in the morning that doesn't involve active heat coming from somewhere else (car parked in an alcove near a heated wall, etc.)

      I'm not saying -35C isn't already plenty cold, I'm just not sure why you included wind chill temp in an anecdote about a non-mammalian vehicle. *smile*

    122. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Half an hour, you say? HAHAHAHAHA!

      I can tell you right now that I *know* that you've never had to call AAA.

      Ever. In your entire life.

      Because it's alway45 minutes and up to "whenever the tow truck driver gets to you" even in an urban, civilized area. It's not laziness, it's just that there are so many people with AAA cards and not enough tow drivers.

      --
      BMO

      Countering with another anecdote of the 7 people I know who've called AAA for tow/gas/unlock all have said they arrived in 30 minutes or less.

    123. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do not have a gas station in your garage. But you can and will have a plug-in station in your garage.

    124. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Musk has said that within two years, there will be high speed turbo charging stations all over the place. Which, by the way, fully charge in 30 minutes.

    125. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by tftp · · Score: 1

      If you're in a position the get tax credit/deductions for your transportation expenses, can you isolate that portion of your electric bill used to charge your car?

      As matter of fact, yes. I have two electric meters on my property, and the utility company would be happy to install more if I need to. Each has a separate power drop from the transformer, and they are used for different purposes. They are even on different rate plans because one has a 6 KW solar panel attached to the grid.

    126. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by tftp · · Score: 1

      How long would you have to wait to get a full charge off, say, a 110v outlet (the most commonly found)?

      Per discussion elsewhere in this thread, a common 110/120V outlet will not even be enough to keep the charge topped off. A 240V outlet will charge the car at a glacial rate (that's what was done at Norwich, as I understand.) Perhaps that would work for an overnight recharge at home. Only the 100 kW, 480V supercharger gives you a chance to charge the car reasonably fully and reasonably quickly.

    127. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did the EPA also factor in the cost of installing all these charging stations every where (including homes) to already loaded electrical grids and many homes that can't even run certain modern electronics due to old (and sometimes non-licensed and sub-saftey standards) wiring into those efficiency figures?

      Hippies always looking at one thing and ignoring the thousands of other factors in the process. (liberals in general are always short sighted)

      Or how about the fact that regulations that us normal people follow (ie on the car itself) that somehow are magically exempt by the big industrial companies that run the power plants (who do you think created the environmental laws and know all the loopholes and lobbied for their exemptions)

      Stupid greenies just don't want to admit that they waist time/money in the name of the environment and get the same damn thing they had before and the same levels of pollution as before but they "feel" better by fulfilling their narcissistic view and control to make others do as they say and that's all that matters. (that and the damn hypocrites like gore and others making tons of money selling and doing nothing.)

      When you figure out a way to make a $1000 solar panel that powers my house without decreasing/maximizing my energy usage and stores enough to operate when it's cloudy THEN we'll talk, until then shut the hell up and quit fucking with product quality in the name mother-earth and giving me crap that doesn't work as well but uses less plastic.

    128. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      That said - Every night, you park your car somewhere in the vicinity of conveniently available grid power. In exchange for five seconds of plugging it in every night, you never need to stop at a gas station in the cold rain and then need to go inside to see the clerk when the stupid damned machine can't read your credit card or the ticket printer breaks.

      I get that. I'd really like an all-elec.
      However, until the infrastructure is built out, many, many people who could and would use it are out of luck.

      Basically, you need a single family home with a garage. To house the car and the plug-in. Live in an apartment/condo? Only if you have your own spot, and the building owner has installed the necessary stuff.
      Rent a house? Not likely.
      Or maybe your forward looking employer has a few parking spots with charging spots. Again, not likely.

      With gas cars, we are long past the point where you really have to try to run out of gas. We're not even close to that with electric.

    129. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by drkim · · Score: 1

      Another difference is, with a gas car, $42. With an all electric, free.

      Who's your electric supplier? Mine keeps charging money.

      Sorry - thought you had read the article.
      http://gigaom.com/2012/09/24/tesla-unveils-free-solar-powered-car-charging-stations-for-model-s-owners/

    130. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by jschottm · · Score: 1

      In the US, you can deduct a fixed amount per mile traveled (currently $0.555/mile) rather than actual costs. That's very likely to be far better than what electricity costs would be and way simpler to track, particularly if you do any personal driving in the vehicle.

    131. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by WorBlux · · Score: 1

      I think anyone dropiing a bit chunk of change on an electric will but in a 240V, 40 or 50 amp outlet for their car in the grage, so by linear conversion, charge time to full drops to 12 hours.

    132. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by WorBlux · · Score: 1

      Fuel cell + CNG, with regenerative braking into a ultracapicitor is going to be cleaner and more efficient that just about any engine. This alone will be pretty sustainable and improve air quality. It will also have all the conveniences of the current fueling infrastructure, plus home or work refueling is possible (albiet at a fairly high cost).

      Using a battery won't help unless you generate the electricity from solar, wind, hyrdro, geo-thermal, or nuclear sources. In fact it makes the situation worse as you need to use resources to manufacturer the battery.

      For renewable mandates, biogas is a lot easier to do than cellulostic ethanal, though is can use the exact same feedstock.

      The only then you give up is the ability to refuel when you run out of gas away from a station. This might be solved with a 5-10 lbs reserve propane tank.

    133. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anguirel · · Score: 1

      I was looking that up recently, since my SO has a car and was considering AAA. I remembered seeing how AAA lobbied against Bike Paths (in particulaR), along with lobbying against other environmental measures, and for further highway development, against public transit, against high density urban development in favor of sprawl/suburbs, and so on... so I went looking and found this: http://www.betterworldclub.com/. No idea how good they actually are, but it might be worth checking them out.

      --
      ~Anguirel (lit. Living Star-Iron)
      QA: The art of telling someone that their baby is ugly without getting punched.
    134. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

      Actually, many of us who live in cold climates do that - we plug in the block heater.

      The car starts more easily, and cold-start wear & tear is reduced.

    135. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      No idea how good they actually are, but it might be worth checking them out.

      Thanks, I'll at least read up.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    136. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Even at the most optimistic sales projections, it'll be at least a decade before EVs are a significant fraction of cars in any large jurisdiction and most of these will charge at night. There aren't many utilities that are worried and several have publicly stated that EVs pose little risk. In fact, a few utilities are looking foward to the development of V2G in order to take advantage of large numbers of EVs as backup power and storage.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    137. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a heart attack victim and an electric car owner. Your fathet would want medical attention instead of seeing your mug. Take your time. Call Enterprise to bring you a rental car.

    138. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      You've never lived in a really cold climate, have you?

      I live in Edmonton, Alberta where it usually hits -40C at night during parts of the winter. Had a block heater installed when we moved here and I have used it a handful of times when we first moved here and never again since but I have never had an issue starting the car...which is not even a modern one - it's a 1998 Cavalier.

    139. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      I think this supports my argument. If it is that bad with petrol how much worse will it be with batteries where, even if they make it to the charging station, they have to wait a hour to fill up (assuming that there is no queue!).

    140. Re:Fault Irrelevant: Shows Flaw by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      So, I can drive about 200 miles to and from work, to the mall and the supermarket for about $2.00 / day

      Not true. The cost of the electricity might only be $2/day but the cost of the battery is FAR more. If you do the maths and figure out the stated battery life and the cost to replace it then an electric cars power+battery costs are a lot higher than petrol+fuel tank. See an old post of mine. The numbers have changed slightly but it still holds unfortunately.

  50. Re:Musk to NYT by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

    No, it's got a crank - haven't you ever watched an old movie?

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  51. Modern cars have set expectations very high by joe_frisch · · Score: 2

    Conventional cars are so well evolved that people have very high expectations. I've had less than one breakdown per 100,000 miles. I can drive almost any car until the "low gas"light turns on, and then have >30 miles range to reach a gas station. When I fill my car at the pump it is filled. No fast fill / slow fill. No trickle-fill. If I somehow don't completely fill it, the gas gage doesn't read full and I can refill a few hours later. Most cars will drive ~400 miles on a tank, and its rare in this country to have to go more than 50 miles to find a gas station.

    It sounds like the electric car works as designed when used by a knowledgeable person. The problem is that people don't need to be knowledgeable about conventional cars. If you buy a new car it just works.

    So while I don't think the Tesla car is in any way bad, it just doesn't meet the exceptionally high expectations for usability that Americans have come to expect.

    1. Re:Modern cars have set expectations very high by bentcd · · Score: 1

      It sounds like the electric car works as designed when used by a knowledgeable person. The problem is that people don't need to be knowledgeable about conventional cars. If you buy a new car it just works.

      Oh but they do. They need to know about optimal RPM ranges, they need to know about gear shifting (even if it's automatic), they need to know about refueling, different fuel types and which ones to definitely not put in this particular car.

      Having driven a Tesla now since May of last year it is entirely clear to me that this is by far one of the most worry free cars in the world. I do not have to worry about RPMs because it has one smooth curve from 0 to 14000, I do not need to worry about gearing whether auto or manual because there is none, I do not need to worry about jerky performance on the traction control because the electric motor can control this perfectly smoothly without having to slam on the brakes to cover for ICE quirks, I do not need to worry about waiting for ages for the cabin heat to come on because it has a resistive heater fed straight from the battery, I do not need to worry about gas ever because every time I come out to my car it is always full.

      Half way now through the Norwegian winter, having gone through two cold dips with regular temperatures in the minus 15 to minus 20 Celsius region, and not a single issue with the cold. I once started it up with only a nearly full battery having left it not plugged in while at work at -10 Celsius and colder, and easily drove it the 200km for a weekend with my parents, with almost 100km to spare on the battery when I arrived. And that was with the resistive heater going on full throttle for the major part of the trip. This on the Roadster which starts at ~360km range on a full battery. In my experience, cold weather is as close to a non-issue as you could expect on any car.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    2. Re:Modern cars have set expectations very high by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Conventional cars are so well evolved that people have very high expectations. I've had less than one breakdown per 100,000 miles. I can drive almost any car until the "low gas"light turns on, and then have >30 miles range to reach a gas station. When I fill my car at the pump it is filled. No fast fill / slow fill. No trickle-fill. If I somehow don't completely fill it, the gas gage doesn't read full and I can refill a few hours later. Most cars will drive ~400 miles on a tank, and its rare in this country to have to go more than 50 miles to find a gas station.

      It sounds like the electric car works as designed when used by a knowledgeable person. The problem is that people don't need to be knowledgeable about conventional cars. If you buy a new car it just works.

      So while I don't think the Tesla car is in any way bad, it just doesn't meet the exceptionally high expectations for usability that Americans have come to expect.

      Actually, driving a conventional car requires knowledge that you are supposed to have learned in order to get a driver's license. Maybe the exams should be modified to require more specific knowledge about electric cars.

    3. Re:Modern cars have set expectations very high by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      At least in the US most cars have automatic transmissions and many don't even have tachometers. Fuel nozzles are sized so that you can't accidentally put diesel in a gas engine car. I'm not saying that people shouldn't understand how cars work, just that in many cases they don't. The electric may not be more difficult, but its different. I don't think the NY times guy was trying to do a bad review. He just got into the Tesla and drove it the way he would drive a gas car.

    4. Re:Modern cars have set expectations very high by bentcd · · Score: 1

      There are definitely differences: different best practices and different failure modes certainly.

      For your average person I could understand getting into an EV and ending up confused about how to manage it. It takes a bit of getting used to. But this was a journalist, it is his profession to inform himself about new unfamiliar topics so that he can then inform the public. In this case he would appear to have made the deliberate decision to remain ignorant and that is a degree of unprofessional behaviour we should not accept in the press. This is the crux of the criticism I would level against him, if the reports I am seeing are correct.

      Of course, I have no idea what kind of publication the NY Times is and whether this is just their usual standards.

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    5. Re:Modern cars have set expectations very high by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      NY times is generally considered a reputable newspaper, they are one of the major papers in the US. I don't know anything about their auto reports though. The columnist claims that he did talk to Tesla about how to charge and operate the car.

  52. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I would expect the car to give me a reasonable approxiamation of the range I have left,

    Let me know when they get that working on gas cars too, as I would like to get an estimate that doesn't change by a factor of two every time I change what type of driving I am doing at the moment.

