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expired Posted by chunmanc123 • Oct 6, 2023
expired Posted by chunmanc123 • Oct 6, 2023

Tesla Model Y Dual Motor AWD Long Range $48490 + $7,500 Federal Tax Credit (For Qualifying Buyers)

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https://www.tesla.com/modely/design#overview

Tesla Model Y

Dual Motor
All-Wheel Drive
Range: 330mi
Top Speed: 135 mph
0-60 mph: 4.8 seconds


Qualify for $7500 Federal Tax Credit with below income cap:
Adjusted Gross Income Limitations
$300,000 for married couples filing jointly
$225,000 for heads of households
$150,000 for all other filers

QA Note: List Price Drop

Rear-Wheel Drive is $43,990

Dual Motor AWD Long Range is $48,490 Now $48,990

Extra Discount for already built ones, change to your zip code and check
https://www.tesla.com/inventory/n...&range=100

Please use the referral link [ts.la] when you purchase one. Thank you!
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
https://www.tesla.com/modely/design#overview

Tesla Model Y

Dual Motor
All-Wheel Drive
Range: 330mi
Top Speed: 135 mph
0-60 mph: 4.8 seconds


Qualify for $7500 Federal Tax Credit with below income cap:
Adjusted Gross Income Limitations
$300,000 for married couples filing jointly
$225,000 for heads of households
$150,000 for all other filers

QA Note: List Price Drop

Rear-Wheel Drive is $43,990

Dual Motor AWD Long Range is $48,490 Now $48,990

Extra Discount for already built ones, change to your zip code and check
https://www.tesla.com/inventory/n...&range=100

Please use the referral link [ts.la] when you purchase one. Thank you!

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Oct 8, 2023
42 Posts
Joined Mar 2008
Oct 8, 2023
jjoshua2
Oct 8, 2023
42 Posts
Quote from jfk123 :
There isn't, but I think there are two points:

1. It was claimed quite a few posts back that instead of pure EV, a PHEV might make more sense, economically. I don't know whether that's true or not but I think it's definitely a good debate to be had.
2. I think given much higher relative price, even after tax credits, one must really be charging at home to make most economic sense instead of superchargers. I don't think that's an outrageous claim to make.

Bottom line though, I'm actually actively considering a Tesla Model Y LR. As a matter of fact I just test drove one again today. To that end I really appreciate real life usage information instead of the all sunshine blow smoke up my rear end ones exhibited from some here, like pretending it's not more expensive, insurance is not more expensive or range and charging speeds isn't a consideration. One can acknowledge there are flaws and weaknesses and still think it's a good car. Tell me the good and the bad.
You have to get your own quote for insurance from several companies. Some will like me can get quotes for $300 for 6 months like me and others literally get $3000 quotes. (I upgraded to $450 / 6 month plan to get 2nd driver and enough coverage for umbrella insurance.) I got a new M3 for 26k after rebates and inventory discounts, which is cheaper than the 2020 used civic hatchback my friend just bought, and I was considering as an alternative. But even with all this if I couldn't charge at home at least with a 120v in garage I wouldn't have done it, because I really value convenience.
And I opted to run a 60 amp 240v line 60 ft from basement that cost $1000 for electrician to do permits, material and install, but I get about $800 back between state, utility and federal credits.
Oct 8, 2023
1,951 Posts
Joined Jan 2005
Oct 8, 2023
snotrag
Oct 8, 2023
1,951 Posts
Quote from bigDeal44 :
Have to TD on principle. Their price shenanigans have made my loan higher than what the car is worth new now 😄
Well that'll bum Elon out.
Oct 8, 2023
306 Posts
Joined Sep 2010
Oct 8, 2023
jskibo
Oct 8, 2023
306 Posts
Quote from ericeast :
You forgot the cost of a battery replacement around 8 years or so. That's between 12k-15k
Wow, you can predict the cost of batteries eight years from now? Amazing
1
Oct 8, 2023
11 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
Oct 8, 2023
ZaleZ
Oct 8, 2023
11 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ZaleZ

Quote from ggapropros :
Theres plenty of model S that are over 8 years old. Model 3 is 2017, so you have people with 200,000 miles on it, which is close enough to 8 years/120,000 miles. Its NCA battery chemistry like the first model S. Ironically this is more time tested then most gasoline engines in a new gasoline car.
No offense, but your post is pure crack smoke. I own a high milage early Tesla model s and it has had so many problems.

