this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2023
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Counterpoint: Ive taken numerous road trips in both of our family's Tesla (Tesli?) as well as a couple loaners, and the built in navigation is always spot on with the estimates. Like it's eerie how it can predict within a percentage point on a 2 hour or more drive within the first 10 minutes of a trip.
Range anxiety really is only experienced by those that it doesn't affect (i.e. potential buyers)
It sounds like your talking about you put an address in gps and it gives you an accurate number.
The article is talking about it's version of a gas gauge, where it says X miles remaining, and that is what's inflated.
Trying to lie on the gps would cause more complaints as people got stranded, the fraud was lying on the "gas gauge" where it would be hard for a customer to realize they had less juice than they were being told.
The number it gives is based on ideal driving. If it says there's 200 miles left, no one should be surprised they don't get 200 miles when they drive 85 on the highway
Except the article is saying that they purposely inflated the number it gives.