  53. to get max range ... by dltaylor · · Score: 2

    Drive the car in only the optimum temperature for the batteries and engine; preferably at a high enough altitude to minimize drag; have it driven by someone of the stature of a Thoroughbred jockey, who provides their own light weight thermal compensation to eliminate heater/AC use, and, of course, their own sound system; turn off the lights; always drive down hill and with the wind.

    Using these techniques, it is likely you will achieve the advertised range, otherwise, much, much less. Top Gear had the same issue with the sports car (drive it "fun" and the range is nearly nothing) and prevailed.

    These work as well for liquid-fueled (gasoline, diesel, alcohol) automobiles and motorcycles, but, for those, you can carry extra fuel in case you're really going to be a long way from one of the much more plentiful liquid fuel stations.

    1. Re:to get max range ... by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      Top Gear had the same issue with the sports car (drive it "fun" and the range is nearly nothing)

      They have similar issues with all cars. They did a nice test of five supercars. The results:

      #5: Ferrari 599 - 1.7 MPG, rated at 11/15; and as James May pointed out, that works out to GBP 3.20/mile.
      #4: Aston Martin DB9, rated at 11/17
      #3: Mercedes McLaren SLR, rated at 12/16
      #2: Lamborghini Murcielago - 4.1 MPG, rated at 8/13
      #1: Audi R8 - 5 MPG, rated at 12/19.

      And in the same segment they compared a Toyota Prius to a BMW M3, with the Prius hitting 17.2 MPG (rated at 48/45) and the M3 getting 19.4 MPG (rated at 14/20).

      Amazingly Clarkson actually has sound advice in the end. It's now what you drive, it's how you drive it.

    2. Re:to get max range ... by zwarte+piet · · Score: 1

      Taking a generator with you in the boot just in case :)

  54. Re:Musk to NYT by c0lo · · Score: 1

    If you want to challenge the existing motor vehicle industry, you have to offer a compelling reason to buy your alternative product.

    All the above makes a valid position when transposed to the pre-Ford car industry, with horses and carriages as the main competitors to cars for "go where you like" kind of travel. At that times, cars continued to be a challenger (even if not a competitor) to the "horse industry".

    So far, other than "wow it's super expensive," there doesn't seem to be too much to recommend the Tesla.

    I agree in the so far precondition. Now, imagine a time of $10/gallon gasoline price, with the current average wage. You think such a situation is improbable/impossible in the near future?

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  55. Tesla is a toy for people with disposable income by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Musk is the con artist who started PayPal which has screwed a lot of people.

    The Tesla is not a vision of the future, it is a vision of how people can be conned
    out of their money when they want to buy things they perceive to be fashionable.

    The car costs $100K. This is so far from being relevant to the actual needs of the world
    it is absurd. And anyone with a decent amount of intelligence knows this is true.

  56. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 0

    As I said: impossible.

  57. Re:Musk to NYT by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

    This is very area-dependent. You get pulled over in ennis/ferris counties for example doing 2-3 over. Go go city of palmer, tx

  58. Re:Musk to NYT by hawguy · · Score: 1

    So the Tesla is only suitable for people who:

    1) can be certain of a full charge every time they leave the house;
    2) never take detours, or get forced into detours by road construction;
    3) never go above the speed limit;

    Given that, I'm absolutely shocked that this isn't already a mass-market blockbuster - it's clearly suitable for all the common use cases!

    The original Beetle had around 150 - 200 miles of range with its 9 gallon fuel tank, yet was still quite popular and most people (not including my sister) managed to use it for day to day life without constantly running out of fuel and didn't need to fill the tank before leaving the house, sometimes dealt with detours or going above the speed limit (but rarely while going uphill). They even managed to live without effective heating, much like someone in a model S that's trying to conserve batter power by turning down the heat.

    Of course, people who pay $60K - $80K for a Model S probably have a second, conventionally powered car they can use for long trips. At least until more charging station are ready.

  59. Kramer's test drive by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1

    Manhattan, there's your problem right there. Maybe Kramer from "Seinfeld" got ahold of it and wanted the thrill of driving it with the charge gauge on "E."

  60. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    any car will not start without a battery, so the car you own doesnt work then?

  61. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No it isn't, you fucking tit. All it means is that if everyone goes the average speed, there is no variation in speed. Assuming you ignore acceleration and deceleration when entering and leaving the highway, it would be quite possible, however implausible, for everyone to go at 5mph over the speed limit.

    Now stop being a pedantic asshole, we're not in English class here.

  62. Re:Musk to NYT by adolf · · Score: 1

    I can tell you with pretty good certainty exactly how much further my car can go based on the gas guage. Clearly there isn't that same capability with this car and the battery.

    Good! You know how to estimate. Given enough time to get used to things, I'll bet you can estimate the range of a Tesla equally well.

  63. Re:Musk to NYT by hawguy · · Score: 1

    And in the actual rebuttal, the reporter mentioned that:

    1. The car displayed "Charging Complete", and its reported range estimate was sufficient to reach his destination
    2. The detour in question was only two miles long
    3. He may have gone above the speed limit for a mile or two, but that was probably before he stopped to charge at Newark. His problems came after that. And surely driving below the speed limit for 100 miles mitigates the excess energy usage caused by going above the speed limit for one mile.

    This is an awful lot of hooplah about a software problem. If the car did say it was fully charged, obviously it was not.

    All modern cars have software bugs, some worse than others. Even gasoline powered cars have them. A car like the Tesla is so new and has so few users that more bugs are likely to be discovered. That's what happens when you want a bleeding edge car. If you want something well tested and less likely to have significant bugs, buy last year's Prius.

  64. Batterygate by Chewbacon · · Score: 1

    Put a piece of electrical tape on the driver side quarter panel and it'll work right.

    --
    Chewbacon
    The Bible is like Wikipedia: written by a bunch of people and verifiable by questionable sources.
  65. Re:Musk to NYT by farble1670 · · Score: 2

    you should read some more.

    1) Didn't have a full battery

    he charged until the car told him "charge complete", which was 90%. you can then "overcharge" but tesla themselves state that this reduces battery life. overcharge is supposed to add 25 miles to the range.

    2) He took detours

    which amounted to a total of 2 miles.

    3) He went above the speed limit

    at some point he hit 75. for the majority of the trip, he was going 55, which around here is 10MPH under the speed limit. if you are going 55 in CA, even in the slow lane, you'll get your ass ran into the ditch.

  66. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1, Troll

    Again, as I said: impossible. Zero deviation is impossible in anything but on paper, period.

    On a side note, if you can't use language to communicate ideas correctly, please refrain from engaging in discussions until you acquire this ability.

  67. Re:Musk to NYT by farble1670 · · Score: 1

    No, the problem is, the alternative route, likely exceeded the "real device usage" guide.

    no need to speculate. you are right, it exceeded it by exactly 2 miles. lesson: better not stop off for that coffee.

  68. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To be fair, if you do start with a non-full tank, drive longer distances or raise the RPM (by driving it at higher speeds) to a fuel-driven car engine, you can expect that you may not be able to reach the next petrol station

    No because petrol cars aren't that fucking pathetic. You can make pretty much any trip unless you're a complete retard. Detours are pretty much irrelevant unless they go on for hundreds of miles.

  69. Re:Musk to NYT by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Let's spell it out:

    Car has theoretical maximum range. This range assumes driving optimally (meaning within certain speeds) and assumes you start with full charge. For internal combustion engine, they have similar maximum range, that also includes certain driving speeds, which is usually FAR more constrained then on electric engine based vehicle due to severe torque penalty on ICE when running in non-optimal RPM range for that specific engine - if you wonder why, look up why internal combustion engines need multi-speed gear box while electric engine on tesla only needs one speed for optimal performance.

    So the claim is that guy who was supposed to test theoretical max range:
    1. Didn't top off the tank
    2. Drove at speeds significantly higher then optimal for fuel consumption
    3. Chose a longer route
    4. Did a lot of stop-and-go during the trip

    Do find me even one vehicle of any kind on the market that would manage to keep its theoretical maximum range with this kind of driving? Because internal combustion engine's energy consumption would actually increease from this kind of driving style far more then electric engine with regenerative breaking both due to no capture of energy on breaking (it's dissipated as heat on brake pads/drums) and due to engine working in non-optimal RPM ranges for much longer periods in case of ICE.

    All in all, if Musk's claims hold, reporter was either very stupid (which could be true - he claimed that he thought that constant stop-and-go would not impact his range) or was intentionally trying to get advertisement for his story.

    Either way, we'll find out when full logs are released.

  70. Musk doth protest too much? by JackSpratts · · Score: 1

    First an initial ''charge complete,'' (the point, warned Tesla, where anything more shortens battery life), then a 2 mile detour to Manhattan.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/10/automobiles/stalled-on-the-ev-highway.html

    http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/12/the-charges-are-flying-over-a-test-of-teslas-charging-network/

  71. Re:Musk to NYT by farble1670 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I agree in the so far precondition. Now, imagine a time of $10/gallon gasoline price, with the current average wage. You think such a situation is improbable/impossible in the near future?

    okay ... then i'll buy an electric car when that happens? and you know what? i bet in 5 years or whenever your prediction comes through, electric cars will have better range, fewer quirks, and they'll be more charging stations.

  72. Flawed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If people that review cars for a living cant figure how to drive it correctly what hope does the average user have.

    Mr Musk. You have no where near the credibility to get away with "Your'e driving it wrong".

  73. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    it was a sentence that transmitted an absurd idea.

    That should have been your clue that you were mus-interpreting it.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  74. I found this line in the article... by JBMcB · · Score: 1

    "A Tesla agent brought the car to me in suburban Washington with a full charge"

    Maybe you missed it.

    --
    My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.
  75. BS by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

    You can't blame the driver when the car can't preform. Basically what happened is the intelligence in the car failed and instead of correct the system Elon wants to blame the driver, to bad, fix the issue first.

    1. Re:BS by oztiks · · Score: 2

      RTFA from CBS. The guy didn't charge the car to full, he then deviated from the projected routes which the system calculated for him.

      It's like putting just enough gas in your car, calculating the route on GPS based on the consumption rate of the fuel, then deciding to deviate from the route and expect to get to your destination thinking god will save you.

      Sad because I'm pretty sure the reviewer didn't expect the fact that when he drove a computer car it kept logs of his dickheadedry right?

    2. Re:BS by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

      The car should of been smart enough to figure out the car was off route and track a new path and compute a new set of metrics to compenstate for the correct measurements. Hence it's still the car's fault.

    3. Re:BS by oztiks · · Score: 1

      Now you're assuming the car can't do that right? Which means you don't know much about the car at all.

      I've seen the reviews and the car is capabilities and what you speak of is a pretty simple feature which is built in to most GPS systems these days (an this particular car) and considering this car is a technological power house then may I suggest doing some reading about the car in question before making any judgements about it.

      Heavy handedness is what is at fault and unless you instate autonomous driving into the equation and take away the ability for the driver to control the car warning will not solve the issue.

      Next you'll tell me that it's the table's fault cause it stubbed my toe, or that it's the knife's fault because I cut my finger chopping onions as well.

      Let me ask you this? is there a political advantage of offering a bad review to this car? i mean if there wasn't do you think that maybe the reviewer might of been just a little less heavy handed? do you think that's at all possible here?

    4. Re:BS by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      It's like putting just enough gas in your car, calculating the route on GPS based on the consumption rate of the fuel, then deciding to deviate from the route and expect to get to your destination thinking god will save you.

      FFS, he deviated by a couple of miles. So it's nothing like that at all.

      He was driving a car, not navigating a boat or aircraft.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    5. Re:BS by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Heavy handedness is what is at fault

      Blame pilot error. It's what airline companies always do when there's a crash, unless there's proof that terrorists exploded a bomb or something.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  76. Does anyone read the New York Times anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess 1 person does ;) I think if I was the writer of the article, I would have probably waited for Tesla to review the driving history, to make sure I didn't do anything wrong. Because it will not look good if you have a list of things you did wrong.

  77. Musk being a dolt again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The comment about Tesla needing a new PR firm is a good one.