AMA.
1
Oct 8, 2023
4,069 Posts
Joined Nov 2005
Oct 8, 2023
MCeatalot
Oct 8, 2023
4,069 Posts
Quote from jskibo :
Wow, you can predict the cost of batteries eight years from now? Amazing
That estimate isn't far off. Replacement for my 10-year old Chevy Volt runs between $6-$8k, and that has a battery pack a quarter of the size of a Tesla.
Oct 8, 2023
15,329 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
Oct 8, 2023
Knightshade
Oct 8, 2023
15,329 Posts
Quote from ZaleZ :
No offense, but your post is pure crack smoke. I own a high milage early Tesla model s and it has had so many problems.

AMA.

Your is the exception not the norm though.

Again, two different sets of fleet sourced data show at 200,000 miles owners average 88% of original range for example- and that's with the earliest, oldest, battery and cooling tech that's been improved multiple times since.

(To be fair the self-presenting door handles on the early S had a LOT of issues-- as did the eMMC.... but they don't use that type of either on the 3 or Y at all, and even the S one has been revised multiple times since then on both items)
3
Oct 8, 2023
101 Posts
Joined Nov 2014
Oct 8, 2023
ISiCK
Oct 8, 2023
101 Posts
Quote from etilord :
My 2019 Model 3 is pretty quiet. I rented a newer Model 3 from Hertz once, that one had terrible noise. My guess is it depends on when and where it was manufactured.
You might be right. I have a 2021 Model Y and when going 65 to 75 on the highway it is awfully loud on the inside.

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Oct 8, 2023
106 Posts
Joined Mar 2016
Oct 8, 2023
jfk123
Oct 8, 2023
106 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank jfk123

Quote from Knightshade :
Correct, the IRS would add $7500 to what you owe them... .eligibility in that regard is not changing in 2024.

NOTE: You can use your income from the year you buy the EV or the previous year-- that's also true in 2023.


The major change for 2024 onward, besides being point of sale, is if your tax liability is LESS than $7500 you still get the full $7500 and get to keep it.









I mean, if you don't consider more than 2 out of 3 people a vast majority, that's on you... because once you include all the non-detached single family homes where they can ALSO charge you're at least to that number- likely higher.





No I'm not.

Unless you think there's some MASSIVE percentage of single family homes that are entirely empty. (there's not)

https://data.census.gov/table/ACSDP1Y2022.DP04
That's the raw data.

61.3% of units are single family detached.

Another 6.2% are single family attached (which frequently have driveways and garages)

Another 5.6% are mobile homes- where again there's typically parking you could plug in a car in front of/next to the home.

We're up to 73.1% of all housing in the US. Even if HALF the single family attached have NO parking, you're still over 70% where home charging is doable.

A few more percent (3.3) are duplexes- where again there's often at least a driveway if not garage to charge in.


Vacancy rates are only 0.8% owner owned and 5.1% rental (and obviously the rentals will slew heavily toward multi-unit for apartments.

So yes, you're talking at least 2 out of every 3 people can charge at home, likely more.

Which seems a pretty vast majority to me.



Please tell me you didn't waste everyones time with these ridiculous replies because you're debating what 'vast' means?







Why?

Is your garage only the exact length, width, and height of your car?

And are there no EXISTING 120v sockets? Because seems that'd be plenty for NYC where you're not driving 100 miles a day around the city and coming back to it anyway unless you're a cab driver (and if you are, there's at least 5 multi-stall Tesla destination chargers in Manhattan- I've seen more than a few Teslas as cabs there and they seem to be doing fine)




You again made a pedantic argument only applicable to your specific case and not the majority of americans?

Yes, I do see!




Right... which is why I mentioned you have to include some NON single family homes in the "can charge at home" stat too, putting it even higher than just the single family ones.





They don't.

For one, the majority of people in NYC don't even own a car anyway.

For another, the folks in say a 5 story walkup with no assigned parking would be in that minority of americans who can't charge at home.





Again, even 30% of the US population is lots of people-- are you planning to individually name the ones who can't charge or something? You're making less and less sense as you go. I never claimed EVERYONE could charge at home... Just most.




Except I'm not because I specifically said most people are at home more than 8 hours.

Do you get home, immediately sleep, then 8 hours later immediately wake up and instantly leave?

No?

Neither does hardly anyone else.

