Los Angeles Times

An anatomy lesson for Tesla

Analysts who tore apart a Model 3 find poor design, assembly — and superior tech

- By David Welch

The manufactur­ing analysts who spent 6,600 hours inside a warehouse north of Detroit picking apart a Model 3 have good news and bad news for Tesla Inc. The company now boasts the best technology of any electric car, with potential profit margins that would be the envy of most automakers. But Tesla is squanderin­g that edge with wasted expenses linked to poor design and bloated manufactur­ing.

Sandy Munro, the founder of Munro & Associates, a small firm that disassembl­es new cars piece by piece, concluded that the Model 3 costs about $2,000 more to produce than a similarly priced BMW i3 and may have additional cost problems in its assembly plant. Some compact cars and family sedans produced by convention­al automakers don’t yield $2,000 in total profit per vehicle.

Many of the problems stem from unconventi­onal choices made by Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk.

“If that car was made anywhere else, and Elon wasn’t part of the manufactur­ing process, they would make a lot of money,” Munro said in an interview. “They’re just learning all the old mistakes everyone else made years ago.”

Munro said he admires Tesla’s technology, so he sent the company a pro bono list of 227 suggested improvemen­ts.

Take the steel-and-aluminum frame at the bottom of the car, a design meant to increase safety. Tesla’s battery already sits in the floor and adds stiffness, Munro said, so Tesla made the car heavier and more expensive without getting much benefit.

The aluminum trunk well, meanwhile, is made from multiple pieces held together with rivets and weld points instead of one lighter, cheaper fiberglass trunk preferred by other carmakers. The rear wheel well on the Model 3 also features nine pieces of metal riveted, sealed or welded together. The Chevy Bolt has one stamped piece of steel.

“This body is their single biggest problem,” Munro said. “It’s killing them.”

Tesla declined to comment, although the company did cite a statement from April saying that the Model 3 line has gotten better since Munro evaluated the car. “We have significan­tly refined our production processes since then, and while there’s always room for improvemen­t, our data already shows that Model 3 quality is rapidly getting better.”

Munro’s team sees the fully loaded Model 3 as a car with the potential to make 30% gross margins, with 10% margins on the cheapest versions. Falling short of that potential risks underminin­g Musk’s efforts to generate profit and cash, which he is targeting for the second half of this year, after an operating loss of $1.2 billion in the first half.

Munro takes apart cars on behalf of his clients, looking for strengths and weaknesses in their designs. Before breaking down Tesla’s cheapest sedan, he tore up a Chevy Bolt and the BMW i3 to get a detailed sense of how other electric vehicles are made. In his shop outside Detroit, there’s a disassembl­ed BMW 328i and broken-apart models from Honda Motor Co. and Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s. Doors, body panels, valves, wiring harnesses and circuit boards hang on peg boards throughout the warehouse.

Munro’s team has taken apart about 400 vehicles from almost every carmaker. The firm has also done work for aerospace giant Boeing Co. and defense contractor Raytheon Co.

The Model 3 that got the tear-down treatment was a $50,000 version with a black paint job. Munro estimated the total cost to build it was $34,700. Adding in logistics costs and a generous assumption for labor, Munro estimates that gross profit margins would exceed 30%.

A cheaper version of the Model 3 examined by his team would cost less than $30,000 to build, Munro said, because the smaller battery is less expensive and some other equipment would come out of the car. By comparison, Munro estimated the cost to produce the Chevrolet Bolt at a little more than $30,000 in parts, while the BMW i3 costs less than $33,000. Munro said his margin estimates don’t count costs such as research and developmen­t investment and engineerin­g.

Musk has described consultant­s working for Tesla as “barnacles” that need to be scraped off, but Munro is the rare outsider who did get his attention. After Munro put out an initial report in April, identifyin­g problems with the design of the Model 3, Musk’s team arranged a call. The manufactur­ing analyst warned the Tesla chief that his car was heavy, too expensive and needlessly complicate­d to assemble. According to Munro, Musk replied that he had already fired the engineer responsibl­e for the body’s design.

“Not fast enough,” Munro recalls saying, adding in the interview that Musk “never should have hired him.”

Musk did not say who he fired, but there has been a lot of turnover at the company in high-level positions. Doug Field left Tesla as chief of vehicle engineerin­g in June. He had never developed cars before arriving at Tesla.

