The Tesla Model 3 will be a great car—someday

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This post was originally published on May 2, 2018.

Change is hard. The Tesla (TSLA) Model 3 is here to persuade you it’s worth the trouble.

The moment you land in the Tesla Model 3, you realize some things are never going to be the same. There are almost no buttons or dials, with climate, radio, vehicles settings and just about everything else controlled from a laptop-sized touch screen. There’s no shifter, just a short stalk on the steering column for toggling between drive, reverse and park. A/C vents? There’s just one—that narrow, barely noticeable slit running across the entire dash.

Oh yeah—there’s no gas tank, either, since the Tesla Model 3 is a pure electric sports sedan that runs on battery power.

The Model 3 is the car that will either save or sink Tesla, depending on whether you believe Elon Musk, the company’s brash CEO, or the many Tesla critics who think the upstart automaker will run out of money before it’s able to turn a profit.

In our abbreviated test, Pras Subramanian and I marveled at the innovations Tesla engineered into the Model 3, as you’ll see in the video above. But we also noticed some glaring deficiencies that might warn of quality problems that could turn off buyers. Our bottom line: Tesla has produced a game-changing vehicle – but only if it can make rapid quality improvements and promptly fix problems that crop up on vehicles already on the road.

Sure looks pretty: The Tesla Model 3. (Source: Tesla)
Sure looks pretty: The Tesla Model 3. (Source: Tesla)

The Model 3 is still somewhat scarce, since production has been plagued with snafus and Tesla is still far short of turning out its goal of 5,000 cars per week. The company doesn’t provide test cars to journalists the way most automakers do, so we rented a Model 3 from an owner in the New York City area, via Turo.

The Tesla Model 3 starts at around $35,000, but the early production models on the road now were more expensive versions with a suite of options, including a more powerful battery. The car we rented went for about $56,000, including an extra $9,000 for the beefier battery, which boosts range from 220 miles on a single charge to 310 miles. Other options on the model we tested include a glass roof, two built-in smartphone docks and a few other goodies.

Pricey? Yeah. But satisfying, still. Pras and I both loved the 3’s driving dynamics. Acceleration from a stop is comparable to what a high-output V-6 might provide. Passing power is even more impressive, as the electric motor generates the kind of instant torque you might normally associate with a throaty V-8 (that gets about 15 miles per gallon). Steering is expertly tuned for taut handling. However those heavy batteries are arrayed, their weight seems to draw the Model 3 down into the pavement as if magnets were at work. You smile a lot in this car.