You can install our site as a web app on your iOS device by utilizing the Add to Home Screen feature in Safari. Please see this thread for more details on this.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Hopefully R&T allows hotlinking. If not, just click the link and you'll see what I'm talking about. I see a lot of newer cars come with these rubber'ish flaps ahead of the front tires. Anybody know what these are for?
LOL. Tesla's R&D is really restless and sleepless. While most of the improvements are not new to the industry, the rate at which they appear in Model S cars is impressive.
I don't think my car had them, I got it May 2013.. But after it being serviced 2 weeks ago, they just magically appeared. I could be wrong, and they could always have been there. Or it might be something else that I noticed, I'll check when I go home this weekend and take a closer look at my car.
I don't think my car had them, I got it May 2013.. But after it being serviced 2 weeks ago, they just magically appeared. I could be wrong, and they could always have been there. Or it might be something else that I noticed, I'll check when I go home this weekend and take a closer look at my car.
My E46 BMW 3-series coupe has them as well. And that is almost 11 years old now.
No idea what they are for, but I have scraped both sides on high curbs in parking lots and my car still drives. So they can't be that essential :wink:
My flaps scrape against the driveway every time I back-out into the street. I tried all different angles but I can't avoid it. When it stops scraping, I'll assess how much was worn and decide at that time whether or not I should replace.
In Formula 1, the top teams spend hundreds of hours of wind tunnel time and $100k's designing ways to get air efficiently around spinning front tires. :wink: