Resist
Active Member
You mean without power.When you open the door with power, that glass will continue to push up higher risking breaking up the glass against the metal frame.
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You mean without power.When you open the door with power, that glass will continue to push up higher risking breaking up the glass against the metal frame.
Anything is possible. The probability of this failure occurring while driving is about the same as the probability while parked.Can this failure happen while driving?
I would ask to have the Regional Manager contact you ASAP as this should NOT be on your plate.To make matters worse, Tesla is demanding that I negotiate with their towing vendor to fix the damaged paint from the glass blowing out and have the drivers side door adjusted by a body shop (this is the door that the window blew out since it was ajar during the drive and the wind pressure blew it out. This side had no power). I should not be negotiating with their vendor. This is absurd.
Looking at the notes it was because of either a bad connection due to dirt/debris or loose bolt holding the ground wire to the chassis.Would you know what would cause a bad ground connection? Thank you for your help.
You mean without power.
Thank you. I had no warning it was failing. It happened just when I parked the car. Can this failure happen while driving?
Manufacturing blunder. Bad contact attracted film that made connection worse.Would you know what would cause a bad ground connection? Thank you for your help.
Sometime things just fail without previous warning signs.UPDATE: I spoke with the Tesla repair shop. I asked why there was no alert about the body control module failing. I asked if the body control module failed while driving, would I have lost power? He said I would have received a “reduce power alert”. Is this true?
They never should have towed it backwards when the door couldn't be closed. They should have turned it around so that they could tow it forwards so that wind wouldn't try to blow the door open.The tow truck company had to bungie cord the doors / strap the exterior to prevent the driver side door from flinging open. Unfortunately, the window blew out on the drive to the Tesla repair shop.
It happened because it was towed backwards with the door ajar. (I'm sure the speed the tow truck was going contributed as well.) If the tow truck driver had loaded the car facing forward that wouldn't have happened.Other than a 3D modeling to understand the physical effects of why the door bent and the double laminated glass blowing out, I have no idea why these events happened.
Yeah this is the major ****up here. Towing company should be paying for the damage 100%.It happened because it was towed backwards with the door ajar. (I'm sure the speed the tow truck was going contributed as well.) If the tow truck driver had loaded the car facing forward that wouldn't have happened.
Really hope you get proper resolution from Tesla. This is really frustrating to hear and you deserve better- we all do as owners.Final update: The sequence of events from a right side body control module failing has been ridiculous. Since the driver side window was powerless, the door had to remain ajar during the tow to the tesla shop. In addition to the window blowing out due to the wind pressure (lessons learned - cover the opening with a heavy duty sticky film to prevent wind from entering the car) the driver‘s side door also got bent and needs to be replaced. Other than a 3D modeling to understand the physical effects of why the door bent and the double laminated glass blowing out, I have no idea why these events happened.
It happened because it was towed backwards with the door ajar . . .
Yeah, and you didn't have AAA or some random operator tow it - Tesla arranged the tow with their supposedly certified and authorized tow company. Who they paid - not you. They're the one with the contractual relationship with the tow company and the responsibility to recover for damages; from your point of view, you called Tesla, and they damaged your car. Trying to make you negotiate with the tow operator is outrageous (and would violate consumer protection laws in many states, I suspect).. . . at 50+ mph probably
Happened to me twice while driving and its a huge safety concern, I have logged an incident with NHSTA. I don't trust the quality of cars being built by TeslaThank you. I had no warning it was failing. It happened just when I parked the car. Can this failure happen while driving?