You'd expect a web site named "howstuffworks.com" to be an excellent source of information on, well, how stuff works. If so, check out HSW's entry "How the Tesla Roadster Works." Author Ed Grabianowskii states the Roadster is "fast, fancy, handles like a dream and goes like a rocket." Since the only road-tested Teslas have been prototypes driven under tightly-controlled conditions, Grabianowski's description requires a distinct leap of faith. Likewise, even though Tesla has delayed production numerous times, he gushes, inaccurately enough, "Tesla's first production car is also the world's first high-performance electric car." Like most of the mainstream media, HSW is happy to parrot Tesla's official claims without question: "An electrician can install a recharging station in your garage. This 220-volt, 70-amp outlet allows for a full recharge in 3.5 hours from a completely dead battery." And here's the kicker: the reference link to safety claims leads to a Tesla web page proclaiming "We're sorry, the page you requested has been moved or is not available." Perhaps HSW should to change the website's name to howpressreleasessaythingswork.com.
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Wasn’t Tesla Birthwatch #15 entitled “Huh?” Where did that one go?
Bumblebee :
I removed Tesla Birthwatch 15 after Tesla challenged the accuracy of our report. Further fact-checking revealed that the previous number 15 was misleading in one case, just plain wrong in another.
It may seem ironic given the article above, but I believe the key to good journalism is to admit your mistakes when you make them, correct them as quickly as possible, learn your lesson and always strive for accuracy.
Thanks for being so honest Robert, thats part of the reason I love this site.
>>Author Ed Grabianowskii states the Roadster is “fast, fancy, handles like a dream and goes like a rocket.”
Having ridden in one at high speed on the SF Peninsula’s coastal range, I can vouch for this.
Now if they could just mass produce them. I think it was Wired Magazine that called them one of 2007’s Vaporware Of The Year products.
Observers have to wonder about the Tesla’s gestation. Hope this series doesn’t have to be renamed Tesla Stillbirth Watch.
Would “world’s first high-performance electric car” be something like Ferdinand Porsche’s vehicles at the beginning of the 20th century? They wouldn’t be considered “high performance” by today’s standards but they ran very competitively with IC cars of the time.
Sorry the following comment was written before I read the preceeding articles. I think the gearbox might be solvable. Battery pack synchronization through hundreds of charge/discharge cycles is a real challenge.
Q Why does a you-beaut electric car need a two speed gearbox?
A For the same reason as any other vehicle.
Problem is that you’ve got to handle rather hefty torques seamlessly. As usual, electrical projects run into problems at the mechanical interfaces.
Robert Farago: Thanks.
I’m intrigued by how closely Tesla monitors car blogs and challenges or corrects them. Just as your frankness reinforces your credibility, Tesla’s attention to what you’re saying about them reinforces theirs.
However, in the case of Tesla, there are larger challenges to their credibility that they refuse to confront. While those challenges may loom larger larger in my mind than in the minds of others, I would suppose someone who may actually buy an $89,000 sports car would be quite discerning.