Again you ignored what I actually said and made up a silly strawman.
You have regurgitated for me for the THIRD TIME the exact same thing DESPITE me telling you that's not the point. Heck, in my last reply to you I even highlight to you VIA POINT 1 AND POINT 2 EXACTLY WHAT I WANTED YOU TO RESPOND. I DON'T deny that homeownership rates in American can reach 65%. In fact, I POSTED THAT VERY DATA. I also DON'T deny that 63 to 64% of homes in America are single family. I POSTED THAT VERY DATA TOO. What I challenged you, which YET AGAIN you've not responded is, what percentage of homes in American are SIMULTANEOUSLY single family AND owner-occupied, because that's the case where an EV could install a home charger. From which you gave me some vacancy which is NOT WHAT I ASKED FOR. I'm starting to think this whole English reading comprehension is not your forte, but you somehow felt you came on top on this one. Hilarious.

And are you seriously asking me if my garage is exactly the same length, width and height of my car? No it's not, but I don't know if you actually seen the inside of a garage. Some of the longer cars are already abutting out of the spots. Let's add a couple more inches each. The neighbors must absolutely love you.

You don't have to drive 100 miles a day around NYC. You can, however, absolutely drive more than 24 miles, which is your 8 hour charge. And when you cite plenty of multi-stall chargers in Manhattan, the part you sort of neglected to mention is that they'll charge you $25 parking ON TOP of what you pay at the superchargers. Real economical.

Again, you don't grasp the concept of SINGLE FAMILY HOME AND OWNER OCCUPANCY. Nowhere in your post have you posted that number. Which makes your "vast majority" claim highly laughable.

Did I bring up a silly strawman? Actually I didn't. YOU BROUGHT UP 8 HOUR OVERNIGHT CHARGE. I brought up 3 miles per hour. You're the one that said "so what, they charge overnight and it's good enough for most Americans."

Aside from the fact that, as I've shown with actual data (as opposed to our made up one) that no, it is in fact not enough for most Americans, your example is hilarious in other ways too. It assumes that people can reliably drive 24 or 37 or whatever miles each and everyday without fluctuation. What happens in reality, instead of your made up world, is people go to work, they might decide to go out. They visit family. Kids have soccer practice. There's a snowstorm and people get stuck in traffic burning heating. And yes, New Yorkers might go to Montauk or Connecticut (what a concept, I know). And if they drove to the office the day before but have to use an 120V outlet, they might not, gasp, get there.
1
Oct 8, 2023
19 Posts
Joined Jan 2012
Oct 8, 2023
Kel69
Oct 8, 2023
19 Posts
Too bad, there don't have lease buyout
Oct 8, 2023
106 Posts
Joined Mar 2016
Oct 8, 2023
jfk123
Oct 8, 2023
106 Posts
Quote from jjoshua2 :
You have to get your own quote for insurance from several companies. Some will like me can get quotes for $300 for 6 months like me and others literally get $3000 quotes. (I upgraded to $450 / 6 month plan to get 2nd driver and enough coverage for umbrella insurance.) I got a new M3 for 26k after rebates and inventory discounts, which is cheaper than the 2020 used civic hatchback my friend just bought, and I was considering as an alternative. But even with all this if I couldn't charge at home at least with a 120v in garage I wouldn't have done it, because I really value convenience.
And I opted to run a 60 amp 240v line 60 ft from basement that cost $1000 for electrician to do permits, material and install, but I get about $800 back between state, utility and federal credits.
No offense or anything, as I am actually in the market for one, I literally did over a dozen insurance quotes, including multi-car discounts, multi-product discounts, safe driver, loyalty discount from my current company, driving courses, etc.

I'm stating that, apples to apples, same level of coverage in liability/injury/etc, a Tesla costs about twice as much as my 2 ICE cars (which to be fair, the first is pretty old, which is why I'm in the market). I can of course get the coverage cheaper by reducing my coverage, but that's hardly the same comparison is it?

I'm still considering one so I'll probably suck up the insurance cost, but let's not pretend it's not more expensive.
Oct 8, 2023
394 Posts
Joined Nov 2007
Oct 8, 2023
seekdealz
Oct 8, 2023
394 Posts
Quote from jockobot :
Is it real vegan leather though.....lol
Isnt Vegan leather the cheap synthetic stuff that eventually cracks and peels?
Oct 8, 2023
15,329 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
Oct 8, 2023
Knightshade
Oct 8, 2023
15,329 Posts
Quote from jfk123 :
You have regurgitated for me for the THIRD TIME the exact same thing
I can explain it to you.

I can't understand it for you.

Sorry.


