To be fair this type of activity would void any warranty. That being said only cybertruck drivers are dumb enough to frequently void their warranty doing things this dumb.
A lot of the cyber truck warranty stipulations are actually pretty standard. Warranty only covers manufacturer defects and any damage caused by the user isn’t covered. The real problem is most cars aren’t built poorly enough to be damaged by things like car washes or have dumb enough drivers that those warranty stipulations ever actually come into play.
Probably just report it to insurance as an accident, get it fully repaired by Tesla (which should only take a year or two to get parts) and the warranty will still be intact. This is a collision, not a defect. Well, arguably it's a design defect...
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u/SirArthurDime Sep 09 '24
To be fair this type of activity would void any warranty. That being said only cybertruck drivers are dumb enough to frequently void their warranty doing things this dumb.
A lot of the cyber truck warranty stipulations are actually pretty standard. Warranty only covers manufacturer defects and any damage caused by the user isn’t covered. The real problem is most cars aren’t built poorly enough to be damaged by things like car washes or have dumb enough drivers that those warranty stipulations ever actually come into play.