Insurance fraud?

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There you have it. Those write offs are highly profitable.

A saner person might have stopped to think about how much they actually sold them for, before shooting their mouth off with that comment, but I think we all know you're not that person... :ROFLMAO:
 
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A saner person might have stopped to think about how much they actually sold them for, before shooting their mouth off with that comment, but I think we all know you're not that person... :ROFLMAO:
You said you bought lots. Surely that would indicate good deal/profit? Is my earlier observation of your business acumen more correct?
 
Spoke to a friend yesterday who was conned into leasing a tesla.
His insurance has doubled this year.
Maybe @DiyNutJob is on to something regarding insurance companies preferring to insure ice vehicles rather than the non repairable ev.
 
Why don't you stop digging holes ?

It's a tale as old as time... (or at least, Nutjob's membership of this forum). It follows a well-worn pattern. He asks a question, people more knowledgeable than him respond, and then he wastes many pages of pixels making a fool of himself trying to tell them they're wrong...;)
 
the non repairable ev.


AFAIAW, Tesla are an outlier in that regard, as structural elements are "gigacast", glued, rivetted.

They are repairable, but at greater faff, time, and expense.

The "traditional" manufacturers build their EVs - drivetrains apart - in a similar fashion to their ICE cars, and so crash damage is no more troublesome than previously.
 
AFAIAW, Tesla are an outlier in that regard, as structural elements are "gigacast", glued, rivetted.

They are repairable, but at greater faff, time, and expense.

The "traditional" manufacturers build their EVs - drivetrains apart - in a similar fashion to their ICE cars, and so crash damage is no more troublesome than previously.

Yes, that's exactly it. Plus Tesla have a very poor reputation for parts supply, so people waiting for repairs end up spending a lot longer in courtesy cars. To be fair, not all of them use glued-together batteries either. I think Tesla are starting to realise that it was a stupid idea now. Plus, of course, crash repair shops are having to learn new skills and techniques - just like they did when cars with metallic paint, aluminium structural components, windscreen-mounted sensors and airbags started to appear.
 
AFAIAW, Tesla are an outlier in that regard, as structural elements are "gigacast", glued, rivetted.

They are repairable, but at greater faff, time, and expense.
My son and his wife went away with some of their mates and their wives. One of them had a Tesla. There was no charger at the property they were staying at but apparently it could be charged through a normal plug but would take ages. He pulled it close to the house and plugged it in through the kitchen window. Just as he had done that, they heard a rattle and a tile fell off the roof and went through the windscreen but it had also clipped the front pillar. It had to go back to Tesla for a specialised repair as his insurance company insisted on it.
 
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