Carsten Haase
Well-Known Member
While I really liked the MINI, the range wasn't really working for me. I kept finding myself on perfect twisty back roads stuck in my wife's Outback because the MINI couldn't make the trip. What good is a fun car if you're not actually driving it?
So I traded it in for a Model 3 RWD for a couple of reasons:


So I traded it in for a Model 3 RWD for a couple of reasons:
- Obviously, range. It worked fine as a second car for commuting but I chose the MINI over a Bolt/other because I like driving and wanted a fun car. The straight line highway back and forth to work was not exactly where you want to be driving a fun car.
- Handling (FWD). It was kinda exciting at first (probably because it was new/different to me) but the constant torque steer and power-on understeer got very annoying. I was hoping I could ignore it but I really hate FWD. The Model 3s handling feels significantly better, despite the increased weight. It has less body roll but is also much smoother.
- Cost. Tesla offered me $23,500 which is $2.50 more than my all in cost over the past 2 years (purchase price, dealer fees, loan interest, etc.) not including the $1700 saved in fuel vs electricity. Not bad for a depreciating asset! All Model 3s also now quality for the full federal tax credit making it quite a lot of car for $32.5k.

- O.Z. Superturismo LM 17x7.5 ET50 (includes ball seat lugs and 3mm spacers). 215/50R17 ExtremeContact DWS06 tires (larger than stock but fits with no rubbing)
- WeatherTech floor mats
- MINI OEM trunk mat
- Cravenspeed platypus license plate holder
- Cravenspeed Stubby antenna
- ECS Tuning 10mm wheel spacers and longer lug bolts (designed for OEM wheels only, due to chamfer on the hub centric lip)
- Grizzl-e classic charger (not pictured, $225)