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Transportation

Consumer Reports Expects Tesla's Model 3 To Have 'Average Reliability' (cnbc.com) 63

There may be only a few hundred Tesla Model 3s on the street, but Consumer Reports already has an opinion on the new car's dependability. From a report: "We are predicting that the Model 3 should have about average reliability," said Jake Fisher, director of auto testing for Consumer Reports. Average may irritate Tesla fans and the nearly 500,000 people who have reserved a Model 3, but Fisher believes people should understand what Consumer Reports expects from the new car. "We don't go around recommending that people buy cars that are below average, so if it is average or better, that is not a bad thing at all," said Fisher. "But let's be very clear, we are not giving it super high marks. We are saying it is basically par for the course." Consumer Reports has yet to buy a Model 3 and put it through a battery of tests, as the magazine does for dozens of vehicles. In addition, so few Model 3 cars have been delivered that Fisher and his team have yet to get a sense of how owners feel about their new Tesla.
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Consumer Reports Expects Tesla's Model 3 To Have 'Average Reliability'

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  • by turkeydance ( 1266624 ) on Thursday October 19, 2017 @05:29PM (#55400025)
    pay to play.
    • by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Thursday October 19, 2017 @06:55PM (#55400487)
      What? Consumer Reports takes no money from companies, and they buy any car they review. They also pay for press cars, and don't do full reviews on any car they don't own. In short, don't talk about things you don't know about.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        In short, don't talk about things you don't know about.

        Oh, the irony is palpable!

        Consumer reports has not performed any testing. They do not have a Tesla Model 3 vehicle to test... and yet they are talking about the quality and reliability.

        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          and yet they are talking about the quality and reliability

          Based on past results from the company - they aren't speaking totally out of their asses. They've done the same for years....next Toyota Camry will probably be above average for reliability, and the next Dodge Ram will be below.

        • by Luthair ( 847766 )
          Man, you didn't even bother to read the summary. It actually starts with predicted reliability, they base their predictions on the brand's recent history, the model history and easy/difficult things the car is doing. In this case they pointed out while the X is unreliable, most of the unreliable parts aren't features on the 3 and since the S has edged up to average reliability (which took years) the 3 while entirely new isn't overly complex.
      • by I75BJC ( 4590021 )
        That's not quite accurate in all things that they reviewed. Consumer Reports decides on a Policy that they like and promote as if they had reviewed it. This is a repeating theme for CR that I have sent since the 1980's. Plus, while they did in past (and may in the present but I have no knowledge of the continuation of that practice since severing the relationship), there are other ways that one can receive a "payoff" and would neither be investigated. Without a Crusading Mueller, there is no expectation
  • by speedlaw ( 878924 ) on Thursday October 19, 2017 @05:32PM (#55400047) Homepage
    How can you possibly rate anything not produced ? I know that Tesla is inside the Reality Distortion Field. Jobs left it to Musk in his Will, but how can you rate a car in beta, er, pre production ? Do CR writers have some Tesla in the 401 (k) ?
    • how can you rate a car in beta, er, pre production ?

      Through a number of methods. Tesla's suppliers are well-known, and one can estimate about how much they will spend on the parts for the Model 3; knowing these things, and what the interior looks like, you can make a reasonable guess at the quality of the components. A small number of vehicles are in the hands of customers; it's possible that CR has had more than a passing glance at one of them.

    • How can you possibly rate anything not produced ? I know that Tesla is inside the Reality Distortion Field. Jobs left it to Musk in his Will, but how can you rate a car in beta, er, pre production ? Do CR writers have some Tesla in the 401 (k) ?

      Same way we get a MTBF on products that haven't been out for that length of time. It's not accurate, but that's why it's called a "prediction" and not a "report". It's not totally pulled out of thin air, hence "prediction".

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      He isn't rating it, he is saying that his expectation is that when it is rated it will have average reliability. Tesla's other models have had a lot of issues, and there are always kinks with new models from any manufacturer.

      He is just setting expectations because he was asked about it by a journalist looking to make a clickbait story about the Model 3 hype machine.