    Face the facts, folks (I mean you too, Elon)- electric cars are still, at this point, not suitable for a LOT of people in the US. The range limitation is a HUGE restriction and most folks can not AFFORD two cars, never mind one that costs 100k.
    Many have trouble affording one for 25k.
    Even those who typically drive less than 50 miles a day may require the ability to drive 300 miles or more once in a while (family visit, vacation, etcetera.)
    If you can only afford one vehicle and do want to get away now and then- well, a severely range-limited electric is useless.

    That being said, the work Tesla has done so far with all-electric cars IS tremendous and has helped move the industry forward. Kudos for that.
    But really- keep Musk from commenting about situations like this- it makes Tesla look stupid and gets them more bad press than anything else they do.

  78. Sounds like Musk doesn't drive in the Northeast by markjhood2003 · · Score: 1

    There are few things harder on a car than a Northeast winter.

    And what's with the parking brake not releasing without a charge? That's an amazing oversight.

    1. Re:Sounds like Musk doesn't drive in the Northeast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are few things harder on a car than a Northeast winter.

      You're a big fucking pussy if you think winter in the northeast is hard.

      Go to Alaska, bitch, and you'll be ready to suck cock to get a plane ticket out
      before January is over.

      Of course you're probably ready to suck cock anyway.

  79. Re:Musk to NYT by immaterial · · Score: 1

    I see you keep repeating this. It's not the two extra miles that made the difference, it's the difference in driving style. How many of those miles ended up in stop-and-go traffic on surface streets rather than a freeway? As a simple thought experiment, imagine driving from one end of Los Angeles to the other on the 405 freeway, and then again using the surface streets that parallel that same freeway. The milage will be very, very similar but one of those trips will consume a lot more fuel and take a lot more time. I'll leave you to guess which.

  80. Re:Musk to NYT by c0lo · · Score: 1

    You can buy it whenever you will judge will serve your interest. My point in the post you replied to was:
    1. the fact that a product has limits doesn't make the product is useless
    2. the fact that a product has limits doesn't mean that other products won't expose limits of the same nature
    3. a rational approach will always look at the limits and the context in judging the fitness to the purpose (knowing well that nothing stays the same forever).

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  81. Re:Musk to NYT by c0lo · · Score: 1

    To be fair, if you do start with a non-full tank, drive longer distances or raise the RPM (by driving it at higher speeds) to a fuel-driven car engine, you can expect that you may not be able to reach the next petrol station

    No because petrol cars aren't that fucking pathetic.

    We'll talk in a few years, see if you will be able to afford driving a petrol car (e.g. at a $10/gallon petrol price).

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  82. Why the Hate? by organgtool · · Score: 2

    I still don't understand why I see so much hatred towards the exciting advancements of electric cars on a technology web forum. Everyone is quick to point out that it can't make long distance trips, but the average person rarely does that. Hell, I own a car with an ICE and I still rent a car when going on long trips because I don't want the extra mileage put onto my car and I can rent a car with nearly double the fuel economy of my own car, so it practically pays for itself. Instead of looking at the limitations of electric cars, let's look at the advantages:

    - Charging the car can be three times cheaper than refueling a car that runs on decaying fossils
    - You don't need to go out of your way every few days to find a gas station and refuel (especially nice if you live in an area that has cold weather)
    - In the near future, you will be able to get a wireless charger that precludes you from having to plug in anything
    - The electric car is likely quieter inside and outside of the cabin
    - Your car isn't constantly spitting out pollutants and ruining our air


    Not to mention that many American families have two cars. Make your next car an electric car and keep the gas guzzler for those long trips you claim to be constantly taking.

    1. Re:Why the Hate? by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      other than style and some battery improvement the exciting advancements of the electric car is that it is mostly the same as it was in the early 1900's

      1) charging can be cheaper, but you have to plan well in advance

      2) out of my way? where the fuck do you live, there are 9 gas stations on the direct road I use to go to work, and where the hell do you go? I can get 380 miles out of 10 gallons of gas, for me its about 35 bucks once a week when I go for groceries, and even they have a gas station out front. I do have to go to another town out of my way and find the one mc donalds that has 2 stations.

      3) wireless electricity has been around since the late 1800's, its already been over 100 years, does near constitute another 100?

      4) no it just uses electricty which is constantly spitting out pollutants and ruining our air, more load on the grid means they have to produce more electricity... and guess what that means.

      I dont hate the electric car, but if thats the best argument you can come up with to buy a basic car with a luxury price tag that going to crap its batteries in 5 years, then your going to have to do a lot better

    2. Re:Why the Hate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still don't understand why I see so much hatred towards the exciting advancements of electric cars on a technology web forum.

      Maybe it's because not all of us are dumbasses like you and we are tired of the hype
      and the con artists who try to sell us useless shit.

    3. Re:Why the Hate? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I still don't understand why I see so much hatred towards the exciting advancements of electric cars on a technology web forum.

      Part of being a nerd is that you don't accept the claims of an interested manufacturer over testable reality.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  83. Re:Musk to NYT by farble1670 · · Score: 1

    you miss the point.

    if all it takes is stopping at starbucks to totally wipe the charge on this eletrical vehicle, that's a fail. people stop for coffee and snacks and bathrooms on 100+ trips. if non-freeway range is that much worse where 2 miles of city driving on a 250 mile trip completely screws over your range, that's a fail. people do drive in the city. not everyone lives right next to a freeway onramp.

  84. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, in that case you should take a look at the follow up from the journalist:
          http://wheels.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/12/the-charges-are-flying-over-a-test-of-teslas-charging-network/?ref=johnmbroder
    To quote the relevant part: "Tesla made the offer to The Times to test the new East Coast Superchargers. The idea and the timing were theirs."
    So nope, it wasn't the NYT trying to fail the car, it was Tesla boasting of a capability they don't have.

  85. Electric cars = fail for endurance, even RC cars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I drive RC cars and fly RC helis and planes, both nitro powered ("gas") and electric. The electrics have much better power to weight ratios, require less maintenance, and are cheaper to run. But when it comes to endurance, forget it. You can't safely charge LiPos. The batteries have a C rating which tells you how fast you can charge them. There will always be this limit, and when you push it, even if within accepted limits for that cell, it still reduces cell life. LiPos tend to explode in a fireball that water can NOT put out. Pro RC pilots have had their hands horribly burned. I've had them go up. You don't want that inside and you sure don't want that strapped "under the cockpit" like the tesla has. Even high quality cells as they age, sustain damage from vibration, overcharging, over discharging, rapid charging, stop balancing properly and will eventually fail, hopefully not catastrophically.

    The idea that you pay $100k for a car and then can't run the heater and have to run under the speed limit in hopes of getting to your destination should say something. In the world of RC - Nitro gives you endurance. You can fly all day on a nitro aircraft or drive all day w/nitro cars. You refuel instantly and you're good to go. Same w/gas cars. The battery technology simply is not ready and is not safe. Same issue you have in the 787's.

    Someday we may have an appropriate battery technology (better yet fuel cells) (the #1 thing would be SAFE - can't explode in a fireball weeks after the damage to the cell has been done). But that time is not now. These are nothing but expensive toys for the rich "environmentally aware" elite.

    Also - anyone looking to make one of these cars - you can't make ppl spend an hour refueling every 200 miles...

  86. Upshot of all this by func · · Score: 1

    My respect for the NYTimes just went way down, and I look forward to the day I can afford a Tesla.

  87. Re:Musk to NYT by immaterial · · Score: 1

    No, you missed the point, as indicated by your repeating the "2 miles of city driving" assumption yet again.

  88. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    No, that should be his opportunity to realize he needs to improve his ability to transmit the information he wishes, and your opportunity to realize that defending ignorance as a virtue, like you are doing, is ridiculous.

  89. This is a review by tompaulco · · Score: 1

    Has the guy posted rave reviews about every car except this one, or has he in the past found other cars that he didn't care for? I am going to guess the latter. The purpose of a review is to express your opinion about the car. It didn't live up to his expectations. Maybe his expectations were on the high side, but that doesn't matter. He was supposed to review it and write his opinion, and he did. Tesla didn't like it. Too bad. They didn't like it when Top Gear reviewed it either. Too bad. If you don't like that people find fault with the car, then fix the faults. You don't get an automatic break from poor reviews just because you made a "green" car.

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  90. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Well, the Times has a vested interest in selling papers and Tesla has a vested interest in selling cars, so I'm not sure we'll ever hear the real truth. It sounds like terrible marketing on Tesla's part and a bit of a flourish by the Times writer.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  91. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Well, I understood him just fine. Are you a native English speaker? You seem to write well enough.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  92. Re:Musk to NYT by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    Most of us would probably commute in this thing.

    This is not a sensible commuting car. A plug-in hybrid with a 30 mile all-electric range would make more sense. Why pay for for a 265 mile battery range when you are just going to use 10% of that capacity? For longer trips you will also have the ability to fall back on gasoline.

  93. Reporters Are Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ALL Reporters. But especially those from the NYTs.

  94. This reads like a Linux maturity argument by tiqui · · Score: 1

    In both situations, the advocates for the tech proclaim its perfection and superior features... and when confronted with claims of its inferior performance/user-experience in the hands of a typical (non-advocate for the particular tech) user, the excuses and accusations about the user ensue. The user just did not use it right! The user is just an idiot! The user is too used to some inferior (but ubiquitous) tech. The user mislead people about his experience!

    Every EE knows full-well the problems an electric car will have, most-particularly in a cold place. A proper electric car design will take these into account. This includes not only the fact the the cold batteries will under-perform, but also that the driver will want a toasty-warm cabin, may run the wipers, may use the headlights and the defroster, me use the heaters in the glass (if they exist) to melt ice accumulation, etc. It's also well-understood that, unlike a gas tank being re-filled, no car-sized battery pack will fully re-charge in a couple minutes in any climate. Why do I suspect all the "green energy" advocates would be ranting against "big oil" if they had to cool their jets for an hour or more every time they re-filled the gas tank of a car?

    With both Linux and electric cars, the advocates need to drop all the defensiveness and learn from their critics.... and FIX the problems; the end-result will be a far better product that both the average user and the advocates like a lot better. There use to be a common phrase in American business: "The customer is always right". This was a very smart (in many ways) statement in a free-market economy. It was not just an admonition to employees that they should bend-over backwards to make customers happy (simultaneously keeping them from going to competitors AND creating positive word-of-mouth) but it also meant that when your customer complained about problems with your product/service you should pay attention and FIX IT. If something upsets/annoys one typical user then it will probably also affect other typical users similarly... and if you intend to sell to other typical users (who tend to be in the majority) then you are going to face the same opposition/anger/frustration/hostility over and over and over again if you insist on not fixing things and just blaming your critics.

    In this case, Musk's defenders are missing the entire POINT: it's a CAR. It's advertized as a superior car. If the thing is a CAR, it ought to perform like a CAR (including being as tolerant of the imperfections of a typical human operator). If it's a superior car, then it should be even LESS demanding of its users and require FEWER specific instructions for how to use it to get from point A to point B. If you cannot use it in the same environment as a CAR to do the same things as a CAR with the same convenience as a CAR .... then it's an inferior product and should cost LESS than a CAR not 2X or 3X as much. PERIOD. Full-Stop.

  95. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 0

    You inferred a meaning from his text, a meaning that has nothing to do with what he wrote. It may be what he wanted to say, then again it may be not. The objective of language is to transmit information. Whenever you force people to guess what you wanted to say with a sentence you are using it wrong and it is failing its purpose.

    Furthermore, just to illustrate how silly your inference is, try to answer these questions: Does he mean that averaging people driving speeds they exceed which speed exactly by 5 mph? Does he means in highways? In the city? In every street? If so in peak traffic time? During the night? In zones where there are radars and photographic surveillance? If some zones are excluded does it means in others people go in average beyond this speed to compensate?

    See the problem here? It is not just a discussion about semantics, even though it would be relevant on its own, as semantics does matter. The failure to transmit an idea in this case, stems from the idea being flawed from the start, among other things.

  96. So it loses power when totally off??? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The reported range dropped overnight because HE FAILED TO PLUG IT IN. Which the manual tells you do.

