Tesla owner becomes first to push Model 3 to 100,000 miles, here’s how it’s doing

Authored by electrek.co and submitted by everyEV

Earlier this year, we contacted several owners with high-mileage Model 3 vehicles and they were all still very impressed by their cars, but now another Tesla owner pushed his Model 3 even further.

Here’s what the first Tesla owner to travel 100,000 miles in his Model 3 has to say about the electric car.

Arthur Driessen reserved a Model 3 on March 31, 2016 – the first day Tesla opened reservations.

Two years later to the day, he took delivery of his Model 3 Long Range.

During the first 6 months of ownership, Driessen went on a couple of road trips and racked up 20,000 miles on the electric vehicle.

That’s more than most people, but it’s actually nothing compared to what he did over the last year.

Driessen, who is based in Los Angeles, ramped his traveling up and he has recently surpassed 100,000 miles on his Model 3 – likely becoming the first person to do so.

He has driven the car all over North America and he has been documenting his experience on Twitter and his blog.

Electrek interviewed him to get an idea of his overall experience with the car and how it has held up after that much mileage.

First off, what everyone wants to know: what kind of repair and maintenance did he have to do over those 100,000 miles?

It turns out that the car held up extremely well and the only repairs that had to be done were related to Driessen “beating the car to death” in his own admission.

“For maintenance and repairs, this is my favorite part. If I was not beating the car to death, all I would have had serviced is tires. I’m averaging 25,000 miles per set when properly rotated.”

As for the repairs due to the “beatings”, it’s nothing too crazy.

Driessen told Electrek about the repairs:

“Other than tires, I drove the car through a valley stream and had to get a control arm replaced afterward. I also was out on the Bonneville Salt Flats when the winds were high speed. They slammed my door to its limit and shattered a piece inside of the hinge.”

He said it ended up costing less than $500 to replace those parts.

Another popular question for longtime Tesla owners, or in Driessen’s case, a Tesla owner who managed to put a lot of mileage on his car in a short period of time, is “how does the battery pack hold up?”

He said that he now gets a max range of 302-308 miles, which is about a 2.5% loss on his original 310 miles of rated range when he bought the vehicle.

However, Tesla did release a software update to increase the range of the Model 3 Long Range to 325 miles earlier this year, but it didn’t affect all vehicles the same way.

Driessen’s Model 3 battery pack appears to be holding very well and it’s particularly impressive considering that he has been exclusively charging it through Supercharging.

A lot of his mileage is done on road trips, which Tesla’s Supercharger network enables, and he lives in an apartment in Los Angeles without a home charging solution.

While it has been known that DC fast-charing is not ideal for battery health, we haven’t seen many real-world examples of it and Driessen’s Model 3 is certainly not one of them.

Although, he has some very good charging habits:

“I have only gone below 10% (state of charge) two handfuls of times. I have never left my car plugged in longer than it has been charging. If there is a supercharger close enough, I don’t charge over 60%. I am immediately hitting the road, so the car never sits with a high percentage of charge in it either.”

Speaking of Supercharging, despite the fact that he has to pay for it like most Model 3 owners, he believes that he saved a lot of money in gas.

He broke down in a message to Electrek:

“Compared to a civic, which is what I drove before, in my base of Los Angeles where the gas is always high, I saved about $7,000 just on gas. Oil changes would be another thousand or more. That’s using an average of 30mpg and $3.75 per gallon as well as $50 per oil change.”

Overall, Driessen says that the vehicle is holding up “amazingly” and it is fair to say that it is coming from someone who likely has the most experience behind the wheel of a Tesla Model 3.

CEO Elon Musk recently set some ambitious goals when it comes to the reliability of Tesla’s vehicles.

Musk said that they built Model 3 to last as long as a commercial truck, a million miles, and the battery modules should last between 300,000 miles and 500,000 miles.

He also added that Tesla is working on a new battery that lasts 1 million miles and it could come out as soon as next year.

We reported earlier this year on Tesla’s plan for a major new R&D lab and vehicle testing facility to improve reliability.

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triceraquake on October 25th, 2019 at 21:59 UTC »

My husband and I have a Tesla Model 3 and we live in an apartment with no garage so we can’t charge at home. We got it maybe 6 months ago and haven’t yet paid for a charge. Between free supercharging miles from the initial promotion and referrals to free EV charging at my husband’s work, we haven’t needed to pay for anything. Imagine not paying for gas for 6 months. It’s great. Even when we start paying, electricity is sooo much cheaper than gas.

So sure, the car was more expensive than what we would normally buy, but the benefits outweigh the cost.

Edward616 on October 25th, 2019 at 21:53 UTC »

Only 2.5% capacity loss on 100,000 miles of supercharging 😳

forsayken on October 25th, 2019 at 19:51 UTC »

Damn that is a lot of driving in 18 months.

The article mentions the cost of oil changes for an ICE car. Do EVs/Teslas need any kind of lubricant changed every so often? Or is there some sort of lubricant that lasts a long time sort of like power steering fluid that could last years and years and years?

Edit:

So many people saying blinker fluid. It was funny the first time. Actual maintenance schedule: https://www.tesla.com/en_CA/support/car-maintenance?redirect=no No traditional oil change is needed. The only fluid that should be changed is the brake fluid if needed. One or two comments were about the time it takes to charge and the cost. Yes, the time at a supercharger is around 15-20 minutes for a decent charge. This appears to cost around $15-20 and depends on the size of the battery. $20 for 350km of range still seems great to me. Where I am, $20 of gasoline gets me about 225km of highway driving in an Impreza. ~130km pure city. Even if a Tesla rated for 350km gets only 200km of pure city driving for $20, that's still more range than $20 of gas for probably most cars. Last factor for me I guess is a charging station at home. That's a somewhat hefty one-time fee to have it installed but nothing compared to a car. Seems like it might run up to $2000.