Cleantech & EV'sNews

Elon Musk reassures Tesla HW3 owners, but bums out HW4 owners

Elon Musk has made a new statement about Full Self-Driving software that reassured owners of Tesla vehicles with HW3, but it is going bum out owners of more recent Tesla vehicles with HW4.

Hardware 4.0 (HW4) is Tesla’s latest suite of Autopilot/self-driving sensors and a new FSD computer. The new hardware, which adds radar and new cameras all around the vehicle, has already been deployed in most of Tesla’s vehicle lineup.

While Tesla was expected to keep upgrading its self-driving hardware, the move to HW4 was concerning for many Tesla owners because the automaker had yet to deliver the features it promised for vehicles with HW3.

There’s a fear that Tesla won’t keep its promise to deliver self-driving technology to vehicles and that it will need the new hardware – HW4, which is not retrofittable – to achieve the goal.

CEO Elon Musk has tried to squash that fear by saying that Tesla is still committed to delivering self-driving on HW3 cars through software updates.

Now, in on X (formerly Twitter), he has gone a bit further by warning HW4 owners that their software will be about six months behind HW3 cars as Tesla focuses on delivering software updates and improvements to the latter:

HW4 software will lag HW3 by at least another six months, as our focus needs to be on getting FSD on HW3 working super well and provided internationally.

That should be reassuring to HW3 owners, but it is going to be a bummer for owners of newer Tesla vehicles who are still waiting on features powered by the Autopilot/Self-Driving hardware.

If you believe Musk’s timeline, they might not have to wait for much longer since he claims that Tesla will achieve this “super well” working level on HW3 by the end of the year, but he has been wrong about timing many times.

Electrek’s Take

Top comment by Haggy


Liked by 1 people

Tesla has a history of putting out new hardware, giving customers the impression that it’s more capable, but leaving them with less functionality for a while. When HW2.x came out, a Tesla driver with AP1 who “upgraded” would have lost virtually all functionality. By the end of 2017, HW2 cars did most things as well as HW1 cars, but lane changes were less smooth. And the onscreen display showed only what was in the driver’s lane.

By 2018, HW2.x pulled ahead of AP1, and AP1 continued to improve in functionality, without getting new features. HW3 didn’t set back functionality, but Tesla later dropped things from the sensor suite prematurely.

It’s not surprising that Tesla is doing the same thing again. The difference is that this time around, there are no promises at all of HW4 giving extra capability. Perhaps that’s a good thing. It would be nice to go back to the old days when updates were surprises with unexpected features instead of another failed attempt to deliver on a promise.

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That brings some welcomed clarity to the plan with HW3/HW4.

On the other side, any slip on the HW3 timeline, which is likely based on historical performance, will result in HW4 owners having to wait a long time.

Personally, I’m still more optimistic about HW4 because the software is already years behind, so six months is nothing. I prefer having the potential for better performance from the hardware.

At the same time, there’s going to be HW5 and HW6, etc.


Author: Fred Lambert
Source: Electrek

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