    Screw what the manual tells you to do, if I have an electric thing, and I turn off the electric thing, I should have approximately the same power available when I turn it back on. Electric cars get no exception to this rule.

    I can understand some reduced capacity from batteries getting cold but shouldn't they warm up again while driving, and the car knowing the be able to make an accurate revised prediction based on it knowing they would be warmed? Instead it seemed like power was simply gone.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:So it loses power when totally off??? by tgd · · Score: 1

      The reported range dropped overnight because HE FAILED TO PLUG IT IN. Which the manual tells you do.

      Screw what the manual tells you to do, if I have an electric thing, and I turn off the electric thing, I should have approximately the same power available when I turn it back on. Electric cars get no exception to this rule.

      I can understand some reduced capacity from batteries getting cold but shouldn't they warm up again while driving, and the car knowing the be able to make an accurate revised prediction based on it knowing they would be warmed? Instead it seemed like power was simply gone.

      The battery isn't allowed to get cold -- draining power from a cold battery had permanent effect on its lifespan. Power is used to keep it warmed/cooled to the proper temperature range. And, for what its worth, every car drains power when "off". Don't drive your car for a month or two and its battery will be dead, just from things like the radio, alarm, etc.

    2. Re:So it loses power when totally off??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lithium batteries self-discharge when they get too cold. Do you not own anything with a lithium battery, or have you just not noticed until now?

    3. Re:So it loses power when totally off??? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Don't drive your car for a month or two and its battery will be dead

      That has not been true of any car I've ever owned.

      I could possibly see an alarm system doing that, but even there I think a standard car battery should be able to power a few sensors longer than a few months.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    4. Re:So it loses power when totally off??? by tgd · · Score: 1

      Don't drive your car for a month or two and its battery will be dead

      That has not been true of any car I've ever owned.

      I could possibly see an alarm system doing that, but even there I think a standard car battery should be able to power a few sensors longer than a few months.

      They won't, but I suppose its pretty cool that you hit some random sampling of cars that could sit that long just fine. You must buy a lot of cars and not use them?

      (FWIW, I do -- and all of them sit on battery tenders, for that reason, because virtually no cars can make two months without turning it over without a drained battery.)

    5. Re:So it loses power when totally off??? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      I've had about 3-4 cars over the years that for one reason or another, were sometimes left alone for a few months. I've never had them not start.

      None of them have had car alarms though... (I hate car alarms and don't feel they protect anything).

      I could see six months being an issue for many cars but two months is too short to have a battery in good shape drained by the average car.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  97. A judge threw out Teslas case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Tesla's Elon Musk made the very same claims against Top Gear, a judge reviewed the case and threw it out. Twice.

    Tesla didn't dispute anything of what went on in the Top Gear review, except the wheeling-it-back-into-the-shed, which they said was unnecessary. They don't dispute their technicians had to fix it (as it turned out it blew a fuse, but they couldn't have known that before wheeling it into the shed):

    http://www.wired.com/autopia/2012/02/tesla-vs-top-gear/

    Why Charliemopps was modded troll, he points out something that is well known and relevant. Tesla DID attack Top Gear over the bad review, Top Gear were correct, comedy show or not, the judge did review a case and the judge was not joking.

    On the Top Gear track, exactly as Clarkson said, the Tesla WOULD have only gotten 55 miles, it DID break down, it WAS wheeled into the garage for the Tesla guys to fix. Everything Top Gear said about it, was unfunny and true.

  98. That is not even close to working by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Electric cars that need frequent recharging *could* work, if you can get about two hour's driving out of the battery for about as much charging time as it takes to drink a cup of coffee.

    That does not work for the real world, coming or going.

    No-one wants to sit that long to refill. Nor could everyone, because there would be a HUGE backlog of drivers waiting to plug in at peak times and it would be more like steak-dinner wait than coffee. Everyone has places they'd rather be than a gas station.

    Two hours is also insufficient, between lets say 30-40 minute commute, and then random errands. It's too close to the margins and as we see in cold weather you aren't really going to get your two hours of driving at normal driving speeds, or with heated seats. If there's a surprise traffic jam because of a storm or accident your two hour window closes rapidly.

    Electric cars are the future but not ones powered by battery. Hydrogen will win in the end simply because of convenience and it's a model everyone understands better, along with great range.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  99. No it's not by tiqui · · Score: 1

    Tesla is a hybrid vehicle: half political prop, half toy for the rich.

    It's designed to prove that an electric car can look great, ride well, and go fast (to mislead the public into imagining an easy affordable and comfortable path to a fossil-fuel-free future). Any good engineer knew full well that an electric car could be made (some of the earliest cars were electric) and knew that modern tech and materials would mean it could now be made fast, stylish, comfortable, etc. The problem is that even with today's tech, it cannot be made cost-effective and it cannot easily be made to be as convenient. It's also likely not very "green" given that a battery is not a power source... when you plug one of those babies into the grid, there's a fair chance it's being pumped up with power generated from burning coal. It deceives gullible people into thinking it is "emissions free" because it has no tail pipe; the tail pipe is actually the smokestack of a nearby power plant (the very same smokestack whose smoke they curse when they see it on TV or the web or in print depicted as an example of big evil corporate pollution).

    It's also designed to be the good-looking show-piece 4th, 5th, 10th, or 20th car of a rich person; the car you use when you want to impress certain people but that you can bypass in your big garage as you step toward your Lexus, Hummer, etc when you really need to go somewhere and your Tesla is not fully-charged or unable to complete the entire trip without a re-charge. (people take trips in cars that need a re-fill during the trip because it's a very short minor interruption in the trip to re-fill)

    It's NOT something an average middle-class person could afford (in many senses of the word) to buy and have as his/her only car.

    The worst part is that each and every one that rolls off the line is so cost-ineffective that it carries a taxpayer subsidy. NOT the sort of "subsidy" that "big oil" is always accused of getting (tax deductions, which most businesses can get and Tesla is probably also able to get) but actual subsidy (cash taken by force from a taxpayer and given to a politically-connected and favored business). The tax money should have been left in the pockets of the taxpayers so they could afford to pay the nearly $2.00/gallon "Obama tax" (price hike largely driven by his energy policies and money-printing Fed) that they have been paying nearly the entire time the man's been in office an funneling their money to guys like Musk

    1. Re:No it's not by Byrel · · Score: 1

      Obama tax? I didn't vote for him, but fact check.

      http://www.gasbuddy.com/gb_retail_price_chart.aspx?city1=USA Average&city2=&city3=&crude=n&tme=96&units=us

      There's graph of gasoline prices in the last 8-years; roughly half under Bush, half under Obama. I can't say that the average price is particularly different.

  100. Re:Musk to NYT by tftp · · Score: 1

    which amounted to a total of 2 miles.

    It could also be an involuntary detour - say, an accident that blocked all but one lane. Will Musk blame the reporter for that too? "If you drive our $101K car make sure that you never slow down; if that happens, stop and call us so that we can recalculate your options. On the other hand, forget it - we will screw it up even more."

    at some point he hit 75.

    There are plenty of stretches of freeways with negative incline. On 680, for example, near Livermore. You take your foot off the pedal and the car still accelerates past the speed limit. Other cars around you do the same, of course. It's a pretty long descent, and it recovers a lot of energy that you spent climbing the hill.

    if you are going 55 in CA, even in the slow lane, you'll get your ass ran into the ditch.

    The typical speed on 280 is 70-75 mph, with 65 posted. Drive slower at your own risk. I-5 has 70 mph posted limit.

    If Tesla dares to publish the logs we will find out where the reporter exceeded the speed and what was the slope of the road there. But in any case he did that way before the last charge at Milford, so I don't understand why would that matter at all? Did that mile or two at 75 mph permanently damage the luxury car? This looks to me like Musk is throwing everything he has at the reporter, hoping that the people will not realize when and where the alleged events took place.

  101. Doesn't have to be electric by SuperKendall · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Do you want a car that won't start just because you forgot to turn the headlights off overnight?

    My car has an automatic headlight setting that I just leave it on - it turns on the headlights as needed.

    So my car will never have that issue.

    Do you want a car that won't start just because you lost your key?

    Yes because I don't want other people to be able to start the car easily.

    Do you want a car that won't drive sideways just because the rear wheels are fixed?

    You aren't cornering aggressively enough.

    Do you want a car that can only travel on the ground?

    You also aren't driving fast enough.

    Do you want a car that spews noxious nitrogenous and greenhouse-inducing exhaust? That even spews exhaust at all?

    That part is irrelevant, especially given there are some pollutants from electricity too, so you really can't use "at all".

    Do you want a car that stops just because you ran over some sharp detritus?

    Sure don't which is why I leave the runflat tires on my car. Awesome technology, even if they do make the ride a little harsher. You are supposed to only go 50 miles/50MPH with them empty but the reality is they can go much farther and faster than that.

    I could go on, but perhaps you get the point that we have learned to put up with a lot of bullshit from our cars.

    But you don't have to, and we should not be adding to the car bullshit list.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Doesn't have to be electric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you want a car that won't start just because you forgot to turn the headlights off overnight?

      My car has an automatic headlight setting that I just leave it on - it turns on the headlights as needed.

      So my car will never have that issue.

      Careful with that - my car had that feature too and still had that happen, because of a faulty sensor. It's less likely to happen sure but still worth checking yourself.

    2. Re:Doesn't have to be electric by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Do you want a car that spews noxious nitrogenous and greenhouse-inducing exhaust? That even spews exhaust at all?

      That part is irrelevant, especially given there are some pollutants from electricity too, so you really can't use "at all".

      It is extremely relevant. Even if the amount of pollution was the same it is better to have it spewing out well away from where people live and in a form that can be easily captured and dealt with than to have it in urban areas. And of course the amount of pollution is actually far, far lower anyway.

      My car has an automatic headlight setting that I just leave it on - it turns on the headlights as needed.

      So what you are saying is that someone saw a way to improve cars and eliminated a problem. Well, guess what, EVs used to have poor range and now they have pretty good range, and in future it will only get better. Going back to the original claim that you have to charge the car every day, that is only true if you drive 300 miles a day. With one of these I'd charge it once or twice a week maximum.

      Besides which the hassle of plugging it in every day is nothing compared to the saving on fuel you will get.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:Doesn't have to be electric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical modern BMW leaser.

    4. Re:Doesn't have to be electric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Yes because I don't want other people to be able to start the car easily."

      You know how easy it is to hotwire your average car, right?

      The newer systems complicate that, in fact (although there are other attack vectors, like those BMW guys showed)

    5. Re:Doesn't have to be electric by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Well, guess what, EVs used to have poor range and now they have pretty good range

      No EV's used to have REALLY poor range, and now the range is just "bad".

      Over a decade, possibly range might get to tolerable. But that's for average use, any long trip gets into the charging delay which is, and will remain, "unacceptable".

      Long before those problems are solved Hydrogen issues will be resolved and that will take over. Electric cars are just a tweener moment we are in until the more sensible solutions come back to the forefront.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  102. Re:Musk to NYT by deimtee · · Score: 1

    I had a 76 datsun that ran fine without a battery. You had to jump start it, but there must have been enough capacitance in the system to run the alternator, and let that power everything.
    Of course, it could run at an insanely low voltage. I measured the starting voltage one day (when the battery was dying), and it was 3 volts across the battery terminals as it kicked the engine over and started. (struggled a bit, but made it)

    --
    I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  103. Well, you can argue about this by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 1

    Well, you can argue all day about this, or simply run the test again with a different reporter. There are a lot of motoring journalists who would jump at the chance, I'd bet.

    --
    Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
    1. Re:Well, you can argue about this by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Well, you can argue all day about this, or simply run the test again with a different reporter. There are a lot of motoring journalists who would jump at the chance, I'd bet.

      If Mr Musk gives me a Tesla on "long term loan" I'll write him any fucking review he wants. But then, I'm not a journalist. I suppose I could start a motoring "blog" though.

      Monday: new Tesla arrives. Spent ten hours just looking at it. It is the shit.

      Tuesday: I have driven 400 miles non stop in my new Tesla. It is the shit.

      Wednesday: Have just discovered that the Tesla is not only the world's best car, it is also a veritable pussy magnet. Drove from Mexico to Canada on one charge today. It is the shit.

