Richmonder
Member
Nope, just refreshed and still the same.Refresh the page.. it updated a few days ago. It shows July with 21s and Aug with 19s.
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Nope, just refreshed and still the same.Refresh the page.. it updated a few days ago. It shows July with 21s and Aug with 19s.
Yeah - it's for my wife, she sold her car in February and has been renting a car since... I've have been getting an earful about the delays ever since, so hopefully this is the real deal.You might be the first white on white LR. Bodes well for the rest of us!
I would really love to see the data of the regen from the independent rear motors. It would be interesting to see if it applies more regen on the inside rear tire going into corners. Of course if you are a good driver and going into the corner at close to the ABS limit(definition of a good driver) then there is not much to be gained. In the Acura I never noticed torque vectoring except on corner exit, really killed the under steer.A bit has been said about torque vectoring but I think it is worth discussing the concept a bit.
Differentials apportion acceleration and deceleration across the rear (and front if AWD) axles of a car. On acceleration, it balances power to deliver the most forward drive from the pair of rear tires. On deceleration, it adds tremendously to stability and rotation (or lack there of) on corner entry.
The ability to actively regulate torque to each rear wheel gives the designer the ability to dramatically improve power delivery on corner exit as someone has already mentioned. When you traverse an arc, the outside wheel travels in a larger diameter circle. The ability to apportion torque (and thus wheel speed) differently across the rear axle allows you to get the most acceleration. The ability to do that dynamically based on steered angle is especially useful.
The ability to very reverse torque (braking affect) on the rear axle has a similar affect in straight line stability to permit the maximum braking from the rear of the car without it wanting to swap ends.
In addition to all of this, many manufactures uses active single wheel braking for stability control. If you start to yaw the car beyond what the limits of traction allow (start to loose the rear), the stability control system will gently apply the inside wheel's brake which pulls the rear back in line. McLaren if famous for their rear brake based stability control.
Now here is the kicker that really makes Tesla stand out.......
Most ICE with traction control will leave black patches followed by clear patches when the rear breaks loose on acceleration in a straight line. I've had cars that leave 18" black marks followed by 12" clear marks repeating and others that are half that. It depends on the time constant of the drive line; that is, how fast the computer can make adjustments combined with how fast the driveline can react.
My first rear wheel drive P85 made a skittering noise on hard acceleration and would leave a fine bar code on the ground. Given torque is generated by exciting coils to generate a rotating magnetic field, time constant for the drive line is but a small percentage of ANY ICE on the planet. Put differently, the Tesla drive line can react to loss of traction many times faster than a conventional ICE. The result is much better acceleration.
Apply all of the above to the Plaid with two motors in the rear and NO differential at all and I get very excited. You now have a near infinite ability to manage traction in all conditions. You can make it turn better. You can make it rotate sharper off throttle on corner entry. You can catch the rear when the driver runs out of talent. And on and on. In addition, its all firmware. You need not have it in the car today. It can be developed and improved over time. My guess is the track pack will be all software with just a sprinkling of hardware mixed in. Exciting stuff indeed.
Hmmm idkkkNope, just refreshed and still the same.
It is very difficult to trail brake on ABS. It is real easy to use motor braking to rotate the car on corner entry (when you are off the brakes).I would really love to see the data of the regen from the independent rear motors. It would be interesting to see if it applies more regen on the inside rear tire going into corners. Of course if you are a good driver and going into the corner at close to the ABS limit(definition of a good driver) then there is not much to be gained. In the Acura I never noticed torque vectoring except on corner exit, really killed the under steer.
Torque vectoring makes a big difference in the handling of the vehicle; it computer-controls the amount of wheel torque on each side (L / R on each axle) so if the computer detects the slightest wheel slippage on one side, it automatically adjusts to grip the road better when cornering. It's what Porsche uses to help their cars handle so well around corners. And, yes, only the MS Plaid has this vs. the MS LR, so I suspect the LR will not handle as well as the Plaid. Another reason for the extra $40-$50k for the Plaid.Also the Torque vectoring which I know nothing about so not sure if it’s a big deal.
most important question now that I see you playing music off of a USB device, do album arts show?One tip for new Plaid owners--all the available sources are all compressed audio. Do yourself a favor and drop some high quality MP4 files on a USB-C stick and listen to those to really get a feel for the audio system. Uncompressed audio files would be ideal, but there seems to be SW bug with reading FLAC files right now.
What about the pedals? Are they chrome plated in the LR?I haven’t seen that. Do you have a picture for reference?
edit: I stand corrected- this is fantastic news! One less differentiator and even more proof that Tesla has given the LR the full P car improvements.
Just heard the Plaid won its class at Pikes Peak todayIt is very difficult to trail brake on ABS. It is real easy to use motor braking to rotate the car on corner entry (when you are off the brakes).
Yes. Photos in the LR thread so it. Also hereWhat about the pedals? Are the chrome plated in the LR?
Or do yourself a favor and upgrade the audio system. I don‘t care how great people say it sounds, factory speakers and amps are junk.most important question now that I see you playing music off of a USB device, do album arts show?
Cool. Thanks!Yes. Photos in the LR thread so it. Also here
The Michelin Pilot Sport A/S 4 is the BEST AS tire out there! Awesome grip in dry, wet and great, long-lasting tread wear. btw -- I can't stand the super soft Pirelli's. Blah!The P ZERO is only made as a Max Performance Summer tire. The photos I took were a Florida location. The P Zero has horrible tread wear so you will be able to put your own tires on pretty quickly. The Michelin below is what my next set will be.
Mine didn’t change either after switching 3 days ago.Nope, just refreshed and still the same.
NIce to see another knoxville address. Stuck in same boat as you, had the charger since January with nothing to plug it into. At this point it's a race to see if the new Knoxvilke sales room opens up before my VIN is assigned, otherwise over to Nashville for a pickup.My sad and lonely wall connector. Without a buddy since February. Been through too many estimated delivery dates/months to count. Currently parked on "July."
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Frankly, with ALL of these MS Plaid deliveries completed with so many more coming in the next few days/weeks, etc, I'm a bit surprised (and disappointed) that Tesla hasn't already released the big UI update to V11. I mean, where's the rotating main screen, independent bt audio for the rear screen and what about all the greyed out features not working yet? Anyone have any thoughts on this?The release notes were the ever popular "bug fixes" -- nothing obvious changed.
The biggest thing is, no matter what combination you pick, you might not get the car at your location because the monkey might not assign cars to anyone at that location. Tampa SC has yet to receive a single Plaid shipment (while other places have randomly received cars that were ordered the same week or the week prior)I'm sorry but I really am baffled by all you folks who contact your SA, "call Freemont" or email/text whomever at Tesla to change your refresh MS order (whether a Plaid or LR) just to possibly (b/c it's not even guaranteed you'll take delivery any sooner anyhow AND even if you did...) get your car a little earlier. I mean so many of us have been waiting several months for the car to arrive and be delivered to us, I just don't think it's worth changing CF to Wood interior trim or changing your wheels or changing your car's exterior color to get a $100k - $156k vehicle in a configuration that was NOT your 1st choice. My opinion here but it's odd to me that people feel they cannot wait another few weeks.
For me, I'm staying with EXACTLY what I ordered on 2/5/21.