From: MoveForward, in ENN.com, Electric Forum, More from this Affiliate
Tesla image via Shutterstock. |
The company is looking to introduce a mass-market affordable electric vehicle within the next four or five years and despite skepticism by some experts there are few who would bet against Elon Musk leading the company onwards and upwards. But will Tesla ever really crack the mass market?
Reputation
means everything
It will be long forgotten in years to come that Tesla Motors was the company, which put the electric vehicle market on the map and has built a reputation for reliability and groundbreaking technology.
Quote from ElectricForum.com: "There’s no doubt that the name of Elon Musk is synonymous with Tesla but where do you think Tesla would be today if Elon Musk had not been at the helm?"
Some experts believe that Elon Musk has bitten off more than he can chew by targeting an affordable electric vehicle for the mass-market. They point out that the company's reputation has been gained at the higher end of the luxury market where perhaps price is not as sensitive as luxury, comfort and groundbreaking technology. However, Elon Musk is certainly not a man to sit on his laurels and if the company believes it can hit the mass market by 2017 then there must be something in the pipeline!
Secrecy
is paramount
The fact is that there are few companies as PR savvy as Tesla Motors, which manages to keep all of its secrets away from the mass media.
Read more at ENN affiliate Electric Forum.
By Mary Beth Quirk in
the Consumerist
(ValueWalk) |
In
the third fiery incident since October,
another Tesla Model S electric car caught fire after hitting road debris. This
time the blaze erupted in Tennessee after the car ran over a tow hitch on the
interstate, possibly damaging the undercarriage and sparking an electrical fire.
Valuewalk
posted the news after a commenter shared a photo of the fire on a Tesla forum,
and a spokeswoman for the company has confirmed the fire, noting that it wasn’t
spontaneous.
“We
have been in contact with the driver, who was not injured and believes the car
saved his life. Our team is on its way to Tennessee to learn more about what
happened,” she says. “We will provide more information when we’re able to do
so.”
It
sounds a lot like the first fiery incident in October, when the driver also hit
road debris that punctured a shield and pierced the battery pack. Another blaze
flamed up in Mexico when the driver ran over a roundabout and crashed into a
concrete wall at high speed.
After
the initial Tesla inferno, the company’s CEO Elon Musk responded with a blog
post noting that the fire was contained to the front of the vehicle,
which also appears to be the case this time. Maybe Musk will weigh in again,
but in the meantime it sounds like Tesla owners should try to avoid driving
over stuff.