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Quoted: Are ceramic rotors and Brembo calipers not available to the general public. The only thing holding it back after a brake upgrade would be some quick disconnect battery or a faster charging battery. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Except it can't, because batteries suck. One hour of track attack, three hours charging! Wouldn't even make it for 1 hour of track time. Maybe 1x 20min segment max before needing to recharge. And Tesla's well know for their brakes being smoking melted pieces of shit after an intense track session. Are ceramic rotors and Brembo calipers not available to the general public. The only thing holding it back after a brake upgrade would be some quick disconnect battery or a faster charging battery. If only they made some sort of extra performance trim with upgraded components made to handle those exact conditions..... They could call it paid even. |
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Quoted: The brakes need to be better because of the weight (can't get around that). I have no idea what the specs of the brakes are, but doing super car things without super car brakes is a recipe for disaster. View Quote Electric cars can use their motors to slow the car almost as fast as they accelerate before even applying the brakes. This is a car that can accelerate from 0-150 in under 9 seconds. This thing will be able to stop quick as well. This is why brakes pretty much last the life of the car on EVs. |
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Quoted: Quoted: It's already happened through decades of continuous improvement. We have a sedan that has 500 miles of range that also is faster at the drag strip than anything, while also capable of smoking exotics at the track. How is that anything other than an enormous disruptive force? Maybe ask the guy who stated it: Quoted: We are one breakthrough in battery tech away (either charging times or range) from vehicles like this being an enormous disruptive force. To me it is more range then you could drive in a full day behind the wheel and/or getting charge times down to roughly how long a normal fill up takes. When they hit one of those two marks, we have arrived. And I think they will. |
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Quoted: Thats fine, doesn't change the fact your argument is wrong bud. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: You are just an old man yelling at clouds now. Everyone is tuning you out. Thats fine, doesn't change the fact your argument is wrong bud. You should put an inward facing camera in your Porsche so we can see the expression on your face when one of these Teslas assrapes you at a stoplight. |
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Quoted: You should put an inward facing camera in your Porsche so we can see the expression on your face when one of these Teslas assrapes you at a stoplight. View Quote The GT3 runs a 10.9-11.4s quarter mile. Stoplight racing a ~8.8 second Plaid against that would look like Usain Bolt vs. Sgt. Sugarcookie. The Plaid would already be crossing the finish line right about when the GT3 got 2/3rds through. |
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Quoted: Yeah, I realize that. It also gets a constant stream of federal tax payer dollars per car. Why am I paying for complete strangers to buy a 40 - 140 thousand dollar car again? The first Tesla was introduced in 2008. Telsa has never turned a profit even with that massive federal subsidy year after year. WTF? View Quote Uninformed much? |
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Quoted: Electric cars can use their motors to slow the car almost as fast as they accelerate before even applying the brakes. This is a car that can accelerate from 0-150 in under 9 seconds. This thing will be able to stop quick as well. This is why brakes pretty much last the life of the car on EVs. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: The brakes need to be better because of the weight (can't get around that). I have no idea what the specs of the brakes are, but doing super car things without super car brakes is a recipe for disaster. Electric cars can use their motors to slow the car almost as fast as they accelerate before even applying the brakes. This is a car that can accelerate from 0-150 in under 9 seconds. This thing will be able to stop quick as well. This is why brakes pretty much last the life of the car on EVs. Any idea on the percentage of stopping power provided by commercial systems? |
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Tesla’s QC on fit and finish is in the shitter right now. I would hold off on buying one right now.
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Quoted: The GT3 runs a 10.9-11.4s quarter mile. Stoplight racing a ~8.8 second Plaid against that would look like Usain Bolt vs. Sgt. Sugarcookie. The Plaid would already be crossing the finish line right about when the GT3 got 2/3rds through. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: You should put an inward facing camera in your Porsche so we can see the expression on your face when one of these Teslas assrapes you at a stoplight. The GT3 runs a 10.9-11.4s quarter mile. Stoplight racing a ~8.8 second Plaid against that would look like Usain Bolt vs. Sgt. Sugarcookie. The Plaid would already be crossing the finish line right about when the GT3 got 2/3rds through. Why are you comparing apples to oranges? I’m sure when he said Porsche he was talking about a direct competitor like the Taycan turbo S |
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Quoted: While every hydrogen proponent is giving up on it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I'll dispute electric is the future. Hydrogen powered is the real future. While every hydrogen proponent is giving up on it. It's a funny story on logic vs herd mentality. |
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Quoted: I always love the retards who can't accept that this is the future of auto tech. "It no make vroom vroom sound, it no good, me no like" ETA: Have fun dealing with the anger when these gap you in the 1/4, they're only going to get better. View Quote I have no illusions about that. Eventually most or all vehicles (especially non trucks) will be either fully electric or some sort of hybrid. Some day our solar grabbing technology will be good enough that a vehicle's skin will capture sunlight and turn it into energy, too. We aren't even close to that day yet, but 20 years from now it will look a lot different. |
