The Niagara Falls Review

Tesla hiring, expanding service ahead of Model 3 sales

- DEE-ANN DURBIN

DETROIT — Electric car maker Tesla is expanding its service operations and hiring more than 1,000 technician­s to meet expected demand for its new Model 3 sedan.

The Model 3, cheaper than Tesla’s existing cars, goes on sale this month and is expected to attract hundreds of thousands of new customers to the brand.

To accommodat­e them, the company is adding 100 new service centres worldwide over the next year, bringing its total number of service centres to 250. The new service centres will be in areas that have the most reservatio­n-holders for the Model 3.

Tesla also is adding 350 vans to its mobile service fleet, mostly in the U.S. The vans go to owners’ homes or offices and repair their cars. The vans are equipped with tools and replacemen­t parts as well as an espresso machine, snacks and kids’ toys.

Until now, Tesla had around 30 mobile repair vans, which were used mostly in cases where the owner lived too far from a service centre. About six months ago, the company began deploying the vans in the San Francisco area in order to ease the burden on its service centres and see if they could help meet anticipate­d demand for the Model 3. Customers were happy with the new arrangemen­t, so the company decided to roll out mobile service in more locations. Tesla is hiring 1,400 new service technician­s this year to staff the service centres and mobile repair vans

At a starting price of $35,000, the Model 3 is about half the cost of Tesla’s two other models. Tesla hasn’t said how many people hold refundable, $1,000 reservatio­ns for the car. It has said it expects to make 500,000 vehicles in 2018, up from 84,000 last year.

Like its stores, which are owned by the company and not by franchised dealers, Tesla’s service model is unusual. Tesla CEO Elon Musk said several years ago that unlike traditiona­l dealership­s, Tesla didn’t intend to make a profit on service and repairs, partly because electric cars don’t need regular oil changes or other maintenanc­e that gasoline-powered cars do. U.S. dealers made $110 billion in service and parts sales last year, according to the National Automobile Dealers Associatio­n.

Tesla said it’s charging the same amount for non-warranty repairs whether they’re done at service centres or through mobile vans. It hasn’t released details on the warranty plan for the Model 3, so it’s not yet clear if it will match Tesla’s other vehicles. The Model S and Model X have a four-year, 50,000mile vehicle warranty and an eightyear battery warranty with unlimited miles.

While other luxury brands like Lincoln and Genesis will pick up vehicles from customers and take them to a service centre, Tesla doesn’t want cars to go to a service centre if repairs can be done remotely. The company says 80 per cent of repairs to its cars, including replacing the tires or fixing electronic glitches, can be done without a lift, which means it’s just as easy to perform them out of a mobile repair van. That leaves service centres free to concentrat­e on more complicate­d repairs that require a lift, like motor or battery problems.

The system isn’t perfect. In online owner forums, some Tesla drivers have complained of long waits for service and inability to use trusted local repair shops because they aren’t certified by Tesla. Tesla certifies some repair shops to do body work when the outside of the car is damaged, but shops have to go through special training to get certified.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Electric automaker Tesla is hiring more than 1,000 people and expanding its service operations to meet the demand expected for its forthcomin­g Model 3, seen above.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Electric automaker Tesla is hiring more than 1,000 people and expanding its service operations to meet the demand expected for its forthcomin­g Model 3, seen above.

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