Quote from jfk123 :
DESPITE me telling you that's not the point.
Yes- you ignored the things I originally wrote, and made up a series of strawmen nobody was actually debating.


Quote from jfk123 :
I also DON'T deny that 63 to 64% of homes in America are single family. I POSTED THAT VERY DATA TOO.
Yes, after I'd already cited it a few times and you called me a liar over it. Glad you admit you were wrong!


Quote from jfk123 :
What I challenged you, which YET AGAIN you've not responded is, what percentage of homes in American are SIMULTANEOUSLY single family AND owner-occupied

Since that's never been an argument I ever made why would you "challenge" me on it?


Again- strawman.



Quote from jfk123 :
, because that's the case where an EV could install a home charger.

Again false.

120v overnight is fine for the average miles driven by Americans, so a 120v charger does them fine.

Plus the huge % who CAN install a 240- or already HAVE one via a garage plug with one, or a dryer plug with one, or an oven plug with one.


Again you seem desperate to find SOME kind of argument because you have some arbitrary definition of "vast" for majority and are SURE it disagrees with mine...for...REASONS.



Quote from jfk123 :
And are you seriously asking me if my garage is exactly the same length, width and height of my car? No it's not,
Then you have room for a charger.

Quote from jfk123 :
but I don't know if you actually seen the inside of a garage. Some of the longer cars are already abutting out of the spots. Let's add a couple more inches each. The neighbors must absolutely love you.
...what?

How would mounting a charger on the garage wall higher than the car impact the neighbors? At all?

Are you sure you mean a garage and not a parking lot?


Quote from jfk123 :
You don't have to drive 100 miles a day around NYC. You can, however, absolutely drive more than 24 miles, which is your 8 hour charge.

Again people are not generally ONLY home for just 8 hours every day. Another strawman.




Quote from jfk123 :
Did I bring up a silly strawman?
Several.



Quote from jfk123 :
Actually I didn't. YOU BROUGHT UP 8 HOUR OVERNIGHT CHARGE.
Except, of course, I did not.

I brought up overnight.

You strawmanned it by inserting the 8 hour thing.


Here's me specifically pointing out it's more than 8 from a previous post when you first tried that slight of hand.


Quote from Knightshade :
Which means charging overnight (most folks are home more than 8 hours a day) gives you back about as much range as the average American drives in a day..


Even PRE covid americans spent an average of 50 percent of their waking hours at home... add in the 8 hours they're actually asleep and you get... quite a bit more than 8 hours a day to have the car plugged in.

And that # is even higher now.


Quote from jfk123 :
. And yes, New Yorkers might go to Montauk or Connecticut (what a concept, I know).
In which case they pass a BUNCH of superchargers that don't charge for parking there and back (at least a dozen, one way, to Montauk from Manhattan for example)

So again a fake problem.
Last edited by Knightshade October 7, 2023 at 07:49 PM.
4
Oct 8, 2023
6,601 Posts
Joined Oct 2005
Oct 8, 2023
mystery250
Oct 8, 2023
6,601 Posts
Quote from seekdealz :
Isnt Vegan leather the cheap synthetic stuff that eventually cracks and peels?
Yup. Good old pleather.
Oct 8, 2023
230 Posts
Joined Jul 2014
Oct 8, 2023
Dm3k1
Oct 8, 2023
230 Posts
Quote from cloudiett :
I wonder if I should trade in my model 3 for model y. I hate all the interior noise from model 3.
Have driven both, the model 3 with the smaller wheels is the best overall ride- that said quality on ALL these is a bit of a crap shoot, ours has very little cabin noise, no rattles or anything - but we've driven one that surely did…

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Oct 8, 2023
31 Posts
Joined Jan 2006
Oct 8, 2023
nookala
Oct 8, 2023
31 Posts
Quote from Knightshade :
Your is the exception not the norm though.

Again, two different sets of fleet sourced data show at 200,000 miles owners average 88% of original range for example- and that's with the earliest, oldest, battery and cooling tech that's been improved multiple times since.

(To be fair the self-presenting door handles on the early S had a LOT of issues-- as did the eMMC.... but they don't use that type of either on the 3 or Y at all, and even the S one has been revised multiple times since then on both items)
Model S batteries failing is the norm, not the exception. Search for Tesla BMS 029 errors. Can you point me to data regarding no failures for 200-250k miles? Cars that have made it that far have had multiple battery replacements. I'm pro EV, but people need to be aware of the reality of battery life and the cost.
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