  • sounds like GM sponsored article. At least it is made in USA!
    • by enjar ( 249223 )
      My gen 1 Volt was made in the USA (Detroit), and the CR reviews/ratings/reliability data suggest it's a very reliable and well-made car. I've had no problems with it so far. I know not every GM product has been stellar, but we also had a number of GM cars and trucks in the 70's, 80's and 90's and they never had significant issues. We also owned Japanese and European models, which were generally reliable but did require service as they aged.
  • >"Consumer Reports has yet to buy a Model 3 and put it through a battery of tests, as the magazine does for dozens of vehicles"

    And even if they did, how are they supposed to know how "reliable" it is based on that? A day? A few weeks? A month? Knowing RELIABILITY comes with at least many months, if not years, of use and observation. The ONLY thing they can do is SPECULATE based on their hunches about the technology and materials, and SPECULATE based on OTHER models. So hopefully people won't freak

    • by I75BJC ( 4590021 )
      Yes, all they are saying is bogus. Their reliability ratings are based on surveys of their members. They use reported Historical data. This is shown, the last I looked, by having no data listed the first and second year of a model and by blanks when not enough people respond to their surveys. So, I assume that CR has some type of Policy or Political Position that Telsa falls outside of and that their Policies and Positions cause such BS.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Consumer Reports gives each car it tests a score that falls within a scale of zero to 100.

    When the 2013 Model S came out, it got a score of 99 -- which has never been exceeded before or since -- with one Consumer Reports representative gushing that "If it could recharge in any gas station in three minutes, this car would score about 110." Ridiculous to say, when the scale only goes up to 100. But such were the Tesla goggles voluntarily donned by the staff of CR back then.

  • To improve the accuracy of their prediction they will survey 1000 people, each of whom have never seen a Model 3, and average the results. Seriously, given that they have no data to work with, betting on "average" is probably they best prediction they could make.

  • If I read the article correctly, Consumer Reports has not tested any Tesla Model 3 yet.

    Why do they have the need to predict anything then? They have no data at alll.

  • Tesla will always have the credits for starting to make the first usable electric cars, but now that other manufacturers are making electric cars they are getting way overhyped. There are already cars out there that are put together better and that I would rather have than a Tesla. So let's please not worship the company.

  • Is that over the duration of the entire lifespan over the vehicle, within the first year, or what?

    It should be very obvious to all but the most blinkered that the model 3 has and will continue to have a lot of issues with quality control until they sort their production out and discover how their car breaks in the field. That is going to take a few years and the chances are the vehicle will be reliable after that.

    As the adage goes, never buy version one of anything. This is true for software and should

    • As the adage goes, never buy version one of anything. This is true for software and should be double underlined and highlighted for cars.

      Software has no [meaningful] warranty, especially in the USA but also in many other places, so your decision should be 100% based on your expectations of how well the software will work. For cars, it's all about warranty since they all have one. How long will you own it, what is covered, and how well do you expect the manufacturer (and dealer) to do at actually meeting their obligations under the warranty. I've got all the service records on my Audi A8 parts car and the first owner had the transmission repl

  • As time goes on, "average" reliability continues to improve across all brands. CR explains this quite clearly in their yearly auto issues. ICE's, as complex as they are, now go 100K+ miles without requiring any major service. Contrast that to, say, the 70's where you might have valve jobs, carburetor rebuilds, spark plug wire replacement, and a bunch of other stuff I'm likely forgetting to make a car of "average" reliability. In terms of the Model 3, it's a new model, at production levels Tesla has never s
  • Given no data points whatsoever, "average" seems a reasonable data point for the quality of a manufactured item. It is, by definition, the mean of the field.

    Given that an electric car has dramatically fewer moving parts than an IC car, and that the technology for charging and motor controls is very mature, I'd expect above average.

    Given that the company is manufacturing their own battery cells, a key failure point, and they have not been in that business for very long, I'd expect below average.

    Given that t

  • This is very unresponsible of them, they haven't seen or tested the car, so how on earth can they even remotely comment on the reliability of the car. It seems to me, they are provoking Tesla into giving them a car to test.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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