http://www.businessinsider.com/tesla-model-3-first-drive-impressions-pictures-2018-2
I drove the Model 3 for a couple of hours — and it's now my favorite Tesla
Feb. 17, 2018  Matthew DeBord

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Tesla Model 3

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    We spent several hours taking the Tesla Model 3 on a first drive.

    Ben Zhang, Business Insider's senior transportation reporter, and I each
took a turn at the wheel and put the car through its paces.

    What impressed us most about the Model 3 wasn't its technology — it was
how much fun the car is to drive.

I've driven every car Tesla has ever made, from the original Roadster to the
Model X SUV. I've sampled Ludicrous Mode acceleration, experimented with
Autopilot self-driving tech, and even once "run out of gas" in a Model S.

And while it's true that I'm very much looking forward to the bonkers-fast
next-generation Roadster, ever since last July I've been salivating about
some more seat time in the Model 3.

The Model 3 is Tesla's car for the masses, with a base price of $35,000 and
range of over 200 miles. It has been touted for years, finally arriving in
2017 — and is now roasting in what CEO Elon Musk calls "production hell."
Tesla has something like half a million advance orders for the car. Thus
far, it has officially delivered about 3,000.

But does being bad at making the Model 3 mean that the car itself has
problems?

Well, there have been some complaints about early build quality and some
technical glitches. But because Tesla started rolling out the Model 3
without going through a manufacturing prototyping process at its Fremont
factory, and has endured battery supply challenges at its factory in Nevada,
the Model 3 is clearly something of a beta release. Tesla is building the
plane after it has taken off.

When I got my first crack at the Model 3, last July in California at a
launch event, I was quite impressed. But I only drove the car for about 15
minutes.

This week, Tesla let us borrow a bright-red Model 3 for a few hours, and my
colleague Ben Zhang and I headed west of Manhattan to New Jersey to really
put the 3 through its paces. We aren't ready to review the car just yet —
that will come later when Tesla gives us a test vehicle that we can live
with for a week.

But we are able to offer some first-drive impressions, beyond what I could
come up last year. The upshot is that the Model 3 is a dandy little ride,
and once Tesla gets the whole carmaking thing figured out (rapidly, if
possible), we think owners will be delighted.

OK, here's a caveat. Our tester was a well-equipped $55,700 Model 3. Wait,
isn't the car supposed to cost $35,000? Well, yes, but right now Tesla is
building only the $44,000 premium version, and for the moment it's
rear-wheel-drive only; the dual-motor all-wheel-drive version will follow.
On the plus side, the more expensive Model 3 has a range of about 300 miles
on a single charge (the cheaper version will serve up over 200).

We managed to chop about 100 miles off a full charge in three hours of
driving, but we weren't holding back. So for many Tesla fans and EV
enthusiasts, the Model 3 has the range to be a perfect daily driver,
especially if the owner can plug into 220-volt level 2 charging at home
overnight (Model 3 has access to Tesla Supercharger network, but unlike the
Model S and Model X owners, fast-charging for Model 3 owners and leasers
isn't free).

Here's how our first drive broke down:

Design

The Model 3 is sharp.
Given the scuttlebutt about build quality, we scrutinized our red Model 3 —
which was a press car and accordingly prepared — very closely. Sure, there
was some misalignment and panel-gapping here and there. But it actually
wasn't bad at all. You'd have to be a true obsessive to have major issues
with it.

No rattles, no shakes, no weird noises. The Model 3 is sleek and shapely and
it looks dazzling in red. It embodies and extends Tesla design chief Franz
von Holzhausen's philosophy, which is elegant and conservative without being
boring. The Model 3 isn't supposed to look like some exotic contraption
borrowed from the distant future. It's supposed to look good right now.

That it does, from its fine-boned front end to its fastback rear hatch. You
could draw a line from the headlight to the tail light, along the Model 3's
beltline, and it would be a clean yet expressive line that gives the car a
core shape and provides a basis for the smoothly curved roof and the crisp
kink of the rear window trim.

The proportions are pretty good — better than the Model S's, as that car now
looks, well, big. They aren't perfect: the hood and front fenders, as well
as the rear haunches, are stunted, so the middle of the Model 3 appears
chunkier in profile than when looked at from a three-quarters perspective.

Also, I hate to say it, but viewed from the rear versus from the front, the
Model 3 seems out-of-balance. The hood doesn't adequately counterbalance the
hatch. Fastbacks are groovy, but they can make a car appear back-heavy. I'd
almost rather have an old-school trunk lid back there.

