You can install our site as a web app on your iOS device by utilizing the Add to Home Screen feature in Safari. Please see this thread for more details on this.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
No reset function. The TPMS sensors on the Model Y re-calibrate to their new wheel locations shortly after you rotate the tires.That is very strange. It's working... so it would be hard to say that one is defective. It just is too much of coincidence that the one that got a patch, is the only sensor reporting.
I'm still not up to speed on how the new software works (Just got my 2nd Tesla a few days ago after a long hiatus) but is there a TPMS reset function available still? That should query all 4 sensors while driving and get everything synced up.
Gotcha, I'm wondering if changing the wheel configuration will cause the car to scan for fresh pressure data then. Afterwards, just change it back to the actual wheels.No reset function. The TPMS sensors on the Model Y re-calibrate to their new wheel locations shortly after you rotate the tires.
No; All you need to do after rotating the tires is to drive for a time. The TPMS system will automatically orient to the new sensor locations.Gotcha, I'm wondering if changing the wheel configuration will cause the car to scan for fresh pressure data then. Afterwards, just change it back to the actual wheels.
I'm not suggesting anything to do with locations - just whatever will get the software to forget the saved pressures and re-scan everything from scratch again.No; All you need to do after rotating the tires is to drive for a time. The TPMS system will automatically orient to the new sensor locations.
Maybe Tesla Service can initiate a diagnostic reset function but there is nothing the owner can do to reset the TPMS system.I'm not suggesting anything to do with locations - just whatever will get the software to forget the saved pressures and re-scan everything from scratch again.