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Quoted: I'll dispute electric is the future. Hydrogen powered is the real future. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Sigh..... It's a fucking 140k SEDAN. Not a gazillion dollar purpose built supercar. What's not to understand about this? Luddites everywhere these days....electric cars are the future whether you like it or not. I'll dispute electric is the future. Hydrogen powered is the real future. If Gordon Murray says electric is just a stop gap measure to get to hydrogen power I'm going to believe him. He's forgotten more about cars than anyone at Tesla will ever know. |
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Quoted: Yes, a car that is so fast stock that drag strips may require you to install parachutes and roll cages just to use them there is gay... https://www.fr24news.com/a/2020/09/tesla-model-s-plaid-may-be-required-to-use-a-parachute-when-racing-in-drag-tracks.html View Quote Well you could make one run then get kicked off of the track. |
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Quoted: I heard that in '96. It doesn't look that different, to me, yet. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: We aren't even close to that day yet, but 20 years from now it will look a lot different. I heard that in '96. It doesn't look that different, to me, yet. 1996 might as well be 1976 in terms of electric vehicle technology. No comparison whatsoever to 2020. |
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Quoted: To be honest already here. ICE is the T-Rex laughing at the little wombat waddling around. ICE is in its grave. Just waiting on logistics at this point. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Still waiting on that "enormous disruptive force" we are continually told that is coming "any day now". To be honest already here. ICE is the T-Rex laughing at the little wombat waddling around. ICE is in its grave. Just waiting on logistics at this point. |
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Quoted: Do you know how stupid comments like this make you sound? There are literally thousands of these driving through Canadian winters without any problems . View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: And still can't be exposed to even 24 hours of a typical winter up here without damaging it. Do you know how stupid comments like this make you sound? There are literally thousands of these driving through Canadian winters without any problems . You Canucks don't salt the roads like we do here, it's not the cold. |
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Quoted: Why are you comparing apples to oranges? I’m sure when he said Porsche he was talking about a direct competitor like the Taycan turbo S View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: You should put an inward facing camera in your Porsche so we can see the expression on your face when one of these Teslas assrapes you at a stoplight. The GT3 runs a 10.9-11.4s quarter mile. Stoplight racing a ~8.8 second Plaid against that would look like Usain Bolt vs. Sgt. Sugarcookie. The Plaid would already be crossing the finish line right about when the GT3 got 2/3rds through. Why are you comparing apples to oranges? I’m sure when he said Porsche he was talking about a direct competitor like the Taycan turbo S Referencing this post: Quoted: Jesus who gives a fuck. The 918 wasn't built to drag race...not sure how fucking hard it is for you to get that through your skull. And its awesome you love comparing a brand new tech car vs a Hyper Car built between 2013-2015....I'm pretty sure my GT3 can beat in lap times Hyper cars built 5-7 years before it at this point. |
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Quoted: That was my first thought. You wouldn't be able to run your stock Tesla at a dragstrip that follows NHRA rules. We are one breakthrough in battery tech away (either charging times or range) from vehicles like this being an enormous disruptive force. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: lol, gay Yes, a car that is so fast stock that drag strips may require you to install parachutes to use them there is gay... https://www.fr24news.com/a/2020/09/tesla-model-s-plaid-may-be-required-to-use-a-parachute-when-racing-in-drag-tracks.html The Tesla Model S Plaid was officially launched on Battery Day and the vehicle is now available to order. The specifications of the Plaid Model S are no joke, with the vehicle being able to go from 0 to 60 mph in under 2 seconds before peaking at 200 mph. The future flagship sedan is so fast that Tesla says its quarter-mile is less than 9 seconds, thanks to its three electric motors that produce 1,100 hp.With the Plaid variant entering the picture, the Model S will effectively become an 8-second car over the quarter mile. That would make the flagship Tesla sedan a downright creepy presence in the drag strip, especially since previous iterations like the Model S P100D with Ludicrous mode and the Model S Performance are quick enough to regularly embarrass supercars. That being said, it's pretty hard to deny that an 8-second quarter-mile time is unfamiliar territory for Tesla, and that, according to a veteran racer, could result in some interesting rules for the next vehicle in the tracks. 'acceleration. Brooks Weisblat, Tesla owner and YouTube drag racing enthusiast DragTimes channel is no stranger to fast cars. Weisblat has extensive experience in drag racing, regularly competing with electric cars like the Tesla Model S P100D or conventional supercars like the McLaren 720S. Speaking as a veteran, Weisblat pointed out that the Model S Plaid is a pretty crazy vehicle, and given its performance, it might actually end up being too fast for some drag tracks in the United States. The drag racing veteran pointed out that in order for the Model S Plaid to reach a quarter mile in under 9 seconds, the vehicle would have to have a trap speed likely above 150 mph. Weisblat noted that in many drag tracks across the country, more safety requirements are placed on vehicles that operate at such levels. Cars that hit the quarter mile at 150 mph, for example, must have a parachute to help them decelerate. Vehicles that travel 8 or 9 quarter mile seconds are generally required to have a roll cage, or at least a roll bar, when also competing. That was my first thought. You wouldn't be able to run your stock Tesla at a dragstrip that follows NHRA rules. We are one breakthrough in battery tech away (either charging times or range) from vehicles like this being an enormous disruptive force. Been factory cars for years that are too fast for the strip out of the factory Same thing happened with the early vipers. They were fast enough they needed a roll bar since it was a convertible There is also tons of hardtops that run fast enough to need a roll bar as well . |
