Big news in Teslaworld today, the new Performance is out and it's a killer deal. Only $3k more than we paid for our Dual Motor (now called Long Range) more than 4 years ago, and only $5k more than the current Long Range. In 2019, I think there was a $12k jump to the Performance.
It's not enough to make me want to trade in, though. There are some things in the 2024 "Highland" cars that I like, such as the heat pump, improved noise isolation, much improved aero, matrix headlights - but none of them are enough to make a meaningful difference to us. The extra performance is mostly academic, as we've never found the car to be lacking on the street and we have other cars for the track.
While looking at pricing - we would have to pay $1500 for our black paint today (no charge in 2019) and another $250 for the mobile connector that was included with our car. That brings the total for the current equivalent to our car to within a couple of hundred dollars of what we paid, not taking inflation and improved tax credits ($12,500!) into account. We bought the right spec back in the day.
I did take the car in for the long overdue alignment after noting a bit of wear on the recent tire rotation. Turns out all four corners were just a bit out of spec on toe. Not any more! In case you want to know what the specs are and how far out it was, here you go.
Tesla has given us free FSD for the month. It's the full monte, enter your destination and the car takes you there. It's really only Level 2 but it feels like Level 3. There was a major version revision last month and that's what they're putting out there for everyone to try. I tried it, it's quite capable. Not 100% smooth on the throttle sometimes, but overall it doesn't feel as much like babysitting a 16 year old. I'm not going to pay $99/mo when it runs out but I respect the improvement. I have expressed my opinions on the fundamental flaw in Level 3 autonomy in the past, I won't do it again.
One interesting thing about the FSD is that the on-screen display levels up, showing what the car is seeing. It's pretty impressive, especially on complex intersections (I only have the one picture, but you can see the detail). Also, the display no longer shows every other car as a Tesla these days :) That's our car in black, waiting to make a right turn. The blue floating rectangles are traffic signals.