      ...etc...

      Profit!

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  104. Re:Musk to NYT by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Then my carefully planned trip - from which I do not deviate - better not have a traffic jam involved, or I'm SOL...

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
  105. Why the left-wing childish moron rhetoric? by tiqui · · Score: 1

    I have come to detest the people Bill Clinton brought to power in the government (by appointment) when he was elected and ripple-effect their proclamations and policies have had in the popular culture and mainstream media (who loved him and took cues from his administration) and the resulting destruction of intelligent dialog in America. Before "Bubba" elevated Donna Shalala from the PC hell hole that is the University of Wisconsin, Americans were free to speak their minds on any subject; people who heard what you said might not LIKE it... but everybody had been raised on the old rhyme "sticks and stones" and you were free to say it. NOW in post-Clinton America we have the "political correctness" of the UW speech codes. If you say something a leftist/liberal/progressive disagrees with he/she/it reverts to some infantile state and accuses you of "hate". like some 3-year-old, they say "why do you HATE me so much?" or they scream "you're just a HATER!" The nation has become a place where half the population seems to need diapers and pacifiers and cannot tolerate exposure to grown-up dialog.

    GROW UP.

    There are still some adults around. If somebody says something you do not like or that you disagree with, DEAL WITH IT. Grow up. Learn to tolerate disagreement. You are not a fountain of perfect knowledge and wisdom. Sometimes you are wrong, and there is NO HATRED INVOLVED when somebody disagrees with you. Wanna see actual "hatred"? Go to a holocaust museum and spend a few hours looking at what the NAZIS did to the Jews. Go look-up some of the grainy old photos of the innocent black men who were lynched by the Democrats in their KKK sheets. If you MUST see things in color, go back and review the video of people leaping from the WTC towers and the ghastly video of Palestinians and Iraqis celebrating.

    Somebody being critical of Elon Musk's wunder car (rightly or wrongly) has NOTHING to do with HATE

    1. Re:Why the left-wing childish moron rhetoric? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Somebody being critical of Elon Musk's wunder car (rightly or wrongly) has NOTHING to do with HATE

      You're the only person who seems to think it ever did. I am broadly in favor of electric cars, but Tesla keep tripping up over reality and seem incapable of accepting any criticism. Musk himself is a charismatic entrepreneur-type of the kind I dislike on principle, but if he can produce an affordable and practical electgric car, good for him.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:Why the left-wing childish moron rhetoric? by bigtrike · · Score: 1

      So, basically, you're complaining that he's using the word hate in a politically incorrect way?

  106. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even here in rural mid-western America there's a tiny little town with a gas station within, at most, 20 miles of where ever you happen to be. Generally within less than 5. If you happen to run out it's trivial to either get a lift to a gas station, get someone to give you half a gallon to get there yourself, or worst case just walk there and back. Also, the process of filling up your gas powered car from empty takes less than 5 minutes.

    It will be a very long time before you can find charging stations all over the country. If something happens and you run out of power you're fucked and need either a tow or a *really* long extension cord and a few hours.

  107. You had repect for the NYT? by tiqui · · Score: 1

    Wow. just, wow. My respect fro you just went way down... (kidding)

  108. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting. You've gone from the idea that it is possible there may be $10/gallon gas at SOME POINT in the future (i.e. between now and Heat Death) and then, once you've gotten agreement that no, such an occurrence is not impossible, you've moved your estimate to within "a few years."

    Fascinating. I would submit the corollary is also, "we'll see if you can afford a Tesla S in a few years"

  109. Re:Cry baby, hell! Top Gear faked the failure by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

    Right. You're missing the point entirely.

    Top Gear didn't misrepresent anything of substance. What they did was drive the car for a few laps, and then pretend that they had run it several more laps and that it ran out of charge.

    They used the figures from Tesla (which, apparently, are *highly idealized* range figures..) to say how far they got before it died. A couple laps more than they took it.

    How is that deceptive? All they did was trust that Tesla's numbers were accurate, and rather than ACTUALLY run the car dry on the track they drove it back and assumed it would have run out of when Tesla said it would run out.

    The point was not to test the range of the Tesla, but rather to viscerally demonstrate to the audience one of the problems with electrics. Their range isn't as great as a petrochem engine, although it can be very close -- but more than that, if they die out on the road YOU ARE FUCKED MAN, YOU'RE JUST TOTALLY FUCKED.

    You can't grab a jerrycan and walk enough fuel back to your car to get *anywhere*. You're fucked. You run your car dry, and it's out of commission for no short period of time while it recharges.

    Yeah. That's a shortcoming of the vehicle, and the PRIMARY shortcoming of the vehicle in fact. Do you, uh, expect them to pretend that doesn't exist? That it's all fucking roses and cherries on top? C'mon man. You're being disingenuous. Top Gear showed what would have *actually happened*, had they run a few more laps with the car. The only deception was that they didn't actually run those laps -- because they didn't want to have to actually push the goddamned car through half the fucking track!

    Tesla was throwing a temper tantrum because Top Gear didn't kiss their car's ass. Period. That's the entire story. The rest of the details are pretty easily understood by anyone who doesn't have their nose buried somewhere around Tesla's appendix.

    --
    ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
  110. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's has a standard transmission and he parks it on a large hill (more of a small mountain really). Also, it was manufactured in the 70's.

  111. um by tiqui · · Score: 1

    An idiot user can put just enough gas in a conventional car to get to his destination, and probably will get there (because gas indicators are generally accurate, unlike software-run progress-meters and battery-drain meters) and should the guy in a gas-powered car underestimate, he can fill up in a couple of minutes at any of a number of the ubiquitous gas stations along his path. An idiot user in a gas car can crank-up the heater on a cold day with minimal impact on driving range but the production of heat in an electric car (essentially shorting the battery through a resistor over which cabin air will be passed) is an almost pure waste of battery charge with a huge impact on driving range. An idiot user of a gas car need do nothing to it overnight at the motel in order to make it work the next day. An idiot user of a gas car has no need to follow any special instructions. For Musk to complain that the driver took a short detour... wow. Most idiots with gas cars take detours, make unplanned stops, etc. NOBODY plans their car trips like a rocket launch with checklists and procedures than must be followed carefully to avoid mission failure; maybe Musk's been spending too much mental energy at Space-X and got a few things mixed-up.

    If Tesla has to put special warnings for "idiots" into their cars then they have already failed. Either their target audience consists of idiots (by their actions in installing said special warnings) OR they are so small-minded and such fanboys of their own stuff that they think anybody who thinks differently is an idiot. This is okay if you are a rich guy burning your own money but its a catastrophic error if you are a business operating in a market economy.

    1. Re:um by oztiks · · Score: 1

      I get what you're saying but what I'm saying is more on the flip side.

      Consider this, all the situations you've mentioned are situations built around a pre-existing form of technology, the traditional car. And forgive me for being blunt but cars are a costly, problematic pains in the FREAKING ASSS!! (Driver of a Jeep here).

      Tesla has presented a new form of technology and therefore the associated problems with that piece of technology need to be rationalised for what it is. To say the problems with Tesla cars are more and not different is unfounded and one eyed. Think of it this way, what would you prefer to service, combustion engine or electric motor? Just a question, even one I cannot properly answer.

      So the flip side to your notion

      If Tesla has to put special warnings for "idiots" into their cars then they have already failed.

      You're talking about behaviours and conditioning set by a old and broken market. Wish to evolve from that market? Learn to be smart about it, the Car does a lot of the thinking for you BTW.

      I hear that if you don't feed a horse it stops pulling a carriage too, imagine that ...

  112. Re:Musk to NYT by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

    impossible

    That's a mighty extraordinary claim. You'd better prove it, a priori, before you start mouthing off about impossibilities based on in a vain attempt to sound smart through pedantry. The alternative is hypocracy, as you are holding him to a standard of proof that you yourself cannot show.

    On a side note, if you can't use language to communicate ideas correctly, please refrain from engaging in discussions until you acquire this ability.

    OMG, You're not driving 60mph, your driving 60+10^-9000mph you fucking liar!!! You're a fucking idiot, idiot. It's a god damn natural language; you know what he meant.

  113. Typical. by B33rNinj4 · · Score: 1

    This is why you have The Stig write your review.

  114. give it a break by tiqui · · Score: 1

    put away the foil hat

    The NTSB did not start bashing Toyota and certainly not as part of some political action. I dislike most of our big bloated over-reaching power-mad control-freak dysfunctional federal government but the NTSB is probably the best part. They are the engineers and scientists that the government calls-in to explore the causes of transportation failures and EVERYBODY in the field of transportation recognizes them as unbiased and strictly facts-and-numbers. Both the NTSB AND NASA got involved in the Toyota car acceleration thing (Toyota, to its credit, actually was involved in asking for NASA's help in the investigations... so they were hardly victims of a plot) and the NTSB did not "finally admit" anything; They took the time they needed to fully-investigate (they sometimes take years on plane crashes, going right-down to metallurgical studies of the materials used in parts) and their investigation exonerated Toyota (whose position will now be rock-solid in any court). Without that lengthy investigation, it's likely that every drunk, sleepy or otherwise distracted driver who crashes a Toyota would be adding to the list of lawsuits claiming the car mysteriously went crazy and accelerated out of control.

    Tesla may not be using the govt to beat-down any competitor, BUT they ARE using government money to compete against the other car companies, one of which (Ford) did not take a bailout and therefore deserved to be free of government-subsidized competitors

  115. Final destination? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, Broder's Tesla Model S, despite a heftier 85 kilowatt-hour battery for an extra 100 miles of range in 'ideal conditions,' died shortly before reaching its final destination.

    No it didn't. Without reading the article, I can tell you definitively that it did NOT die shortly before reaching its final destination.

    I'm not quibbling about whether it died, or even where or after how many miles driven. I merely object to the way that the place where it died is being characterized. You see, where it died WAS its final destination. Because it died there.

    "All destinations are final. That's what it means, destiny, FINAL. If you haven't gotten where you're going, you aren't THERE yet." ~ G. Carlin.

  116. Sorry, but by tiqui · · Score: 1

    if you work all day away from home and plug-in over-night then your car is most-definitely NOT charging from your solar panels. And while some people have little windmills making some electricity in rural areas, I've never seen an urban home with a massive commercial-grade windmill generator. So, no, not many people charge their electric cars on their own "clean energy" sources. As for spending extra on your electric bill for the assurance that your power company bought "your" electricity from windmills or solar panels, well you can probably count on those corporations to make you a variable-interest "ninja" home loan with balloon payment that's been chopped-up and merged into derivative financial instruments and ended-up in credit default swaps......

    Let me guess: you believe this eco-marketing and you think Al Gore is fine flying on corporate jets while buying "carbon offsets" (from himself, of course) ... but you thing "big oil" and "big banks" are evil and corrupt?

  117. Re:Musk to NYT by c0lo · · Score: 1

    Interesting. You've gone from the idea that it is possible there may be $10/gallon gas at SOME POINT in the future (i.e. between now and Heat Death) and then, once you've gotten agreement that no, such an occurrence is not impossible, you've moved your estimate to within "a few years."

    If you refer to this post, let me put an emphasis:

    Now, imagine a time of $10/gallon gasoline price, with the current average wage. You think such a situation is improbable/impossible in the near future?

    If something else, [Citation needed].

    Fascinating. I would submit the corollary is also, "we'll see if you can afford a Tesla S in a few years"

    If you won't be able to afford a Tesla, maybe you will be able to afford a MIEV. If not, maybe the Bangalore guys could entice you with a Reva? Failing this, you can try an electric moped.

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  118. The trade-offs are probably not what you think. by tiqui · · Score: 1

    First, there are significant losses in the transmission of electricity over long distances; we'd be far better-off if our power plants were closer to where the power is used. The losses are likely higher than you suspect. Second, most petroleum is transported in pipes by pumps (with remarkable efficiency) for most of the distances covered over land (or in ships over water of course) This is all quite efficient. As for people using significant amounts of gas to get to gas stations? Not so much. Most people "fill up along the way". The common scenario is not to make a dedicated trip to an out-of-the-way gas station, but rather to pull-into the gas station that's right along the way (often just 30 or 40 feet detour off the path that would have been taken anyway)

    1. Re:The trade-offs are probably not what you think. by Anguirel · · Score: 1
      --
      ~Anguirel (lit. Living Star-Iron)
      QA: The art of telling someone that their baby is ugly without getting punched.
  119. Stand by for ... by PPH · · Score: 1

    ... "You're holding it wrong."