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Quoted: Yeah, I realize that. It also gets a constant stream of federal tax payer dollars per car. Why am I paying for complete strangers to buy a 40 - 140 thousand dollar car again? The first Tesla was introduced in 2008. Telsa has never turned a profit even with that massive federal subsidy year after year. WTF? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: You do realize it got the same lap time as the Porsche 918... a multimillion dollar hypercar built for the track, and this is a large 4-door sedan. Yeah, I realize that. It also gets a constant stream of federal tax payer dollars per car. Why am I paying for complete strangers to buy a 40 - 140 thousand dollar car again? The first Tesla was introduced in 2008. Telsa has never turned a profit even with that massive federal subsidy year after year. WTF? Lol, actually there are no longer fed tax credits if you buy a Tesla. However, Ford, GM, etc will qualify for those fat tax credits once they start offering their EVs. You gonna complain about them too? |
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Quoted: While every hydrogen proponent is giving up on it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I'll dispute electric is the future. Hydrogen powered is the real future. While every hydrogen proponent is giving up on it. I used to work in a hydrogen plant. Extremely expensive to produce and leaks out of virtually everything you can store it in. Our top management didn’t think it would happen anytime soon, either. |
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Quoted: I don't understand the name "plaid" when it appears to be solid white or whatever. Shouldn't it be a tartan plaid colors like below? https://www.AR15.Com/media/mediaFiles/123535/B5B3C0A8-26BF-47E9-806C-87FECF93E1C7_jpe-1609295.JPG View Quote |
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Quoted: Do you know how stupid comments like this make you sound? There are literally thousands of these driving through Canadian winters without any problems . View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: And still can't be exposed to even 24 hours of a typical winter up here without damaging it. Do you know how stupid comments like this make you sound? There are literally thousands of these driving through Canadian winters without any problems . Not even considering in Northern countries like Norway and Sweden Tesla are very common. |
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Quoted: You Canucks don't salt the roads like we do here, it's not the cold. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: And still can't be exposed to even 24 hours of a typical winter up here without damaging it. Do you know how stupid comments like this make you sound? There are literally thousands of these driving through Canadian winters without any problems . You Canucks don't salt the roads like we do here, it's not the cold. Know how I know you never lived in Canada, especially southern Ontario? |
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Let me know when I can throw one in my chevelle and then die in a massive car wreck.
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Quoted: Yeah, I realize that. It also gets a constant stream of federal tax payer dollars per car. Why am I paying for complete strangers to buy a 40 - 140 thousand dollar car again? The first Tesla was introduced in 2008. Telsa has never turned a profit even with that massive federal subsidy year after year. WTF? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: You do realize it got the same lap time as the Porsche 918... a multimillion dollar hypercar built for the track, and this is a large 4-door sedan. Yeah, I realize that. It also gets a constant stream of federal tax payer dollars per car. Why am I paying for complete strangers to buy a 40 - 140 thousand dollar car again? The first Tesla was introduced in 2008. Telsa has never turned a profit even with that massive federal subsidy year after year. WTF? Were you mad that tax money paid for the development of the space shuttle? Technologically, these things are next level beasts. This is the future and this production sedan is basically better than anything else produced at any price point. To be angry about subsidies doesn't speak at all to the technoligical leap that is happening. |
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I’ll buy an electric when a single charge can get me 500 miles in -20f weather with the heat running.
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Quoted: It's been an option for years. https://www.teslarati.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Tesla-Model-S-3rd-Row-Seats-e1379317106445-1280x720.jpg Only really fits kids though, like the backseats in a Porsche. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: How does a sedan seat up to 7? It's been an option for years. https://www.teslarati.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Tesla-Model-S-3rd-Row-Seats-e1379317106445-1280x720.jpg Only really fits kids though, like the backseats in a Porsche. LoL That’s awesome Like being in the rear seats of a Comanche |
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Quoted: NHRA needs to update some of their rules IMO Been factory cars for years that are too fast for the strip out of the factory Same thing happened with the early vipers. They were fast enough they needed a roll bar since it was a convertible There is also tons of hardtops that run fast enough to need a roll bar as well . View Quote |
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Quoted: Yeah, I realize that. It also gets a constant stream of federal tax payer dollars per car. Why am I paying for complete strangers to buy a 40 - 140 thousand dollar car again? The first Tesla was introduced in 2008. Telsa has never turned a profit even with that massive federal subsidy year after year. WTF? View Quote The same reason your tax dollars go to national security or how they went to the space program. It pushes innovation. It's not about the product, it's about pushing forward and leading. |
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