
"You read that right. The new Standard models still get cellular data and Bluetooth, so you can pair your phone or listen to music through Tesla's native apps. But if your morning commute involves jamming out to classic rock on your favorite local radio station, then you're out of luck. Unless you figure out a workaround like streaming it over a cellular network."
"The new Model Y Standard costs $39,990, which is $5,000 less than the outgoing cheapest model. The Model 3 Standard will run you $36,990. Apart from the omission of radio, these cars are slower to 60 mph, have less range (321 miles), will Supercharge a bit slower and lack Autosteer, Tesla's lane-centering system. Tesla also nixed the wraparound ambient lighting strip and slotted in a more basic textile interior that's only available in black."
Tesla introduced the Model Y Standard at $39,990 and the Model 3 Standard at $36,990 as lower-priced variants. The cars retain cellular data and Bluetooth but lack FM/AM radio, requiring streaming over cellular for local radio. The Standard trims are slower to 60 mph, offer reduced range (321 miles), charge slightly slower on Superchargers, and do not include Autosteer lane-centering. Tesla removed wraparound ambient lighting and fitted a basic black-only textile interior. The changes reduce price by about $5,000 from the previous cheapest Model Y while trading off convenience and several premium features.
Read at insideevs.com
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