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Tesla Meets Self-Imposed Deadline For Model 3, Rolls Out 7,000 Cars In a Week (cnbc.com)

Elon Musk tweeted on Sunday that the company produced 7,000 cars last week, including 5,000 Model 3 electric sedans. "Beating a self-imposed deadline, the final car rolling off the assembly line on Sunday morning, several hours after the midnight goal set by Musk, two workers at the factory told Reuters on Sunday." CNBC reports: The 5,000th Model 3 finished final quality checks at the Fremont, California factory and was ready to go around 5 a.m. PDT (1200 GMT), one person told Reuters. It was not clear if Tesla could maintain that level of production for a longer period of time. Tesla had a goal of producing 5,000 Model 3s per week before the close of the second quarter on Saturday to demonstrate it could mass produce the battery-powered sedan.

5 of 356 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And ... if they hadn't? by religionofpeas · · Score: 5, Informative

    All of them.

  2. Re:hmmm by Rei · · Score: 5, Informative

    sounds like they have done the same thing as last quarter, realised they could not meet the number so put on a heap of extra shifts in the final week so they could get it across the line for the numbers.

    Meanwhile, in the real world, despite shorts insisting that last quarter's weekly numbers (2k) would be an unsustainable burst rate, they maintained it for weeks, all the way up to the next scheduled downtime. Then they got back up to 3,5k and maintained that until the next set of upgrades. Now they're at 5k. But if you really think the 5k is a burst, by all means short that.

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  3. Re:Beating a deadline late by gerald.edward.butler · · Score: 5, Informative

    If the production shift started Saturday before midnight, then, that shift's production counts towards that week. That is fairly standard practice.

  4. #factorygated by fozzy1015 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Read what Elon actually said. 5000 Model 3s were 'factory gated', not produced. That means, according to Elon himself, a chunk of that number were already built at the beginning of the last week of June. Knowing this week was coming up, that chunk could be a significant portion. They are counted in the final tally even though in the last week Tesla may have done as little as move them from one lot to another. So Tesla didn't even pull off a true 5K burst week. This is why sustained production numbers are the only accurate ones. Those numbers are what Moody's pays attention to.

  5. Re:And ... if they hadn't? by haruchai · · Score: 3, Informative

    "If you only look at the quarter average, they won't be making anywhere near 5000 a week, especially given they've had several shutdowns to retool"

    They produced 28,578 Model 3s in Q2 vs 9766 in Q1 2018 so the avg weekly production went from 751 to 2198, an improvement of 342%

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