Tesla loses title
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Tesla Overtaken As Fastest-Growing EV Brand
Tesla has been the fastest-growing EV brand in the U.S. ever since it introduced its second product, the Model S, back in 2012. Since then, new products and the marketing success of hype-man CEO, Elon Musk, have kept it growing year over year. No longer.
Tesla made Mad Max mode available briefly in 2018 and then reintroduced it in October. It contradicts a core promise of self-driving cars.
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Video: Electric truck charging leap as Tesla Semi reaches 1.2 megawatts record
Tesla has publicly demonstrated its Megacharger for the first time, showing a Tesla Semi reaching a peak charging power of 1.2 MW in a video.
Rivian has started retrofitting Tesla-style NACS cables to its DC fast chargers. The Rivian Adventure Network has over 400 DC fast chargers in the United States. The Rivian-branded chargers with native NACS support come after the company fitted the Tesla ...
The U.S. auto safety investigation into the sedans' emergency door release controls renews scrutiny over Tesla's door design.
Tesla said that the Dutch regulator RDW had "committed to granting" FSD approval "in February 2026." In a response, RDW said that the agency had set goals with Tesla for February — but that it's not yet clear if Tesla will meet them. RDW's rebuffing of ...
The messy feud could cost Tesla billions as subsidies hang by a thread. Just when we thought the drama between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump was old news, think again. Their high-stakes feud just got a fresh jolt, and yet again, it comes at the ...
Tesla Superchargers may be coming to a Steak 'n Shake near you. The renowned steak and burger chain and the iconic electric vehicle company confirmed their upcoming partnership in an exchange of tweets on X, formerly Twitter, according to Drive Tesla Canada.
When it comes to car ownership, depreciation can quietly erode your wealth more quickly than more visible costs, like insurance and repair bills. On average, new cars depreciate by about 30% in the first two years. Every year after that, new cars tend to depreciate by about 10% (1).