- Joined
- Mar 7, 2020
- Messages
- 5,128
- Reaction score
- 7,202
- Location
- Naples, FL
- Cars
- Model S Plaid, Odyssey
- DE Number
- 154
- Referral Code
- 033M4EXG
It’s not as open and airy as my Model S (but I realize you don’t want a Tesla): Visibility on the front quarter is a struggle because the A-pillar is too thick, and the side windows are too narrow and create a slightly confined feeling.
That's a very even-handed review of the Air. However, this point about openness did surprise me a bit. It's not that what you said about the A-pillar and side windows isn't accurate, because it is. But, to me and most passengers in the Air, the glass canopy creates a feeling of openness that is lacking from our Model S and that should be belied by the things you point out. Although our Model S has a full glass roof, the heavy beam across the top of the windshield causes front seat passengers to miss the effect altogether. What is surprising is that the Air has a cross beam at the B-pillar whereas the Tesla doesn't . . . yet rear seat passengers have repeatedly brought up the open-air effect of the Lucid canopy, while none have ever mentioned it in the Tesla. (It's a little odd, now that I think of it.) Maybe the combination of the black interior and the cramped rear seating of the Tesla work against the sense of openness they get in the Air with its light interior and stretch-out room?