this post was submitted on 01 Oct 2023
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Not just that. I mean a 50k+ car that needs ducttape to hold the hood down! Wtf!? π€£
I mean I like bashing on Tesla as much as the next guy, but any car can end up like this regardless of price. They probably bumped into something that broke the locking mechanism and this is probably just a temporary solution until they get it replaced.
A permanent solution until it gets replaced πΉ
Its temporary, unless it works.
Breaking the locking mechanism while doing no damage to the plastic fender is an amazing feat.
Also, there's usually a 2nd safety mechanism that prevents it from popping up.
how do you bump it into something enough to break the latch without messing up bumper, number plate and bonnet? all of it looks intact
It was just an example. There are a thousand other ways to break the latch without messing up the rest of the car
*Dutchtape
Yeah buddy of mine mended his lease car with duct tape. He rear-ended someone at a roundabout at 30 km/h. Couldn't get it fixed quickly, had to wait 3 months for the garage.
Fuckin hell that was a long lunch. Was it in France?
That's a 100k car. It's an S
It's a 50k car disguised as a 100k car
All cars break. Thatβs why they all come with warranties.
I am the warranty
warranties don't cover accidental damage, that's what the insurance is for.
Despite the insistence of a couple generations of shadetree mechanics and even its own manufacturers, the proper nomenclature for the material in question is "duck" tape, not "duct" tape. It was never intended for, and performs very poorly at the task of sealing ducts.
"Duck" is the name of a type of densely woven cotton cloth, treated with wax. The waterproof nature of this cloth is where the name comes from, as duck feathers famously repel water.
The original duck tape was made by applying a pressure sensitive adhesive to strips of duck cloth. Modern variants still use a fabric matrix for strength, but have added a layer of plastic to provide water resistance.
Either are okay, because the history is actually linen tape ("doek" tape, from Dutch) and it was branded as both when Anglicized.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
the history is actually linen tape
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
TIL!
That said, reading the Wikipedia article, there very much were tapes made for repairing ducts.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duct_tape