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  120. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    Firstly it is "hypocrisy" not "hypocracy", but I guess the literacy level in this thread went down the drain for some time now.

    Secondly, apparently you don't even know the meaning of the word "hypocrisy"

    Last, but not least, no, I am not holding any standard of proof, you are (apparently you seem to have a lot of problems with logic in addition to your inabilities regarding languages). There is nothing extraordinary in my claim and it should be self evident for anyone that has a thread of common sense, which apparently is not your case. The precision and calibration of the speedometers, that of the accelerator pedals, the need to accelerate and deaccelerate often, the fact that transit is a chaotic system, the fact the speed limits vary from place to place, and at least a few dozen other factors, make impossible for this to happen even if by some weird motive it was attempted on purpose.

    But by all means keep feeling butthurt about being blatantly wrong in everything you said and spilling nonsense. It will be entertaining.

  121. Find shots from security cameras by BlueCoder · · Score: 1

    Find a few pictures from security cameras. Show that the reporter lied.

    If your testing maximum millage you have to follow the route. It's plain and simple that you can't race up and down hills. No different than any other vehicle be it electric, gasoline, diesel, natural gas, or compressed air. And if you don't fill up the tank then your an idiot and slandering if you claim the machine didn't meet expectations.

    Between this and the other incident I really wonder how many accurate these publication and reviewers are or wonder if they are being paid to lie. Being critical or saying something different certainly makes your article more likely to be read and cited even if it is being slanderous.

    1. Re:Find shots from security cameras by Legion303 · · Score: 1

      your an idiot

      Yes.

  122. Re:Musk to NYT by complete+loony · · Score: 1

    And of course the prevalence of petrol stations.

    --
    09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
  123. Re:Musk to NYT by drkim · · Score: 1

    any car will not start without a battery, so the car you own doesnt work then?

    Works fine.

    My pit crew push starts it...

  124. Re:Musk to NYT by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    At the rate battery technology is improving it won't be that long. This article says:

    " ... the energy density of batteries goes up 15 percent every 18 months; the cost per kilowatt hour goes down 15 percent every 18 months; the life cycles of the batteries (how many times it can charge and recharge) goes up 15 percent every 18 months; and the cost per lifecycle-mile does down 50 percent every 18 months. “

    As far as charging time and range anxiety goes I think once electric cars reach some critical mass they will start making them with standard battery packs that you can get changed in 5 or 10 minutes at a "filling" station, a similar experience to a gas station. You would exchange your depleted batteries for fully charged ones and be on your way without any more range anxiety than you have with current vehicles.

    Someone's probably going to pipe up with "I don't want to exchange my nearly new batteries for some crap batteries from some station!" My answer to that is don't start the cars with brand new batteries but ones from the filling station inventory in the first place. That way they can handle bringing in new batteries and retiring old ones as needed.

  125. I drive a car, it doesn't drive me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Tesla is a PoS - electric vehicles will never work as long as they use batteries. If they used fuel-cells, they might have a chance - but there goes the zero emission dream up in smoke. And let's not even talk about how much energy actually has to be produced to charge those batteries - it would make the demand for power sky-rocket... Just another pipe dream - brought to you by the people who have been "smoking it" for years and don't have enough brains to look at reality.

  126. Re:Musk to NYT by drkim · · Score: 1

    "Everyone" can't do anything "on average".

    Sure we can! I have 2.4 children, Mary, Mark and little 'Stubs.'

  127. Re:Musk to NYT by drkim · · Score: 1

    So the Tesla is only suitable for people who:

    1) can be certain of a full charge every time they leave the house;
    2) never take detours, or get forced into detours by road construction;
    3) never go above the speed limit;

    Given that, I'm absolutely shocked that this isn't already a mass-market blockbuster - it's clearly suitable for all the common use cases!

    It would still be a great commuter car. Most people have a short range trip to work and back every day. If your employer lets you charge for free, it would be way cheaper than the current cost of gas.

  128. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a petrol car this is much less of a problem, because there are a lot more places to fill up and filling up takes much less time.

  129. Re:Musk to NYT by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    when you can go 500-800 miles on a gas tank and there's a gas station every 10 miles and it takes 3 minutesto top off(not "charging complete" at 90% top off like the fast charge.. see, it lies to you about the charge being complete which is how it gets it's fast charge time)...

    wasn't the whole test about seeing if you could reach the next supercharging station from one?

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  130. Re:Musk to NYT by DFurno2003 · · Score: 0

    Just wait until you find yourself "swapping it out for a fully charged one" that turns out to be a POS and not only looks like crapola but leaves you stranded in the middle of nowhere. Ask around any of your friends that have purchased a brand new oxy, acetylene or other tank, and gotten a rust bucket in return when using the exchange program.

  131. Re:Musk to NYT by c0lo · · Score: 1

    wasn't the whole test about seeing if you could reach the next supercharging station from one?

    Didn't I say: "the difference is in the advertised range."?

    --
    Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  132. Re:Musk to NYT by Smauler · · Score: 1

    The objective of language is to transmit information.

    If that is true, and everyone save you understood the information which was transmitted, it implies the problem is with your language comprehension.

  133. Re:Musk to NYT by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

    It is not for people who decide not to max out the fuel before a long journey, take illogical routes that slow them down and waste fuel, break the law by speeding..

    So the rest of the sensible, law abiding public should be buying these ...

    --
    Puteulanus fenestra mortis
  134. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  135. Re:Musk to NYT by bentcd · · Score: 1

    What it's looking like is that this guy deliberately only charged the car to e.g. 200 miles, and went out and took it on a much more demanding trip on purpose. What a normal person would tend to do is top the car up (which gives significantly more than 200mi of range) and only then go out on a trip of unknown length. Usually this topping up happens over night, but again it seems like this guy deliberately chose not to charge it over night.

    Likewise, you could fill up a petrol car with only enough petrol to take it for 200mi and then go out and drive 250mi just to demonstrate that yes, it is physically possible to run out of gas and in fact it is quite easy to do so if you go out of your way to make it happen.

    But we already knew this. Did the New York Times think that electric vehicles are magic new wonders that have cracked the perpetual motion problem and that they never run out of juice? If so, then I can understand why they would think this was a news story worthy of print.

    --
    sigs are hazardous to your health
  136. Re:Musk to NYT by bentcd · · Score: 1

    I can tell you with pretty good certainty exactly how much further my car can go based on the gas guage. Clearly there isn't that same capability with this car and the battery.

    And likewise I can tell you with pretty good certainty exactly how far my car can go based on the battery meter. This is just a matter of experience, and the journalist in question clearly had no experience with electric cars so he was in a state of constant confusion.

    You don't need to drive an electric for very long before you get a feel for its remaining range. Most of the time this doesn't matter so much though because you essentially need to go on road trips to start challenging the battery on a Tesla and most people don't do that very often. On a normal day of driving to work, to the shops, and back home, it is a non-issue because you start the day with a full battery and it's got plenty of juice in it.

    --
    sigs are hazardous to your health
  137. Ah, a quaint lie. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Firstly, you are talking about trickle charge.

    To recharge for 300-400 miles of road use.

    Each day? Five hours driving a day???

    So, alternatively, if your daily trip is an hour, your trickle charge is a smidgeon over 8 hours.

    Or you can charge up at full rate which cuts that to a third.

    Or get an electrical power point that works and not your piss-poor 120V stuff and reduce that 8-10 hours to 1 hour.

  138. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The detour in question was only two miles long

    3,2 kilometers of stopping, starting, stopping, starting, and extra cold. Kilometers is not exactly kilometers.

  139. Top Gear ADMITS they faked it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Top Gear admitted that the car that they "pushed home" on camera still had 50 miles range left.

  140. Re:Musk to NYT by msauve · · Score: 1

    "at some point he hit 75."

    Perhaps factually true, but very misleading. The NYT's own graphicshows he drove the first leg of 114 miles in 1:24. That's an average of over 81 MPH.

    Sure, lower averages on other legs, but there were also things like driving through NYC and stopping to eat, etc. Still, that first leg provides an idea of how he drives, and how he misleads.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  141. Buried Lede by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    The car is keeping a log of where you've been.

    Is Tesla partially funded by the state Security Organs? Nah; probably just insurance companies.

  142. Gas gages by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    Most gas gages on conventional cars are rather conservative - I assume their lawyers to tell them to do this. Maybe Tesla needs to fuzz the range numbers and recalcuations downwards.

  143. In summation: that was made up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So in summation: You'll have to re-buy 1/3 of your car before too many years are up"

    That was made up.

  144. Re:Musk to NYT by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    You inferred a meaning from his text, a meaning that has nothing to do with what he wrote.

    You, sir, just proved yourself to be 100% full of shit when you claimed that the meaning he inferred (which was the implied meaning) had nothing to do with what was written. You are a liar and a troll and you should go away and pound sand.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  145. Re:Musk to NYT by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    In my DD class of 25 there were 5 popped for doing 5 over. And this is in Northern California. Don't make assumptions.

    I do know that at least one of them had a lifted truck with tinted windows, because she said so. I drive a stock Mercedes so I typically do go ten over...

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  146. Re:Musk to NYT by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    I had a 76 datsun that ran fine without a battery. You had to jump start it, but there must have been enough capacitance in the system to run the alternator, and let that power everything.

    Most alternators use the battery as a voltage reference, but not all of 'em.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  147. Will we really see a difference in the end? by geekmux · · Score: 1

    My midsize "typical passenger sedan" has a 20-gallon tank and gives me over 30MPG. 600+ miles for under $20K is a hell of an argument still, especially when it comes to independence. It's gonna take a full day to "fill" half a Tesla tank at your house unless you feel like opting for that 3-phase service, which I'm certain will be offered, but likely at a premium from your local electric provider.

    The irony is when you'll find your 4-hour "quick-charge" 3-phase hookup in the end costs you....about $3.50 a "gallon" in electric costs.

    Why do I feel the electric companies will become this century's oil sheiks, and we as consumers will merely see greed shift from one hand to the next, with little or no impact to our wallets...

    Oh yeah, a little guy named "History" told me...that's right.

  148. Re:Cry baby, hell! Top Gear faked the failure by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

    Tesla got a copy of the script for Top Gear - written before they drove the car - and it had pre-planned a battery disaster.

    Top Gear always has stupid crap like that in it. Its one of the reasons why I stopped watching it, they assume everyone is as thick as Clarkson.

    I remember watching one of the pointless car v whatever races they were doing where it was posh sportscar car v light aircraft from somewhere in france to the UK. Obviously a light aircraft would win this since it can take a far straighter path and maintain a speed that would get you arrested in most places on the ground (100-120km/h). They came up with the idea of using a halfwit pilot (James May) who was not allowed to fly at night over the channel or something though so that the car won.

    Everyone knows that if you had to go between southern france and london a plane would be the quickest choice if you could afford it. The plane winning would be dull TV so to make it interesting and also to appeal the braindead petrol heads who watch Top Gear marvelling over cars they will never afford they come up with a way for the car to win. Every episode where they did similar races was the same from what I remember.

    --
    I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
  149. Re:Musk to NYT, musk lives in a dreamland by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of the behaviours you list are normal driving behaviours, they are not unreasonable. Not spending 2 addional hours to top off a battery when the estimated range showed was 50% greater than the remaining trip mileage. Taking a slightly different route out of the city that added a small distance (2 miles) to the trip. Driving within a few mph above the speed limit for a short time; then drving 10mph below the speed limit. None of these things should radically affect how far you can drive.

    There are drivers who go for hyper-mileage with vw diesels, they can often get above 65 mpg with their cars. They do this by tailgating trucks or driving at the optimum speed for mileage (42 I think) or otherwise drive very, very carefully. Only a fool would promote the car based on 65mpg because these are not real world driving habits. Yet that is what Elon Musk does.