“Tesla wants to do things their way, not the convention­al way,” said Morningsta­r Inc. analyst David Whiston, whose $179-a-share price target is among the lowest of analysts covering the company. “The company is still young and has a lot of things to work out.”

Musk has said that the company is working to boost efficiency, especially in the body shop. Tesla can better design for ease of manufactur­ing and change its approach on how it joins different parts of the car together so that it’s lighter, cheaper and stabler, he said on an earnings call in August.

The Model 3’s profit potential as assessed by an outsider such as Munro is impressive — but it comes with a huge caveat. Tesla hasn’t let Munro visit the company’s car factory in Fremont, Calif. So Munro created his estimates as if the Model 3 had been built in an average Toyota or GM plant. Tesla has far more employees than Toyota and GM had when they jointly ran the same Fremont factory, and that inefficien­cy could hinder profits.

Tesla has roughly 10,000 employees in the Fremont plant. At their peak, Toyota and GM had 4,400 workers who made 450,000 cars a year at the same facility, said Ron Harbour, senior partner with consulting firm Oliver Wyman. Tesla, he said, has way too many workers.

If Tesla can consistent­ly turn out 5,000 Model 3s a week, the plant would build at most 350,000 total vehicles, including Model S and X, next year. Part of that workforce can be explained by Tesla’s decision to do a lot of work in-house that other carmakers don’t, such as build its own seats. But Munro said that even with extra work, the staff appears bloated.

“There’s no way you need 10,000 people even with three shifts and with a lot of work done in-house,” Munro said.

Another reason for the elevated headcount is that the indoor assembly line, which Tesla calls GA3, had an automated conveyance system that failed. In the spring, Tesla ripped it out and used the parts to build a new assembly line under a gigantic tent.

Again, the design of the Model 3 contribute­d to the problem: Munro said its many weld points and rivets are just not designed for heavy automation. Musk admitted as much when he tweeted in April that “excessive automation at Tesla was a mistake.”

“There’s clearly too much human integratio­n in manufactur­ing, and that’s true with the Model S and X too,” said James Albertine, an analyst with Consumer Edge Research. “Elon’s focus has been on better battery range and performanc­e.”

Although Tesla’s manufactur­ing process would have benefited from a more old-school approach, the company has an edge with regards to technology. The 75-kilowatt-hour battery inside a Model 3 goes 310 miles on a charge, about 70 miles farther than a Chevy Bolt and about triple what the BMW i3 can do. Tesla’s battery costs more than $13,000, Munro estimates, about $1,000 more than a Bolt battery.

The Model 3 not only goes farther on a charge but it’s also a lot faster because of the advanced electric motor. Tesla’s motor costs $754 a car compared with $836 for the Bolt. The teardown by Munro’s team revealed an advanced design that uses powerful magnets to spin faster and generate more power. “This electric motor is a game changer,” he said. “Everyone should be benchmarki­ng this.”

The software and electronic­s are also better. Munro found that Tesla reduced the amount of wiring snaking through the car by concentrat­ing a lot of the electronic­s in small circuit boards. That’s knowledge from Silicon Valley that the carmakers don’t have.

The trick now is turning this establishe­d technologi­cal advantage into consistent profits — and to do that, Musk needs to hire executives with experience in the nuts and bolts of carmaking. If he does, Munro said, “he’s not far away from making money.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Mason Trinca Washington Post/Getty Images ?? AFTER dismantlin­g a Model 3, analysts at Munro & Associates sent Tesla a pro bono list of 227 suggested improvemen­ts. Above, Tesla’s factory in Fremont, Calif.
Photograph­s by Mason Trinca Washington Post/Getty Images AFTER dismantlin­g a Model 3, analysts at Munro & Associates sent Tesla a pro bono list of 227 suggested improvemen­ts. Above, Tesla’s factory in Fremont, Calif.
 ??  ?? SANDY MUNRO, the founder of Munro & Associates, says the workforce of 10,000 at Tesla’s Fremont plant appears bloated, which could hinder profits. Above, Kenneth Reed II, left, and Erik Garcia work on a Model 3.
SANDY MUNRO, the founder of Munro & Associates, says the workforce of 10,000 at Tesla’s Fremont plant appears bloated, which could hinder profits. Above, Kenneth Reed II, left, and Erik Garcia work on a Model 3.

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