Los Angeles Times

Tesla buyers face delays for service

It may take weeks to get an appointmen­t for repairs.

- By Russ Mitchell

SAN FRANCISCO — As Tesla ramps up its Fremont, Calif., factory to escape what Elon Musk called “production hell” with its new Model 3 electric sedan, some customers are enduring their own state of suffering trying to get Teslas serviced.

Parts shortages, long repair delays and problems getting through on customer help lines have led to scenes of strife at Tesla’s service centers.

At the entrance to the company’s Dublin, Calif., center recently, an agitated Model X owner was trying to drop his sport utility vehicle off for repair. A Tesla service agent said he couldn’t leave the car there because the facility was too busy. He could make an appointmen­t to bring it in another time, maybe in a couple of weeks.

“But I don’t want to drive it!” said Kaushal Bhaskar, a software engineer from nearby San Ramon who complained he sometimes couldn’t get the passenger door to open, while other times the door would open on its own — including once on the interstate at highway speeds. “This is a safety concern for me!”

Another service rep was assisting Mike, the owner of a red Model 3 with door-lock problems who declined to give his last name. He’d lock the car, walk away, and it would electronic­ally unlock itself. That caused him to alter his vacation plans. “I couldn’t take it to Yosemite like that,” he said.

The agent said Mike would have to leave the car there awhile: “The amount of cases I’ve got right now is unbelievab­le.”

Service complaints are common at traditiona­l automobile dealers, of course, even for new cars. But weeks-long waits for basic auto repair are rare, and months-long waits for body parts are practicall­y unheard of for all but the most exotic vehicles, because spare parts from automakers and after-market manufactur­ers are stocked in inventory.

Spare body parts for repair almost always are made by the original manufactur­er, said Bill Hampton, editor of the industry trade publicatio­n AutoBeat Daily.

But, he said, it’s not surprising that such parts aren’t a top priority right now at Tesla.

“When you’re making dramatic efforts to manufactur­e 5,000 [Model 3s] in one week, you sure can’t say, ‘Hey, some guy in Topeka needs a new hood. Too bad,’ ” Hampton said.

The parts shortage goes well beyond California. In Norway, the third-largest market for Tesla cars after the U.S. and China, some customers told Norwegian media they have been waiting months on body parts for their damaged Teslas. Musk addressed the Norway problem on Twitter on July 5, saying “Norwegians are right to be upset with Tesla. We are having trouble expanding our service facilities in Oslo

especially. Can solve quickly with Tesla mobile service vans, but awaiting govt permission to do so.”

He has not addressed problems in the U.S. or elsewhere. The Times asked Tesla to make a service executive available to talk about what the company is doing to improve customer service, but it declined.

Only Tesla knows the full extent of its quality problems. J.D. Power, which ranks initial vehicle quality, measures all mass-market automakers except Tesla, which declines to provide quality data requested by the market research firm.

A Tesla spokesman said in a statement that the company’s own global satisfacti­on scores for service are above 90%. A new parts distributi­on service was opened this spring in Caliseem fornia, the statement said, and although “call volumes have increased dramatical­ly due to the overwhelmi­ng excitement around the Model 3, this hasn’t impacted our ability to respond to emergency roadside events.”

Tesla has “plans in place” to hire more staff in customer support “in the event they are unable to find their answers” at Tesla’s support site “or in their Tesla account,” the company said. And it plans to open a large new service center in Oslo later this year. Tesla cars have topped Consumer Reports’ owner satisfacti­on survey for the last two years, the company noted.

Jeff Klein, a publishing executive in Northridge, said the hood and front quarter panel on his wife’s Model S were damaged in a March accident. Four months later, the car is still parked at a Tesla certified repair shop, waiting for parts, while Klein makes monthly payments on the lease. Klein didn’t need a loaner vehicle.

“The general manager said it could take several months, that Tesla didn’t to realize that their cars might get in accidents and they had no parts inventory,” Klein said. “Their parts are made to order, just like their cars.”

On Tesla online forums, customers complain about long hold times on Tesla’s customer service phone line and waits of sometimes hours to check the status on a car delivery or repair, or to ask for a refund on a car deposit. Some report Tesla doesn’t get back to them at all.