  150. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So from now on, all product reviews should just be reprints of product announcement press releases, instead of actually seeing if it performs adequately under real world conditions.

    Got it.

  151. Re:Musk to NYT by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    "Bob drives 5 miles over the speed limit on average". Does that make sense to you? Sure it's not the most elegant wording, but that seems to express that if you subtracted the speed limit from Bob's speed then the average value would be be 5.

    "Bob and Sue drive 5 miles over the speed limit on average". Haven't we just applied the statement to both of those people?

    "Everyone drives 5 miles the speed limit on average". So now the claim applies to the entire population.

    You can argue the claim - I'm pretty sure it's false, I'm pretty sure my average speed minus the speed limit is less than 5 (for averaging over time and for averaging over distance) and I'm in the set "everyone". The person making the claim knows it is false too, since they added the weasel words "pretty much" which means "not" if applied to "everyone". But the statement itself makes sense.

  152. Ah... Telsa misses the point again. by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    Awkward reality:

    In a regular car you can refuel in 5 minutes at any gas station. If you do run out, all you need is a jerrycan of fuel (unless you stupid enough to run a diesel or fuel injection engine bone dry - assuming a modern engine-management system will let you do that).

    In an electric car, even with fast charging, you need to plan your journey around meal breaks - if not overnight stays - at service stations with charging points. If you run out, the car is bricked and has to be towed.

    Even if NYT, Top Gear etc. may (or may not) have used a bit of journalistic license to make this point, it doesn't change the reality.

    What's needed is a standard battery pack - when its empty you turn up at a service station and some sort of automated forklift system unhooks the flat battery and slots in a freshly charged one. The system then checks the battery's built in status indicator and works out how much you owe based on remaining charge level and the amount of 'wear' on the battery since it was last changed. Solves the slow recharge problem, and also allows you to spread the cost of the battery pack over time.

    (Basically, the business model used for propane tanks for boats & camping - you don't sit around at the store while they refill your tank).

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    1. Re:Ah... Telsa misses the point again. by Pontiac · · Score: 1

      What's needed is a standard battery pack - when its empty you turn up at a service station and some sort of automated forklift system unhooks the flat battery and slots in a freshly charged one. The system then checks the battery's built in status indicator and works out how much you owe based on remaining charge level and the amount of 'wear' on the battery since it was last changed. Solves the slow recharge problem, and also allows you to spread the cost of the battery pack over time.

      (Basically, the business model used for propane tanks for boats & camping - you don't sit around at the store while they refill your tank).

      I'm sorry but I don't want the business model for Propane.. If you like paying double the price for a 3/4 full bottle of propane go right ahead..
      I can wait 5-10 minutes for a full tank for much less $$.

      You are missing the point anyway.. It's a trade off. You trade spending $5-75 for a tank of gas and quick easy refills for spending $10 in electricity for a full range charge and planning you trip a little more. This isn't the kids of car you plan long cross country tips in anyway. (Well until the infrastructure is there). This is the one you drive every day to work and the grocery store.

      --
      If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur. --Red Adair
    2. Re:Ah... Telsa misses the point again. by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      This isn't the kids of car you plan long cross country tips in anyway. (Well until the infrastructure is there). This is the one you drive every day to work and the grocery store.

      That's not what Tesla is selling - do these cars look like they're on a grocery run? OK, you don't shoot car porn on the parking lot of the local mall, but notice how they're headlining the range (while failing to point out that, when that's up, the car is a brick for an hour or so). If I was spending $60k on a car, it would be precisely because I wanted something comfortable for long trips. If you can afford $60k for a Tesla and a similar price for a 'long trip' car then why not send the freakin' maid to get the groceries?

      The idea of a small electric 'second car' for commuting/grocery runs is fine (maybe not as small as this but that's the general principle) - provided you have somewhere to charge it overnight. The idea of a plug-in hybrid that can get through a typical day on an overnight charge without starting the petrol engine is also fine. (Lets assume that your electricity is coming from a nice green source and not the local coal-burner) The idea of an electric-only 'primary' car that will leave you high and dry if you deviate from your meticulous journey plan.

      "What? The baby's coming? It wasn't due until Saturday! No, of course I can't come now, I've just got in from a 200-mile drive and the car's recharging! Whaddya mean 'take the bus'? I didn't pay $60k for a car so I could take the bus!?"

      In a way, the original Telsa Roadster made more sense - if you're trying to justify buying an expensive roadster on practical grounds you're doing it wrong. The model S is pretending to be a regular car. The X is a SUV, for fsck's sake!

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  153. Suck It Elon! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your company lies about your cool car, which I intend to buy, just like EVERY laptop manufacturer LIES about their battery life.

    Ten hours battery life! Except that it never really lasts longer than six and that's only with the good ones. It seems that all battery based devices over promise and under deliver on battery life.

    So the reality is that the 300 mile range is more realistically around 200 and that's likely to decline rapidly after the first year in use.

    My fear is what it will cost me to replace the battery after five years. "Well sir, with your prorated warranty, the total comes to $20,000.00" OMFG!

    I hate myself because I still want a Telsa S, even if it does under deliver.

  154. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    Which obviously is not the case here.

  155. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    Nope, you are the troll, my good sir, the one who brought absolutely nothing to the discussion except personal attacks. Next time you want to argue about anything remember of bringing arguments.

  156. To The TOP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod this UP!

    It is precisely right.

  157. Re:Musk to NYT by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Nope, you are the troll, my good sir, the one who brought absolutely nothing to the discussion except personal attacks.

    You don't even know what these words mean. Heartfelt personal attacks are not trolling.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  158. Wrong sort of leaves - Re:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    In Britain, I remember a remarkable comment, during autumn, by a train company spokesman trying to excuse all the cancelled trains, and the failure to clear the slippery tracks, with a comment "They were the wrong sort of leaves".

    This sounds awfully familiar.

    The wrong sort of journey perhaps?

  159. Re:Musk to NYT by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    With Tesla being a public company, it could be considered criminal.

    Isn't that a criminal libel against the newspaper/reporter? You are claiming that he deliberately wrote a bad review in order to affect the share price? Probably just as well you're an anonymous moron on the internet and not an actual identifiable person.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  160. Need a serial hybrid, not parallel by slackergod · · Score: 1

    What they need to start doing is sell electric cars with a small, removable, high-efficiency, gas turbine generator for charging.

    Build an easy-attach mounting point inside the trunk, with hooks for intake, exhaust, and connection to the battery.

    You could leave the thing sitting in your garage 3/4 of the year... and plop in it there when you need to go on a trip. Then you've got the best of both worlds (outside of losing some trunk space).

    I suspect (IANA engineer) that you'd have a bunch of weight savings from an engine dedicated to charging the car rather than having the power to push the car directly. Also, the engine could be optimized to always run at it's most efficient RPM, rather than going all over the place during stop-n-go traffic.

  161. Tesla Model S Driver here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I made a similar trip in my Model S on MLK weekend a few weeks ago. 200 miles round trip in ~30 degree weather with a two-day, unplugged, dwell in single digit overnight temps. We knew the sit in the cold was going to be rough on the car so starting with a full max range charge we drove 65mph to our destination 100 miles away. We arrived with an estimated 150 miles left to go. Getting back to the car two days later it was now estimated at exactly 100 miles left. We made plans to stop a charge point halfway home and drove 60mph. We didn't stop to recharge and made it home with an estimated 20 miles left to go.

    I did the same trip in a day a week ago and was able to get a full regular charge while I attended to business at the halfway point. That enabled me to drive above the speed limit and show off the awesome acceleration for the gawkers with the heat blasting.

    The reporter made some rookie mistakes and also got some bad advice from people at Tesla (this really annoys me). He could have put a max range charge on at Delaware and had a comfortable ride. He took a break in Manhattan. Why not plan ahead and find one of the many charge points? He then ate dinner and slept overnight unplugged. If he'd even found a common house plug it would have kept the batteries warm and added a few miles. Again planning, especially in winter.

    He also seems to always quote the "rated range" indicator in the instrument cluster. One quickly learns to look at the energy consumption graph where you can change the timescale of the moving average range estimate between 5-30miles based on what you might think the future holds.

    Why a Tesla employee told him not to use cruise control I will never know. I would call that a fireable offense for any customer-facing employee. It's also not clear what sitting in the car with the heat on will do over just driving it conservatively while the battery gets warm.

    In my opinion the article proves that the car will outlast your backside sitting in it. Being at the forefront of a new way of traveling requires a little extra thinking. In the future, charge points will be more prevalent so it will be easier. We don't fully appreciate that we've spent our whole lives being trained to use fuel-driven vehicles. The gas price spikes of a few years ago seems to have taught a lot of people that buying an SUV for that one-in-a-hundred big load or wilderness trip might not be worth it. I'm happy that I now have the choice to take it further to the one-in-a-hundred long drive requiring a little extra thought while having it cheap and clean 99% of the time.

    1. Re:Tesla Model S Driver here by Cederic · · Score: 1

      What happens when you drive at European motorway speeds?

      Just that nobody I know drives at 60. Shit, most people are doing 60 halfway down the slip road to even get onto a motorway.

    2. Re:Tesla Model S Driver here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not plan ahead and find one of the many charge points?

      If the thing is so damn superior to a petrol-powered car, then why should he NEED to?????

      He then ate dinner and slept overnight unplugged. If he'd even found a common house plug it would have kept the batteries warm and added a few miles. Again planning, especially in winter.

      His actions were entirely reasonable. Just how safe an arrangement is it to dangle a power cord out through your propped-oven hotel room door, run it down the hall, down the elevator shaft, out another door, across the parking lot and into your $100K car?????? WTF is wrong with you Tesla fanboyz??!?!?!??!

      It's not going to take much (an injury lawsuit perhaps?) to get hotels to either [a] ban you from plugging your car in, or [b] install special outlets in the parking lot and then BILL YOU FOR THE ELECTRICITY. (so much for your "everything is free" worldview)

      He also seems to always quote the "rated range" indicator in the instrument cluster. One quickly learns to look at the energy consumption graph where you can change the timescale of the moving average range estimate between 5-30miles based on what you might think the future holds.

      WTH is wrong with trusting an instrument on the panel???????? OH, there are TWO instruments that disagree with each other?!?!?!?! Major user interface FAIL and design error. They need to hire some usability people FAST and figure out how to integrate that info into a single common instrument that presents the actual and predicted range/usage info in a way that even an idiot can easily grasp (important because instruments never get 100% attention; even the smartest guy has most his brain focused on the stuff out the window and possibly a bit on his schedule, his travel companions, his throbbing tooth, sore neck, impending divorce, etc)

  162. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    Apparently you are the one that doesn't know what those worlds mean, but there is still hope for you. You just have to accept your ignorance and educate yourself.

  163. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Yes, keeping your speeds to 10-over-the-limit or less will not protect you from profiling :)

    I was once pulled over for an "obscured license plate" (obscured by what?) and it happened to be when my black girlfriend was in the car. It was also the only time I was ever pulled over by more than one cop car.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  164. Re:Musk to NYT by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Apparently you are the one that doesn't know what those worlds mean, but there is still hope for you. You just have to accept your ignorance and educate yourself.

    By all means, why don't you attempt to educate me? I already know what the difference is between troll and flamebait, and I'm waiting for your hilariously wrong explanation.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  165. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    If you think you already know something there is no hope for you to learn it. All that remains to me is pitying you for your pathetic ignorance and willingness to hold to it. Now go back to your cave Mr. Troll. You aren't even entertaining enough to be considered good sport.

  166. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Furthermore, just to illustrate how silly your inference is, try to answer these questions: Does he mean that averaging people driving speeds they exceed which speed exactly by 5 mph? Does he means in highways? In the city? In every street? If so in peak traffic time? During the night? In zones where there are radars and photographic surveillance? If some zones are excluded does it means in others people go in average beyond this speed to compensate?

    Wow, no. Why don't you ask him? The whole point of his post is that most people speed, so real-world estimates of mileage should reflect this. If that's not the way you read his comment, then I'm sorry but you're parser is borked.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  167. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    the one who brought absolutely nothing to the discussion except personal attacks.

