Across the past decade, industry disruptor Tesla has been the global automotive success story.
And much of that success has been spearheaded by the affordable Tesla Model 3, more than a million of which have found homes since 2017. But ‘affordable’ is a relative term, and a new one will still set you back just shy of £40k – or nearer £45k for the reassurance of a bigger battery Long Range model.
As our 15 January used buying guide reported, those first cars are now being replaced, so the market is flooded with Model 3s – which is great news for buyers, with prices starting from just £12k.
There’s plenty to choose from, whether you want the standard 252bhp rear-wheel drive model or the loopy 444bhp dual-motor Performance. I decided that 346bhp (and 0-60mph in a shade over 4.0sec) was probably more than enough and a claimed 360-mile range suited me, so I opted for the Long Range AWD.
My car has covered 37,771 miles and, being of 2021 vintage, got a heat pump as standard and was made in China (the timber on the dashboard and doors is the giveaway).
Finished in my favourite colour scheme of Midnight Silver with black pleather interior and attractive silver multispoke 19in wheels, it would retail for around £25k-£28k through Tesla’s Certified Pre-Owned (CPO) scheme, and I picked it up from the Gatwick branch in West Sussex.
“All CPO Teslas undergo a 200-point inspection that goes through all the vitals of the vehicle,” explained sales manager Kul Rajbansh, who ran me through all of the car’s features, pointing out that the tyres on CPO cars must have at least 10,000 miles left on them at the point of sale and there are checks to the cosmetics, interior, battery and brakes.
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I'm surprised and slightly impressed at the range and charging ability.
If all EV's had such a charging network, then range anxiety may be a little easier.
One point I am confused about was the tyres. If they are sold with a minimum 10,000 miles tyre life and they where old dated then surely the dealer should be paying for the replacements.
Or did I misread that ?
After 5,378 miles in a Tucson PHEV i'm getting an average of 78.8mpg and plenty of those miles have been longer trips (beyond the PHEV range of approx 38 miles). On a recent 250 odd mile trip I had 43mpg in a fully laden holiday mode car, so not bad at all. 60-70 mile round trips can be dispatched at approx 60mpg average if you clever with the excellent brake regen setup and intelligent use of petrol and electric switchover depending on road (and sometimes weather) conditions. Works for us esp using the Octopus Go 5hrs of mega cheap elec at £8.50p / kWh - no need to shell out for a home charger either as just use 3 pin plug on an extention. Simples.
I don't remember seeing any reviewer here going on about those who run Chinese car companies, some of whom are closely aligned with the repressive Chinese government, so why single out Musk?
I click on this site to read about cars, not to read reviewers personal political jibes. Can you stick to that Autocar?
You may not care one way or the other about Musk, but when some owners are selling their cars, sales are taking a dive alongside the share price and dealerships are set on fire because of his political views, then clearly it matters to a significant number of people. If one line in a six month report is sufficient to upset you, you might want to consider reading something more bland.