No, you're not being sarcastic, you're just being KiwiRob and talking nonsense. Even on a suv nation like mine, the vast majority of owners don't tow anything nor put anything on the roof. I've only seem once a crossover carrying bikes on the roof, and it was a GLA, a car whose roof is barely higher than a hatchback like mine. Same with boxes. Suv are too damn high to be practical and carry stuff on their roofs.
Lastly, if you think the car doesn't suit you, great, you made your point more than once and ad nauseam, so please move on and stop spreading your ill hate and contaminating this thread
So what happens in Bolivia means jack shit. BTW how many Model S have been sold in Bolivia?
It's basically a lifted, cooler station wagon.
but I'm not going to throw money at one today.
You just hit the nail on it's head as well, this is no SUV it's a minivan in drag.
So what happens in Bolivia means jack shit. BTW how many Model S have been sold in Bolivia?
And what happens in Norway does?
BTW, I think Holland is he biggest market of Tesla in the world, looking at the numbers sold vs the number of people living here. And even though it looks, uhm, weird, it will sell like hotcakes.
Yes, like quite a few other SUVs in the market today.
And most of these come with the ability to tow.
Man, do you seriously think that someone who wants a new car and will use the said car for towing, will ever consider an electric car, of whatever brand?
Tesla has a completely different target group and they are just using the same modular underpinnings to launch a (small) variety of different bodies, just to cater a wider variety of needs. They are about to launch a SUV styled Model X, for those that don't want a sedan or sportscar. They didn't set to create the electric Land Rover Defender of the 21st century.
I can't 'speak' for other countries, but as far as Norway goes, @KiwiRob does have a point sir. Not that anyone would use the car strictly for towing, but to be able to tow every now and then really does help from time to time. And a lot of people here actually do put things on their car roof for whatever reasons (skiing, trips, and so on), you see it all the time... And if Norway is one of the markets Tesla aims for with this Model X, then it's a bit of a letdown IMO. Not that I'm considering one, just thinking out loud.
@montana
I am of the opinion that if you want good off road abilities, great towing abilities, etc, you buy yourself a diesel SUV with a ladder chassis.
Our friend, KiwiRob, is of the opinion that the Model X should be either the best, or nothing. Well, it can't be. It can't be the ultimate trailer towing vehicle and it can't have the ultimate off road capabilities of a Unimog.
Towing?
Tesla Model X Spotted while Towing a Dump Trailer, Testing 10,000 lbs Towing Capacity
Now, if you remember, previous spyshots revealed a tow hitch coming out of the camouflage foil that was generously covering the car. It looks like Elon Musk thought it was high time engineers tested the towing capacity announced by Jim Chen, Vice President of Regulatory Affairs for Tesla, during the Georgia Technology Summit.
We're talking about a theoretical towing capacity close to 10,000 pounds, or 4,535 kg. Just to put things into perspective, consider this: the Ram 1500 Express has a maximum towing capacity of 10,500 lbs (4,762 kg), so yeah, the Model X will also know how to throw a punch, if we are to put it metaphorically.
Also, if we consider the trailer weighs around 1,500 lbs (680 kg), you'd still have 7,500 pounds (3,402 kg) worth of speedboat, motorcycles or whatnot to pull from A to B.
Autoevolution
I disagree with you, an SUV should at the very minimum be able to tow, load items on the roof, take a family up a skifield access road, it's an SUV, not a sports car. A Defender is a pretty terrible thing to use as a daily driver in a city environment, a Mog would be even worse, I couldn't imagine anyone being that daft.
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