    When irony attacks.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  168. Re:Musk to NYT by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    Did any of you RTFA? He said that the range dropped as he was driving, so he thought he had 80 miles as per the guidelines at one point, but the car said something in the 60s. The best allegory I can give you is hard drive manufacturers and their actual vs advertised storage spaces (hint: a 240gb SSD is more like 220gb). For $101,000 that can raise an eyebrow or two.

  169. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    everyone keeps saying the detour was only two miles, but no, it was an ADDITIONAL 2 miles. He made a major re-route which included distinctly different driving conditions, speed limits, time frames, et all, and justified it by saying "Oh, well it was only 2 miles more than that other route would take." Anyone that takes alot of road trips knows that's horseshit. A country mile and a highway mile will eat gas (or electrons apparently) at different rates. How did he think idling in traffic for hours would be beneficial? He's claiming that they told him that braking would give him a little bit of a recharge boost, so "Of course! The solution to low battery is to leave it running for a few extra unscheduled hours but pump the brakes every couple of minutes."

  170. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    You are right about the 30 mile range, but probably not about hauling around the gasoline engine. That adds a lot of expense and complexity to the car, and will probably kill any economic incentive to buying such a beast unless gas gets REALLY expensive. The Prius makes sense for high-mileage city driving (like Taxis) and not much else. The Volt almost never makes sense. The Leaf has too much battery, and so also makes no economic sense. When we have $8 gas, it'll be a whole different equation - but even then, you'll need to own the car for a long time before you get a return on your investment.

    Most of us married folks have two cars. In my family, we are very lucky (well, we picked our house based partly on our job locations...) and my wife's commute is 5 miles while mine is 10. Time-wise, they are both around 20 minutes. If one of our cars were electric, we wouldn't need much range at all. On the off chance that we needed more range, we could borrow the gasoline car. Thing is, they don't make an electric car that fits my very meager needs. I explored a good old fashioned lead-acid conversion, but even that is pricey compared to a similar vintage gasoline vehicle. And with our little tiny fuel bill, it would never pay off.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  171. Re:Musk to NYT by farble1670 · · Score: 1

    The best allegory I can give you is hard drive manufacturers and their actual vs advertised storage spaces

    actually, as you said the range dropped *while he was driving*. it'd be more like if you had an empty drive w/ 100GB free, and you started to copy a 95GB file to it, and then in the middle of copying the drive capacity changed from 100GB to 70GB.

    if you are in the middle of a round trip in between charging stations, it's sort of too late to find out your range has dropped.

  172. Re:Musk to NYT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nah, just park on a hill and pop the clutch. Jerk.

  173. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    You explained yourself why the statement does not make sense. Keep reading what you wrote yourself and maybe you will get it.

  174. Re:Musk to NYT by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    I don't see how it doesn't make sense.

    For all drivers X, X drives at 5 miles over the speed limit on average.

    Doesn't seem nonsensical.

  175. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    Apparently you can't differentiate irony from sarcasm, and couldn't recognize either even if they bit you in the ass.

  176. Not a fair assesment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey New York Times why don't you oversee another test drive with another ofyour writers to see who is really telling the truth???Take it from and owner of a Signature Model S who has now driven almost10,000 miles. This vehicle is exactly what Tesla claims and every time mywife and I drive in it we are still in awe at the performance, feel andsheer pleasure of driving it.The NYT should really examine the facts in the logs before defending theirwriter since they in fact show something other than what was written in thearticle.At minimum Tesla deserves that the NYT commission another article andoversee the results. Then and only then can we know who is really beingtruthful about what the vehicle can and can't do.Whoever is not telling the truth they should be the ones to put a full pagearticle in the NYT apologizing to the other.

  177. 10 mph or more above speedlimit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I listened to the cnbc interview with Elon Musk, and he said the reporter drove 10mph or more above the speedlimits. I'm really wondering how much more, and if the cops will take action if they see the logs.

    1. Re:10 mph or more above speedlimit by deadweight · · Score: 1

      I can drive my car 50 MPH over the speed limit and still get to work and back ...............just sayin. (cops and traffic notwithstanding) BTW, when not it jam mode driving the speed limit on a major highway would make you a major obstacle to traffic at best.

  178. Re:Musk to NYT by deimtee · · Score: 1

    That's not why alternators won't run without a battery. The older generators were fine because they used fixed magnets. Alternators need a battery to supply a current to the primary winding.
    Also, I've never heard of an alternator that uses the battery as a voltage reference. It would either chase the voltage down until the battery was flat, or up until it overcharged it.

    --
    I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  179. Re:Musk to NYT by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Also, I've never heard of an alternator that uses the battery as a voltage reference. It would either chase the voltage down until the battery was flat, or up until it overcharged it.

    It is in fact normal. Today some of them are actually using the PCM as a voltage reference, I don't know what the PCM is doing to provide it, but in that case you are definitely going to need a battery.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  180. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Apparently you can't tell when someone has figured out how to irritate a pendant.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  181. Get over it Musk by TheSkepticalOptimist · · Score: 1

    First, Musk has to understand that most people these days are functional retards. People are never going to drive the "correct" way, so you got to make a car that is going to work ideally when driven by a functional retard. You can't win an argument against a functional retard so why try.

    Second, I am incensed by the idea of paying up to $100k for basically a commuter vehicle. Lets face it, unless you live along that one highway system in California, the "fast" charge stations are not going to be available anywhere else on the planet, which means that you can only drive about 200 miles in any direction before you have to return home, or find a place to sleep for the night with a power plug.

    It's the reason why electric cars suck, they are overpriced pretentious commuter vehicles driving by functional retards.

    --
    I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
  182. Re:Musk to NYT by fredprado · · Score: 1

    Please keep me up to date about the results of your efforts to irritate a necklace. Your journal will be fascinating.

  183. missing the point by loshwomp · · Score: 1

    The NYT and Musk are both missing the point. EVs aren't well suited to road trips, and it doesn't matter because that kind of driving represents a tiny fraction of the driving we humans do. (Save your personal anecdotes to the contrary--they have no bearing on the facts.)

    EVs can accomplish long distance travel if you're patient and determined, and Tesla's supercharger network has dramatically lowered the bar, but it still sucks, and fixating on it ignores all the aspects of EVs that are so much better than the alternatives.

    Chelsea says it better than I can.

  184. Re:Musk to NYT by MightyYar · · Score: 1

    Your cute.

    --
    W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  185. The solution is simple. by VzXzV · · Score: 1

    We just need some standardization of battery packs and infrastructure "swapping stations". There are a few companies working on this and one has actually been doing it for a while. http://www.betterplace.com/How-it-Works/battery-switch-stations

  186. Re:Musk to NYT by deimtee · · Score: 1

    Sorry, slight misunderstanding there. I thought you meant they used the battery voltage itself as a reference. That wouldn't work.
    Using the battery to power a reference circuit is exactly what they do.

    --
    I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
  187. No, go back to your X-Box... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You clearly completely misunderstood.

    The idiotic misuse of the word "hate" is an act of political correctness; pointing out the idiocy of it, and opposing this childish and political act is not equivalent (not an attempt to suppress a cogent counter-argument) but rather a call to return to rational dialog. The earlier poster was not criticized for defending Musk but rather for trying to equate opinions he/she disliked with "hate" (a tactic to used to stop debate by declaring any opposing opinion as invalid)

  188. Fellow Jeep Driver by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Love my Jeep. Approx 20Mpg (when not if 4WD), big tank for long range, change the oil 2/year, smog check every 2yrs (CA) it's fully paid for (bought it used for cash years ago) ..... I just don't see where you think it's problematic or a pain in the butt. It was absolutely affordable, it's cheap to insure, it's 100% reliable, very capable in all weather, with and without assorted cargo, it works perfectly (even when the local power grid is down) so I can depend on it if I ever need to evacuate my family from a wildfire or something. Gas-powered automobiles are a very stable, very mature technology with excellent infrastructure (that, aside from the actual roads (which ANY type of car including Teslas are free to use) was put there by businesses, rather than tax dollars). As a result, the Gas-powered car is the established champion in the marketplace. As is often the case, the product with the market share is not there because of a conspiracy.... it's there because it's the best solution at the time, in the judgement of the consumers (who vote with their money)

    You talk about an "old and broken market". What's wrong with "old"? "old" can also indicate "proven","reliable", etc. As for the market being "broken"... how? What's broken about a free market where consumers choose the best vehicle (generally gas-powered) and choose to use the best portable power source (gasoline or diesel)? One may dislike petroleum because it's "icky" or one has been propagandized into thinking we're about to run out of it or that it kills the planet.... but the simple fact is that it is a reasonably stable, easily transported, easily used, highly-concentrated source of energy produced using very affordable and well-understood industrial-scale methods. There's nothing "broken" about any of this... it has the market because it's the best. I would argue that Musk and his allies are trying to create a broken market; a market that only works with government subsidies (artificial market manipulation) and that his cars will ultimately be no better environmentally or geopolitically. His cars require many rare/exotic/dangerous materials (rare-Earth magnets, Lithium, etc) and if they ever were the primary vehicle type the world could become as dependent on tyrants for these materials as it currently is on tyrants for oil

    We all know Tesla is a new thing, and all high-tech and shiny.... this is Slashdot (grin). But Tesla does not get some special new rules. In a market economy, it's their job to bring their best to market and compete. The car did not replace the horse buy going to government and getting the government to institute a horse slaughter program to "save the world from global horse s**t" ..... the car won by being more convenient, more capable, less trouble, etc. If the first cars had been much worse than a horse and their advocates had spent all their time denouncing critics and bad-mouthing horses (rather than making their cars better and better) we probably would all be driving cars today that would be far worse than what we have. Musk and his Tesla team can either curse the critics, OR they can buckle-down and absorb the criticism as an indicator of where they can do even better.... and then silence their critics with products that REALLY perform. If they can make a gas car look like junk while being affordable, then they won't need govt subsidies; the public will naturally move to their products

  189. You need to go back and LOOK at that graph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gas (in CA for example) went over the $2.00/gallon line in 2001 in the immediate aftermath on 9-11( with all the impending uncertainty over a possible war in the middle-east). During the Bush years with 2 wars underway in the mid-east gas mostly bounced-around at about $2.60/gallon. The price spiked in the midst of the financial meltdown in 2008 (your graph shows this well) then plummeted to pre-9-11 levels (lower than even the wars had re-baselined it to be, due to the slowdown in economic activity and resulting brief supply glut). In the spring of 2009 as Obama-Reid-Pelosi went into one-party-rule legislative overdrive the price leaped back up (even without increased economic activity) and it has been on a rising trend (with obvious and normal fluctuations) ever since... for a number of reasons but one major reason: Oil is commodity traded on international markets in dollar units. When the Federal Reserve Bank prints lots of new dollars without any underlying increase in economic value/activity to justify them the the total number of dollars in worldwide circulation rises while representing the same total value.... which means each dollar represents less "value". This means that, all other things being equal, the global markets will want more of those less-valuable dollars in exchange for the same product or service.

    Obama's Fed has been printing money at a rate never before seen in US History and the non-partisan CBO has projected that his proposed spending will put us over $20,000,000,000,000 in debt by the end of his 2nd term (probably far worse given that is 1st term took us from about $10Trill to over $16Trill and at that rate $22Trill seems more likely) Things will get much worse if the interest rates (currently abnormally VERY low) rise; we currently spend over $200,000,000,000/year in interest on that debt (about 10x the NASA budget). Oil traders know all this. The Opec oil ministers know all this, and they have more palaces in need of new gold-plating...

  190. Easy to fix fault by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    The difference is, with a gas car, once a week. With an all electric, every day.

    No, the key difference is that one I can fix in a couple of minutes the other takes an hour or so. Given I will forget to fill or charge the car from time to time regardless of power source what matters is how easily can I fix that mistake when I make it. A 5 minute trip to a garage is a lot easier to accommodate than a 1 hour one if I need to get to work in the morning.

  191. new york times will lose this argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because they are a newspaper company and tesla is a technology company, and this is a technology argument.

  192. .t vRe:CEO Switchout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I initially had your reaction as well, but I've sat in one of these cars in a dealership before. It is a technological wonderland. So no, just sitting in traffic doesn't mean the electrons stop flowing. Yes the motor is the big consumer, but not the only one by a long shot.