In the final analysis, I think the Model 3 is the best-looking Tesla:
sportier than the Model S, less spaceship-like than the Model X. The new
Roadster is, naturally, a sexier machine. But we won't see it in production
for at least a couple of years. For me, it's the Model 3 for the win.

And one other thing: as you can see from the photos that BI's Hollis Johnson
captured of the Model 3, the car looks magnificent in motion. This is the
acid test of a design. A car is meant to move. A great vehicle has to look
great from the outside, on the road, when the driver steps on the
accelerator and makes it go.

Performance

Electric cars are, no doubt about it, quick. The Model 3 is no exception.

It isn't as fast off the line as the Model S or Model X — but it's plenty
fast. The 0-60 mph sprint is accomplished in just over five seconds. That's
speedy enough for anybody, and the quality of that speed is very Tesla, and
very electric-car. EVs have 100% of their available torque at 1 rpm, and
that's means potentially neck-snapping velocity.

A Model S P100D with Ludicrous Mode engaged can do 0-60 mph in under 2.3
seconds.

That's jarring acceleration. The Model 3 is calmer. But not too calm. You
are rewarded when you punch it.

On the highway, the Model taps out once you're up around the legal speed
limit. It has plenty of passing power, but compared with, say, a Model X
P100D SUV, it can't rocket away from traffic like a spaceship spooling up
its warp drive.

If that sounds like a negative, it isn't. The Model 3 is a more
even-tempered package, performance-wise, than the Model S, which in its more
belligerent trims is basically an electric muscle car. I'm one of those guys
who likes driving well-proportioned, modestly scaled sport sedans that don't
have huge engines. The Model 3 is that in spirit. It's fun in a straight
line, but it's more fun going around corners, and in the rear-drive
configuration, it offers just enough oversteer and back-end lock-down to be
a blast in the twisty parts of the roadways.

The braking can be a bit odd due to the regenerative capability on offer,
but you can dial that back. You can also make the steering rather heavy,
creating a nice sense of communication with the asphalt, something that Ben
enjoyed in his time behind the wheel. Steering can also be set to be more
comfortable, for everyday driving.

The battery under the floor isn't a lightweight thing, and although it
creates a low center of gravity, it also wants to make the Model 3 go in
whatever direction momentum is carrying it. This makes the car feel planted,
but it also makes you feel the bulk. We didn't drive the Model 3
irresponsibly, but we did get it leaning into corners, and the car certainly
didn't come off as light or tossable.

That said, I prefer RWD Teslas to their AWD counterparts, mainly because
they feel more dynamic.

In normal driving, the Model 3 exhibits a nice, solid personality: smooth,
relatively quiet — even at higher speeds — and the steel construction (the
Model S and X are aluminum) and bulky battery soak up bumps extremely
effectively.

Obviously, there's an element of compromise that comes into play: behind the
wheel, you can feel isolated from the more visceral aspects of driving. But
Tesla designed the Model 3 to appeal to a broad range of customers. For
enthusiasts, there's just enough fun on tap. For non-enthusiasts, the Model
3 isn't intimidating.

And with a truck in back and "frunk" in front, the Model 3 is a sedan that
offers cargo capacity on par with some compact SUVs.

Interior

The interior is groundbreaking. It's the most minimalist I've ever
experienced in a car not intended for racing competition.

I've already offered a take on why the minimalism is magnificent.

But in a nutshell, while the Model 3's interior doesn't wrap you in luxury
or exude a spirit of sportiness, it does provide the sense that you're
interacting with a piece of made-in-Silicon Valley technology.

Like the front of most iPhones, the Model 3 has just one official button
inside: the one for the hazard flashers. Otherwise, the 15-inch touchscreen
in the middle of the dash is the star of the show. It controls all vehicle
functions and replaces the traditional instrument cluster.

The steering wheel is stripped of adornment: just a Tesla logo two
trackballs to manage stuff like audio volume — the in-house stereo system
sounds awesome, by the way — and side-view mirrors. There are no visible air
vents. A single strip of open-grain wood stretches from the left to right
side. Our test car's back synthetic leather upholstery was broken up only by
some modest stitching here and there and some brushed metallic trim. The
windshield sweeps up as a near-continuous pane of glass, across the roof and
down to the rear hatch.

Beautiful to be sure. But also austere. You could say chilly, if it weren't
for the strip of wood.

Technology

There are some drawbacks here, as well as multiple learning curves to
confront. Tesla definitely wants Model 3 customers to think different about
their car.

I'm used to the big touchscreen on the Model S and X. But new Tesla owners
will have to spend some time getting up to speed navigating among the
various menus.

