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Tesla Opens Orders To All US and Canadian Model 3 Reservation Holders (arstechnica.com) 164

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: For people who put down a $1,000 deposit for a Tesla Model 3 as long as two years ago, the big day has arrived. Specifically, the day has arrived when they can give Tesla another $2,500 and then wait a few more months for their car to arrive. Days before the end of the second quarter, Tesla is now allowing all reservation holders in the United States and Canada to place orders for the Model 3. Customers will be able to choose between several variants of the Model 3 -- including the high-end "performance" model -- as well as choosing colors and option packages. However, the low-end version of the Model 3 with its long-promised $35,000 price tag isn't available to order yet.

Each customer will get a specific delivery estimate based on the model they choose and their position on the waiting list. A typical delivery window is two to four months. While the original $1,000 Model 3 deposit was fully refundable, customers who pay the extra $2,500 will be locked in three days after placing an order, the company told CNBC. That isn't a new requirement -- a Tesla spokeswoman told Ars that the company has long asked customers to pay a $2,500 deposit when they order other Tesla models.

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Tesla Opens Orders To All US and Canadian Model 3 Reservation Holders

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  • I definitely want one... but I am still quite disappointed that the "moderate" price Tesla, the $35K one, is yet to appear.

    The lowest cost option of the ones being made so far is $50K. That makes it a luxury car, not a car for the people.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by msauve ( 701917 )
      "$50K. That makes it a luxury car, not a car for the people."

      That depends on operational and maintenance costs, as well as longevity. That is, unless you consider anything other than a cheap upfront cost shitbox with a short lifetime which provides job security for the dealer mechanic to be the definition of less-than-luxury.

      I'm not claiming which side of the scale Teslas fall on, just pointing out that the economics are much more than initial cost.
      • Re:I want one... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Saturday June 30, 2018 @09:46AM (#56870550)

        Modern new cars need minimum mechanical intervention over first few years of their lives. It increases as they age, but used cars cost far less regardless.

        50k-ish USD is going to buy several decades of mechanical interventions for a decent used car, which will only set you back a few thousand. And Tesla, while cheaper to maintain, is by no means free over its life cycle.

        So yes, all current Teslas are luxury vehicles by definition.

        • by msauve ( 701917 )
          Ah, so your definition of a luxury vehicle is a new one. OK, but luxury doesn't mean what you think it means.
          • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

            No, luxury vehicle is a vehicle that cost far more than a budget vehicle, and as such is not a justifiable cost. You must have never lived middle class or working class life to read my statement the way you did.

            Granted, your lack of empathy on this issue is not surprising. I've seen this problem for people who spent their lives living comfortably. They make rather silly assumptions about reality for overwhelming majority of population.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    for every $1,000 of stock bought eight years ago, you'd have $14,000 today

  • Assuming that the US/Canadian tariff fight doesn't screw all this up.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Canada isn't trying to harm the USA with its new tariffs... they are entirely reciprocal, and measured out dollar for dollar. They will be lifted when the USA lifts its illegal tariffs. If the USA wants Canada to remove its dairy tariff, then perhaps Trump should offer something as well. But instead, Trump decides to impose punative tariffs to effectively intimidate a country whose economy is about a tenth of the size into capitulating.

      And it's not like the USA was ever getting burned by its trade wi

      • Re:Car Pact & NAFTA (Score:4, Interesting)

        by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Friday June 29, 2018 @07:50PM (#56868732)
        Furthermore, Trump calls the Canadian dairy tariff one-sided, yet he seems completely unwilling to acknowledge the fact that American farmers are subsidized as well. The difference is that Canadian dairy farmers are assisted by people actually buying their products and are weighted in a way to control production based on demand. American farmers are paid for by American tax dollars whether you consume dairy products or not.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Additionally, the US subsidies/incentives given to American dairy farmers are larger than the entire dairy industry of Canada. You produce more dairy in Wisconsin than our entire country produces.

          In this case, your agricultural incentives are backwards. Instead of managing supply, you pay farmers to overproduce.

        • by Jodka ( 520060 )

          ...American farmers are paid for by American tax dollars whether you consume dairy products or not.

          This is why we have a 1.39 billion pound cheese surplus [vox.com].

  • I can't wait! (Score:2, Insightful)

    I can't wait to get my $80k Model 3 that has been made in a tent in order to make some arbitrary 5000 cars a week production number that Musk came up with. Oh, and they didn't make those numbers, hence the "announcement". Musk is the best at distracting everyone.
    • ...in a tent

      They're not fabbing semiconductors, shortstuff... and anyway, I can assure you that your $80K Model3 will likely spank an RS6 or an M5 but hell, I don't need to tell you that; anyone can tell that you're quite the car enthusiast.