Mathijs Kok of Bueren, Germany, said the company promised by phone someone would return his call to correct a windshield problem on his new Model S. No one called him back.

The next time he had a problem — this one with unresponsi­ve roadside assistance — Kok emailed the company. He never heard back, despite some followup reminders.

Kok, who said he runs a customer support department at Aerosoft GmbH, a flight simulator software maker, called the email snub “nasty.”

“The lack of callbacks was sloppy, almost certainly caused by too much work,” he said. “In a nutshell, it’s damned hard to get in contact” and Tesla’s procedures “make it possible for issues to be missed and not followed up in time.”

Service problems are not new at Tesla. In August, the company’s president for sales, marketing, delivery and service, Jon McNeill, said on the Tesla Motors Club forum the company had “streamline­d” customer service “to make contacting the right person at Tesla easier.” Six months later, McNeill quit Tesla to become chief operating officer at Lyft.

In June, Karim Bousta, Tesla’s vice president of worldwide service and customer experience, left, as did David Erhart, senior director for reliabilit­y and testing.

Tesla’s sales and service approach differs greatly from most automakers, which sell their cars to franchised dealers. Tesla owns and runs retail sales and service operations on its own.

The company’s 74 service centers in the U.S. are complement­ed by Tesla Rangers, a mobile service program that dispatches service workers to fix some cars on site.

The company also has pioneered “over the air” updates, through which software updates can be beamed to the car without having to bring it to the dealer.

Tesla executives have said this approach lowers Tesla’s capital costs. But accelerati­ng production — to 53,339 cars of three models in the second quarter, up 55% from a year earlier and almost a five-fold increase from the same period in 2015 — may be overwhelmi­ng Tesla’s service resources.

Add to that the wide variety of Model 3 quality problems reported on Tesla customer forums, including broken glass, bad paint jobs, body panel gaps, dead batteries, wind noise, dents, scratches and software problems including door locks and weirdly behaving touch screens.

Tesla has one of the most rabidly loyal customer bases of any automaker, of course. The same forums are peppered with praise for the cars and with Tesla service. And auto reviewers are near unanimous in their praise for how the Model 3 drives.

Consumer Reports relies on customer surveys for its quality assessment­s. Mike Quincy, an automotive specialist at the research firm, called Tesla’s quality record “mixed.”

“The good news is that the Model S has a new-car predicted reliabilit­y better than average,” Quincy said, referring to the mainstay Tesla sedan. “The bad news is that the Model X has proved far worse than average. Too few surveys have been collected yet to evaluate the Model 3.”

If Model 3 quality proves subpar and service issues aren’t fixed, it could mean deeper trouble for Tesla as the company tries to go mainstream, said Karl Brauer, executive publisher at Kelley Blue Book.

Early Tesla buyers are “so in love with the car, they’d ignore things most buyers wouldn’t put up with, like delays for repairs, or batteries that fail multiple times,” Brauer said.

He suggested that Musk spend more time straighten­ing out issues at Tesla and less time on cave rescue operations or offering to fix water contaminat­ion problems in Flint, Mich., Musk’s latest social cause.

As the Model 3 broadens Tesla’s customer base, it may test the company’s “over the air” service model.

At the Dublin service center, Bhaskar’s service rep said a review of his vehicle’s operationa­l data, captured on Tesla’s cloud storage system, showed the door never opened by itself. “But I have seen it with my own eyes,” Bhaskar insisted. (The Times called the Dublin center three times to ask the service manager for comment. No calls were returned.)

Bhaskar told the rep he’d take the car home and make an appointmen­t, but wanted a written statement acknowledg­ing the door safety problem. “We’re not putting this on paper,” he was told. “Here, that’s not the way business is done.”

The issue was escalated, and after 45 minutes Bhaskar was allowed to leave his car. He departed in a Mercedes-Benz SUV loaner.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? TESLA’S PUSH to ramp up production may be overwhelmi­ng its service resources. Despite customer complaints of extended wait times for delivery status or repairs, Tesla points to high marks in Consumer Reports.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times TESLA’S PUSH to ramp up production may be overwhelmi­ng its service resources. Despite customer complaints of extended wait times for delivery status or repairs, Tesla points to high marks in Consumer Reports.

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