While I was driving, Ben played co-pilot and did all the swiping. I thought
I would be looking to my right often to check out the speedometer and the
Autopilot controls, when the system was engaged, but I rapidly learned to
incorporate the screen into my peripheral vision and spent most of my time
behind the wheel with my eyes in the road (I also spend some time talking
about Led Zeppelin, but that was mainly because I made everybody listen to
classic rock in the audio-streaming setup).

Autopilot is still Autopilot. It's good but not great, a work in progress. I
didn't feel comfortable taking my hands off the wheel in the Model 3,
anymore than I have in other Tesla's running the system. Autopilot remains,
for me, a fine example of very advanced cruise control, and although Tesla
says the Model 3 has the hardware for full autonomy, I'll believe it when I
see it. One difference in the Model 3 from the Models S and X is the lack of
a dedicated Autopilot stalk. To engage it when available, you pull down
twice on the gearshift stalk.

The GPS navigation worked the way it was supposed to, the touchscreen didn't
lag or freeze up, and Bluetooth pairing was easy. There are enough USB ports
to keep several devices charged, front and rear.

It's a totally Tesla infotainment experience. And as you might have heard,
there's no key and no key fob. You have a credit-card size valet "key" that
can turn the Model 3 on, and you can download Tesla's app to your phone and
use that as both a key and a sort of mobile command center. I made it honk
the horn!

Value versus the competition

You can find a Chevy Bolt — $37,499 base price, about 240 miles of range —
for $25,000 if you do a dealer search. It's also versatile and fun to drive,
with lots of nice high-tech features. So at $44,000, you're paying a Tesla
premium for the Model 3, and Tesla doesn't do discounts.

But with Model 3 you're getting a much better-looking car with a cooler
interior, a steady stream of Tesla over-the-air software updates to look
forward to, the Supercharger network, Autopilot, stouter performance, and
whatever intangibles you associate with the Tesla brand.

You will, however, have to wait a while to get one. It's not as if you can
go down to the local Tesla lot and drive a Model 3 home today. A deposit
plunked down will get you a car in a couple of years, most likely.

This won't be the case with the wave of new EVs coming from major
automakers. So you have to factor in a time or a waiting cost with the Model
3.

Still, it's a Tesla! For anybody who has been dreaming about the brand for
over a decade, that's priceless.

The takeaway

I was impressed by the Model 3 in the brief time I had with it last July.
I'm even more impressed now. The car has its flaws, but no dealbreakers. And
it's every bit a Tesla, just at a lower price point.

Ben also liked it. In fact, we probably neglected a good run-through of
Autopilot because we were having too much fun driving the car. Ben likes to
take cars hard into corners, and when he was engaged in one of his favorite
motoring pastimes, it was clear that the Model 3 can handle spirited
backroad driving of the sort that a lot of future owners will enjoy with the
car.

I continue to think that if Tesla can get its act together and start rolling
a lot more Model 3s out the factory door, they're going to have a winner on
their hands. Sure, the Chevy Bolt and the Nissan Leaf are terrific vehicles.
But they just aren't as stylish or sexy as the Model 3.

Many Tesla fans are going to be attracted to the Model 3's more abstract,
high-tech features, ranging from Autopilot to the software updates to the
15-inch screen. That's fine of course, but Ben and I were uniformly
impressed by the Model 3 as a car. At over $55,000 for the Model 3 we
sampled, it's a relatively expensive car, and if you need basic electric
transport, until Tesla move on to the less expensive version, you might
considering looking elsewhere.

We wound up gently comparing the Model 3 with the Audi A4, a sedan that
wildly impressed us with its near perfection when we tested it last year
(our press car was about the same price as the Model 3). The A4 is a nicer
car. But the Model 3 is just as much fun to drive. Probably more so.

Being impressed by the Model 3 as something to drive, in this era of grand
pronouncements about autonomous vehicles, is important. Tesla has been
catching heat for doing a bad job of building Model 3. And to be fair, other
automakers with more experience can craft a vehicle of higher overall
quality, fit, and finish.

Nor is the Model 3 ceaselessly and viscerally enchanting. It can feel
technical and cold, in the way that electric cars do. But if you want a
screaming motor or the symphony of internal combustion, that's what Ferraris
and Mustangs and Corvettes and Porsches are for.

When you get down to it, the Model 3, from a car company that's just 14
years old, is an awful lot of car for the price. Radically different
propulsion, tech galore, high-caliber semi-self-driving. But we derived such
joy from taking the wheel that we didn't much want to give it back. Some of
that might be because driving an all-electric car is different from driving
a gas car.

But much of it can be attributed to the Model 3 being simply good. And as
Tesla improves it in the coming years, truly great isn't out of the
question.
[© businessinsider.com]


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