slave1 wrote: » In fairness to Nissan, they’ve decent pricing
Shefwedfan wrote: » Hence why you partner with larger company, they had a relationship with Merc which is gone now Ford needed help to transfer to electric and are now with VW.... Let’s say they partner with Ford, both American so I’m sure they would get some benefits. They would get ready access to huge manufacturing and they would get access to money to get more batteries..... Doing it solo, which looks to be Musk choice, might end up killing the company long term
Mike9832 wrote: » No rush when you have no competition Tesla are now the best selling EV producer in Europe and US They will partner with Toyota sometime in the future imo, both are in partnership with Panasonic for battery supply
Shefwedfan wrote: » The problem is they announce it and then say it will be 2021 before it will start selling. So why bother? if they are going to wait around for so long then why not do something different...
Shefwedfan wrote: » I love this "best selling" stuff..... In reality what percentage of the market does Tesla have? would they have got to 1% yet? in either US or Europe? How many cars have Tesla sold in Europe to be number 1? The BEV market at the moment in Europe for instance is what percentage of the total sales in Europe? would it be 1-2%?
T-b0n3 wrote: » Anyone care to guesstimate when we can expect the Model Y over here? Surely it will be quicker than the M3, but still years no doubt!
unkel wrote: » I saw those pictures last night. Looking good for any of us with 5 in the family. Back seat size looks typical for a large D-segment car (i.e. Modeo or Passat) or any E-segment cars (BMW 5-series, Mercedes E-class, etc.). And as such a full size up from the Model 3 (a small D-segment car) and the likes of Ioniq and Leaf (large C-segment cars) I'd say 3 teenagers or even adults (as long as they are not big) could travel in the back in reasonable comfort
Idbatterim wrote: » HOW much will they sell for here I wonder ?
Ryath wrote: » Boot looks quite large. Probably the first nearly affordable Ev that would meet my needs. Was considering if I could downsize to get in an Ev but a golden retriever has put an end to that idea. Currently have a 7 seater in 5 seat mode most of the time. 3 foot crate fits down one side of boot but he’s nearly too big for that now at 5 months!
unkel wrote: » The good thing is that it will be an EU built car and will not attract import duty (like the Model 3 does). This will shave a few grand of the price of the car
liamog wrote: » The cynic in me reckons an extra 10% profit for Tesla!
unkel wrote: » The market won't be as one sided anymore in 2022 there will be a lot more competition! Now the Model 3 is in a league of its own. Selling like hotcakes and I'd say Tesla are making substantial profits on each and every one of them. And fair play, that is what a company is supposed to do in our capitalist society.
ELM327 wrote: » considering they are price 1-1.5k more than the equivalent M3 in the US I'd estimate take the M3 price here and add 2k EUR
Gumbo wrote: » I’d say look at the % difference between the the Y and the 3 in the US and then apply a similar % for here.