  • Getting mine Monday! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Idou ( 572394 ) on Friday June 29, 2018 @05:01PM (#56867884) Journal
    For those of you debating whether to order now and splurge on the long range model, waiting for the 35K model likely means you will not get the full tax credit. The impact of this may be more than you think. Not only do you get to take the tax credit for this year when you buy now, but if you wait until the tax credit expires to sell your (now used) car, the resale value should increase by close to the tax credit amount. So it really does make sense to buy now (35K + 15K = long range Model 3 now).

    Of course, now that they are opening orders to everyone. . . you probably want to closely look into the probability of getting your car in time to take advantage of the full tax credit. . .
    • As a bonus, it was quickly made in a tent. But you get your tax credit!
      • by Idou ( 572394 )
        I guess there is a first for everything. . . "I can’t say for sure, but I would guess it’s currently the only vehicle assembly for a high volume car going on under a tent right now," [theverge.com]

        The thing is, there are estimates that the difference in moving parts are 20 vs 10,000 [tesla.com]!!! Perhaps once EVs take over, all cars will be assembled in tents?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 29, 2018 @05:28PM (#56868054)

      Going to post this as AC because I'm sure the haters will be out in full force. I got mine a few weeks ago and it was better than I expected. For context, I have a 2016 Porsche 981 GTS (everybody please put down your pitchforks) so my standards are set pretty high. The model 3 is totally worth the wait and is definitely worth the money. I am pretty sure that the Model 3 can trash the 981 at just about any metric and in fact a slightly modified Model 3 just ate a 981 race-ready Boxster at a time track event and won the event overall [teslarati.com]. It is 2/3 the price of the Porsche fully-loaded too!

      It is a totally unassuming car but it is brilliantly designed. So much so that I'm considering getting rid of the Porsche as there is just no reason to own it. It feels like a dinosaur when I get in it now.

      The parking garage at my condo has free regular 110v plugs, and they don't mind us charging cars with them, so to date I have paid absolutely nothing for "fuel". At 110v it would take two and a half days to charge it from empty (it charges at a rate of about 7km/hr at 110v and the 80% range is about 450km), but I just plug it in when I get home and it is ready for me the next time I want to use it. On average I just don't drive more than 7km/hr/day so it works out. Of course there are many other charging options a lot of them free (my local airport parking has free EV charging and you can leave your car there and plugged in the entire time you are away). The parking garages in this area also have free EV charging.

      The seats are great. The interior is really nice - the glass roof is beautiful! I love the minimalist dash. I would give the touchscreen controls a 7/10. They could do a lot to improve that and they are slowly making some positive changes to it. Very usable though. The handling is adjustable and I find it very responsive. It is a fun car to drive. I have found no fit and finish problems despite the reports - the body panels all line up and the tolerances are great and the inside trim is quiet. No squeaks or rattles. The car is so quiet that you do notice tire noise when you are driving.

      I wrote to Tesla asking them when the whole LTE music streaming and free map updates and live traffic was going to end and they were going to start charging me, and they said "Never. Enjoy!" Turns out that this offer expires for people who get their cars after July 1st. Most of it will still be free, but they will offer a premium level after some period of time that you will have to pay for that will give you music streaming and traffic. Updates will be done over wifi unless they are a safety issue in which case they will eat the cost of the LTE update.

      I'm rambling probably. Enjoy your car in good health! It really feels like it is the next generation of the automobile.

      • They will start charging you after the bankruptcy

      • by Idou ( 572394 ) on Friday June 29, 2018 @07:07PM (#56868586) Journal
        Thanks, I enjoyed your post. You hit many good points, but I am compelled to add one more: purchase experience. . .

        I do not think I will ever be able to get near a car dealership again after experiencing how buying a car should be. . .
      • Going to post this as AC because I'm sure the haters will be out in full force.

        It's worth noting that there are a few haters here on Slashdot, but the people who actually like the car and have modpoints far outnumber the haters. Don't be afraid to be proud of your car.

    • The tax credit is non-refundable. It is unlikely people waiting for the budget model have a large enough tax bill to get the full credit anyway. Even then, with no promise on delivery day they may not get it anyway.

      And the idea that the value of the used vehicle will go up by the full value of the credit is laughably optimistic.

  • Humbug... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Freischutz ( 4776131 )

    For people who put down a $1,000 deposit for a Tesla Model 3 as long as two years ago, the big day has arrived.

    Not to dump on Tesla's, they are nice cars, but waiting two years for a car? You have to be a major fanboy to do that ... and people around here call Apple users all kinds of ugly names for queueing in front of a shop for a mobile phone 24hrs before release day.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You can get a Bolt right now for a bit more than $35k. And you still get the tax credit. And a fully loaded Bolt can be used with comma.ai, the open source autopilot. I don't get why anybody is willing to wait that long.

      • Re:Humbug... (Score:4, Informative)

        by Rei ( 128717 ) on Friday June 29, 2018 @06:35PM (#56868434) Homepage

        It's also an econobox that can't supercharge.

        People want a car, not a hair shirt. Don't get me wrong, Bolt is fine for a subset of users. But don't pretend that it's a replacement for the Model 3.

        • Chevy Bolt: the long-range EV for people who don't want to do long drives.

        • "Econobox" I can drive today, or a 6+ month wait for a car I can drive later... Hmmm, decisions decisions!
          • "Econobox" I can drive today, or a 6+ month wait for a car I can drive later... Hmmm, decisions decisions!

            False dichotomies, you mean. Lease the econobox today, while waiting for the real car.

            • Either way - it's a tangible product today in exchange (maybe temporarily) for a promise at a time to be named later. It's false to even claim the Model 3 base vehicle is better than the Bolt - given there are exactly zero base Model 3's available.
              • It's false to even claim the Model 3 base vehicle is better than the Bolt - given there are exactly zero base Model 3's available.

                No. No it isn't. Those are separate issues.

                • So - can you buy that base Model 3 today? If not - you're simply talking about an imaginary vehicle versus a tangible vehicle.
                  • So - can you buy that base Model 3 today? If not - you're simply talking about an imaginary vehicle versus a tangible vehicle.

                    Tangible doesn't mean "available for sale". Try again, I guess, though since you're trying to make a fallacious point you could save us all some trouble by just STFUing.

                    • No, tangible was right. Can you even touch a base Model 3, let alone buy one? If not - it's a fantasy, something that doesn't exist. Which it doesn't.
                    • No, tangible was right. Can you even touch a base Model 3, let alone buy one? If not - it's a fantasy, something that doesn't exist. Which it doesn't.

                      It's a fantasy which will become reality before the fantasy of you being realistic.

        • hair shirtWe use car metaphors for computers; why not bizarre-clothing metaphors for cars? Hmm, I wonder what kind of cars Mormon magic underwear or ass-less chaps would be...
          • by Rei ( 128717 )

            "Hair shirt" is a common saying, getting 1 1/2 million hits on Google. It dates back to the use by early Christians of uncomfortable shirts made from human or animal hair as a penance. In modern parliance, it means punishing yourself by accepting discomfort or inconvenience in order to achieve some end.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      At least you aren't in a RHD country. I'd estimate 2021 before you can even order one.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I know that some people have waited two years, but that was because they were not building them yet. I placed my order last August and picked it up earlier this month. Yes, a 10-month wait isn't great either but there was a lot of pent-up demand. I waited 5 months for my Porsche and they had been building that model for 4 years before I ordered it.

      If you ordered a Model 3 today I don't think you would wait more than six months for it. Still not the instant gratification we are all used to, but when you

  • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Friday June 29, 2018 @05:36PM (#56868110) Journal

    That isn't a new requirement -- a Tesla spokeswoman told Ars that the company has long asked customers to pay a $2,500 deposit when they order other Tesla models.

    Model 3 buyers have always (*) been required to pay a $2,500 deposit when ordering. "other" isn't appropriate here. Is that a mistake by the Tesla spokesperson or by Ars?

    * It's possible that there were special rules for "family and friends (and employees)" who ordered very early Model 3s.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Sorry, you must be off.. it was $1000 (10000 NOK here) and I decided waiting years for a promised car was insane and cancelled. And I did get 10000 NOK back, maybe they earned a few bucks on interest but it wasn't much.

      • Sorry, you must be off.. it was $1000

        I just love it when I am "corrected" by someone who doesn't know what they are talking about. Hint: I actually bought a Model 3, so I know this better than you.

        Here's how it worked:
        Reservation deposit: $1000.
        Then, you get your invitation to configure and order a Model 3. To turn this configuration into an actual order, you have to put down an additional $2,500 deposit. Both the $1,000 and the $2,500 are credited against the purchase price of the car. Some time after ord

    • That isn't a new requirement -- a Tesla spokeswoman told Ars that the company has long asked customers to pay a $2,500 deposit when they order other Tesla models.

      Model 3 buyers have always (*) been required to pay a $2,500 deposit when ordering. "other" isn't appropriate here. Is that a mistake by the Tesla spokesperson or by Ars?

      You assume those are two different people...

  • a $10,000 plug-in electric truck with a winch, designed for the mountains, with a spare battery pack in the toolbox of the bed.

    And you can buy them in Canada, so don't tell me they're not available.

  • by rojash ( 2567409 )
    Read my earlier posts...I had booked this...impressed w their site video...went on a test drive on the X...promptly canceled
  • Does anyone else think that this seems like a desperate attempt to raise more cash with little indication of actual manufacturing rate and quality improvements?

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