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But yea, this update is taking quite a while to roll out and this is definitely not normal. Normally updates hit the entire fleet within a week (maybe 3-4 days) of first appearing.
But yea, this update is taking quite a while to roll out and this is definitely not normal. Normally updates hit the entire fleet within a week (maybe 3-4 days) of first appearing.
Thanks for the links. Perhaps they are getting feedback or are intentionally rolling out slowly in case there would be feedback about the summon and other higher risk features.
TeslaFi has MUCH more accurate information compared to ev-fw, sorry for the member link - use the one that d21mike provided above (TeslaFi.com Firmware Tracker)
I beg to differ - ev-fw posts the grid of number of updates and day of update, grouped by model. So it is easy to see that the most recent widely released version on Model 3 is still 2018.21.9.
2018.24.1 had a fraction as many updates, then petered out about a week ago, whereas it DID go to wide release on S & X.
2018.24.7 has an even smaller distribution so far and hasn’t gone to wide release on Model 3 either.
S/X already playing with 2018.26.
All of which clearly answers the OP’s question. Most people don’t have it yet.
TeslaFi does all of this except for showing the model (for free at least, if you subscribe you can not only see Model but also what FW they upgraded from).
My key reason for liking TeslaFi more is that they simply have more data. For example, you only see 2018.24.7 listed 8 times whereas TeslaFi shows 21 Model 3's with it installed, starting back on the 9th.
Regardless of personal preference for firmware tracking sites - it’s worth pointing out that both sites represent a tiny percentage of the cars out there so should only be used as an indicator.