![]() 05/22/2014 at 11:30 • Filed to: tesla, infographic | ![]() | ![]() |
Tesla questions answered: where they can sell cars, where they can't and who's fighting them in court.
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![]() 05/20/2014 at 13:39 |
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Nice lookin chart. Let's see what goes down with Ohio.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 11:48 |
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Cool, so I am ALLOWED to buy one in New York. Now all I have to do is make bank and then I can actually do it.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 11:48 |
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Automach Tom posted something close to this yesterday, lots of good discussions on it there.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 11:52 |
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Oh you're right. Our bad.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 11:53 |
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Not a big deal at all, stuff gets shared here more than once quite often, just thought if you wanted to see more about it you could go check it out.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 12:28 |
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So, Texas, Virginia, etc. have stores but can't sell them? I'm not sure I understand this map.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 13:26 |
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Yes, I'm confused by this. We have a Tesla gallery/store that opened in a local mall here in Indianapolis.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 14:28 |
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That's right. Shoppers would have to order the car online or drive to neighboring state to buy. Only dealerships are allowed to sell cars based on laws written in the early 2000's.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 14:43 |
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Free market state? Okay.
![]() 05/22/2014 at 15:13 |
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Thanks for the heads up. We went ahead and changed Indiana to a ''Yes.' It's technically illegal for manufacturers to sell cars directly to consumers in Indiana, but dealers have yet to fight Tesla and there's no indication shoppers couldn't actually buy a Tesla at their mall gallery.