A Cybertruck engineer, Wes Morrill, addressed claims Tesla's truck rusts in the rain and said the specks of rust were the size of a "pinhead."
Cybertruck engineer pushes back on claims that Tesla EVs rust in the rain — “It's surface contamination only and can be cleaned off easily.”::A Cybertruck engineer, Wes Morrill, addressed claims Tesla's truck rusts in the rain and said the specks of rust were the size of a "pinhead."
Most likely metal dust, called fallout by detailers and "flying rust" by some. Mostly comes off brake discs and railroads and other things that grind ferrous metals.
Common pest for anyone washing their car. There are chemicals that are useful. Mostly those smelling of eggs and turning purple on contact with iron.
You can buy versions of it that don't smell like eggs, though they never smell good. That it turns purple is convenient when you spray it off, imho at least.
Doing an image search, there are a lot of real ones in various states of decay or oxidization. Certainly takes a lot more time (and straight up abandonment) for a DeLorean to show damage.
And this is why you don't buy stainless steel sinks and cars, unless you want to polish them regularly they will look like shit even just from water stains.
Edit: Stop telling me your sink doesn't have rust on it. I'm not talking about rust. Most stainless steel will not rust. I'm talking about how stainless steel can become ugly from residual water marks, staines, water with high mineral content, etc
Unless you take care of it, clean it and polish it regularly. Maybe ideal for a kitchen surface but not for a big ass ugly car.
Stainless steel which has been sufficiently alloyed with Chromium won't rust. The chromium reacts with oxygen at the surface and forms an inert layer preventing oxidation of the iron in the steel. Cybertruck's stainless steel simply doesn't have enough Chromium.
Over the past week, some new Cybertruck owners have taken to social media to complain about what they say are spots of rust on their brand-new electric vehicles, which cost up to $99,900.
Justin Demaree, the host of the YouTube channel Bearded Tesla Guy, said in his video on the issue that a Cybertruck owner had brought the truck to him the day after it was delivered when he'd noticed the specks.
In his video, Demaree said the tiny orange specks were probably the result of "rust dust" or particles that had landed on the surface of the truck and embedded into the material.
Demaree told Business Insider he'd seen the issue before but said the Cybertruck seemed to be even more prone to collecting the dust, probably due to its stainless-steel exterior.
The YouTuber tried a handful of methods to address the issue, including wiping the car with Windex and a liquid form of Bar Keepers Friend.
Correction: February 20, 2024 — An earlier version of this story included a photo caption that misstated when Cybertruck deliveries began.
The original article contains 752 words, the summary contains 179 words. Saved 76%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!