Latest Tesla recall? Wheels may fall off Cybertrucks


Almost last year All Cybertrucks had to be recalled because Tesla used the wrong glue On a metal plate that the automaker says can come off while driving. Now, another embarrassing recall reveals that Electric pickup Wheels can be seen separating on certain models due to the use of the wrong grease.

In what is the eleventh Call Cybertruck Until now, besides concerns that stainless steel Trucks can rustTesla is recalling its long-range, rear-wheel drive (RWD) Cybertruck due to faulty brake rotors. in notice Published by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Tesla states that “brake rotor bolt holes may crack and allow the strut to separate from the wheel hub.”

Tesla’s description of the defect is as follows: “In affected vehicles, severe road turbulence and cornering may stress the bolt slot in the wheel rotor, causing cracks to form. If the crack spreads with continued use and pressure, the wheel bolt may eventually separate from the wheel hub.” In this case, some playfully driving RWD Cybertruck owners can have their wheels alarmingly overtake.

poor The Cybertruckers have enough to deal with Without worrying about wheels falling off on its “anti-apocalypse” pickup trucks, so thankfully, Tesla says it will replace the entire wheel hubs, rotors and wheel nuts free of charge for all 173 trucks affected by the recall.

Sean Tucker, Managing Editor at Kelly Blue BookIt explains how Tesla is once again in a position to fix released models of the Cybertruck before something potentially dangerous happens. “The car is such a complex machine that even a simple change in design can have consequences many years down the road,” he says. “It literally has to do with some grease (Tesla) caught on the lug nuts that are threaded to hold the 18-inch wheel to the brake rotor.”

Tucker says the grease didn’t reduce friction enough and could cause the nuts to loosen over time, causing vibrations that could lead to a cracked brake rotor. “So they changed the grease,” he says. “However, that message didn’t get to the production floor in time, and they built the 173 using the wrong grease. It’s a very specific materials issue.”

Some reports have suggested that recall number 173 reveals a surprisingly low number of rear-wheel-drive Cybertrucks, but Tucker says that’s not the case. The recall applies to trucks manufactured on certain dates using a specific shipment of nuts and grease, and vehicles with 18-inch wheels produced on certain dates. He says it’s “a subset of a subset” of Cybertrucks.

“The Cybertruck certainly isn’t selling the numbers Tesla expected it to do,” Tucker says. “But this is really just a matter of a small change in production that was not delivered to the factory in time.”

The Cybertruck has already achieved sales It was sad. “The demand is off the charts!” Elon Musk shouted at the end of 2023, noting more than a million reservations for Tesla’s multi-spoke pickup. But this wrong glue smack affects not only a small percentage, but also… everyone Cybertrucks produced up to that point revealed that the company moved only 46,096 trucks in the first 14 months of sales.

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