The Hamilton Spectator

Musk promises ‘corrective action’ after Tesla complaints

- ETHAN BARON

Imagine waking up before dawn to line up in the cold so you could pre-order a Tesla Model 3 sedan, then getting bumped back by some slacker who later went online and made a reservatio­n.

Tesla opened pre-orders on March 31, 2016, starting with people who came to showrooms — including hundreds who showed up at the Palo Alto carmaker’s hometown store in Stanford Shopping Center — and then began to take online orders that night.

Over the weekend, Model 3 reservatio­n holders complained on Twitter that they had put in their reservatio­ns on Day 1 in stores, but that people who ordered online were getting order invitation­s first.

“Hey, how come online reservatio­ns of Model 3 are getting priority over us line waiters?,” one Twitter user said.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk responded, saying it was probably a matter of the person’s preferred configurat­ion not being available yet. That drew a comment from another purported reservatio­n holder.

“No...they’re getting invited first. Online people w/April-June are getting invited before Day 1 March-May reservatio­n holders. I’m Day 1 & got inside the store at 12pm...still no invite. Tons of us like this,” the person tweeted.

Musk responded that he would look into it, then tweeted: “Will take corrective action immediatel­y. Sorry about this.”

The Model 3 is Tesla’s bid to bring electric vehicles to the masses, and is seen by analysts as critical to the company’s success, but its production has been plagued by delays. The car starts at $35,000, but currently only costlier versions are being produced.

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