Tesla Model X owners finding car doors won – t shut, windows won – t close, TechCrunch

Tesla Model X owners finding car doors won’t shut, windows won’t close

Earlier this month, Tesla Motors recalled Two,700 Model X cars to fix a third-row seat latch that could permit the seat to fold forward during a collision.

But owners of the $138,000 sport utility vehicle — whose many features include falcon-wing doors, a 200-plus-mile battery range and proximity sensors that prevent it from coming into contact with other cars — are being confronted with more instantaneously irksome issues, including car doors that all of a sudden won’t shut and windows that won’t close. Contine reading

Tesla Model S Crushes Large Luxury Car Competition (H1 two thousand seventeen US Sales), CleanTechnica

Tesla Model S Crushes Large Luxury Car Competition (H1 two thousand seventeen US Sales)

I just wrote a lump putting Tesla’s H1 two thousand seventeen sales into a bit of perspective. At the end, I began getting into Tesla sales versus gas vehicle sales in the Model S and Model X classes, but then determined this topic deserved its own lump. Contine reading

Tesla Model Three, An Electrified Car For The Masses, Is Coming Soon

Tesla Model Three, An Electrical Car For The Masses, Is Coming Soon

Fresh YORK – The very first Tesla Model three electrified car for the masses should come off the assembly line on Friday with the very first deliveries in late July, the company’s CEO says.

CEO Elon Musk, in several Twitter messages early Monday, says the fresh car passed all government regulatory requirements for production to begin two weeks ahead of schedule. Contine reading

TCR International Series

TCR International Series

The TCR International Series is an international Touring Car championship. The championship – founded by former World Touring Car Championship boss Marcello Lotti [1] – is marketing itself as a cost-effective spin-off of the WTCC, targeted at C-category tin-top racing cars. The title TCR goes after the naming convention now used by the FIA to classify the cars that rival in touring car racing, with TC1 referring to the top tier as used by the FIA WTCC and TC2 referring to the legacy cars which principally contest in the FIA ETCC. Contine reading