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Re: boston745 post# 81549

Tuesday, 09/12/2023 11:37:07 PM

Tuesday, September 12, 2023 11:37:07 PM

Post# of 86622
Again, I'm not a scientist.

AFAICT neither are you.

Scientists still can't explain how fragile sea life thrives at depths and pressures that can crush the best submersibles.

You said it yourself in your last msg: "My theory is the Hutchison Effect." T-H-E-O-R-Y.

You've had that theory for years, when you prove it get back to us.

No one, including NHTSA, Tesla, mechanics and everyone else who've looked at the defects have concluding they were caused by anything other than design or manufacturing errors, least of all supernatural or extremely rare phenomena which may or may not exist.

Bad castings can cause brittle parts prone to failure. Yes - even within 3 days.

Several other suspension components break in Tesla vehicles, including in the Model 3 and Model Y. A Swiss Model S owner saw the lower control arm break at 200 kph (124 mph) on a German Autobahn. The Model 3 and Model Y had suspension recalls, and the Chinese government forced Tesla to replace some components in China with the Model S and Model X.

Tesla has not issued a recall for the problem, but it has issued multiple technical service bulletins. The TSBs call out suspension issues with Model S and X Teslas. A TSB issued for 2016 Model S and X cars in February 2017 warned: “Some Model S and X vehicles may have been manufactured with front suspension fore links that may not meet Tesla strength specifications. In the event of a link failure, the driver can still maintain control but the tire may contact the wheel arch liner.”

Internal investigations have shown that Model S and X suspension failures were caused by fore links that are fractured at the ball joint. They show visible flaws and/or improper forgings. Instead of issuing a recall, Tesla issues TSBs. Lots of them.

This dude reported suspension problems on his two-month-old Model Y.

💩 HAPPENS.




In that video you posted as evidence, the narrator didn't come to any conclusion. At 29:41 he says "if the Hutchinson is some kind of an electrostatic effect..."

IF - in other words, he has no idea what it is or if it's even real. So thanks for shooting holes in your own theory.

At least you're in good company - neither of you can prove a damn thing.


Several SpaceX rockets exploded during launch, let me guess your theory on that - ummmmm something to do with Hutchinson?

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