Tesla Model S
What it’s like to drive a transmission-less Tesla
Like many pure electric vehicles, the Tesla Model S is missing a whole lot of extraneous stuff including a transmission, gears and a clutch. This means there’s a plethora of things that don’t need to be maintained due to component wear or failure. But it also means that the Model S has a much different driving characteristic than any other car with a transmission.
Clutches
There are two types of transmissions in cars with a traditional gasoline-powered internal combustion engine (ICE) – automatic and manual. Manual transmission vehicles require engagement of a clutch typically through a clutch pedal. Some people prefer the direct control of the car by being able to shift through gears and engine braking through downshifting. I was one of them.
I’ve owned and driven a number of manual transmission cars over the years, anywhere from a cheap Ford Fiesta to a high-end Porsche 928. The feel of the clutch and quirks with shifting vary from car to car. Case in point was my 928 which I had to double clutch from time to time.
I eventually gave up driving any sort of manual transmission when my daily commute grew. Using the clutch and shifting on a manual transmission is a bear when it comes to heavy traffic. So, what does all this have to do with the Model S that has neither gears nor a clutch? The feeling.
Driving a Tesla Model S is eerily similar to driving a manual transmission vehicle. The car will roll if you take your foot off the brake while on an incline or decline. Tesla added the “hill assist” feature in the recent 5.9 software update, but that only holds the vehicle for 1 second before the car begins rolling again.
Letting go of the Model S accelerator pedal as you’re approaching a stop light will slow the vehicle down through regenerative braking which to me feels exactly like downshifting and engine braking, but without the noise.
Another thing I caught myself doing was quickly moving my foot from brake pedal to accelerator to prevent stalling the car only to realize that the Tesla will never stall. I guess it was just muscle memory.
Creep
Tesla added a feature called “creep” which simulates the behavior of an automatic transmission.
In an automatic transmission vehicle the car will begin moving forward when you let go of the brake pedal as opposed to sitting perfectly still and silent in the Model S. Creep makes this happen by moving the car forward when you let go of the brake pedal.
I took my Model S to an empty parking lot and gave the creep feature a try. You can only toggle this feature on/off when the vehicle’s in park mode. After turning on the creep setting, put the car in drive, take your foot off the brake and the Model S will begin to move forward. It starts off pretty slow but picks up speed quickly. I measured a top speed of 5 MPH which felt pretty quick to me. You can literally drive around a parking lot in this mode without stepping on either the brake or accelerator and just creep along.
I also didn’t like the idea of the car using energy unless I was specifically asking for it through the accelerator pedal. I had originally thought that the creep feature would be useful when pulling into a tight parking space but the accelerator pedal on the Model S is very well tuned for both fine and aggressive movements. Creep is not really needed in my opinion. That being said, the only time I’ve used this feature was for this particular test.
Summary
The Tesla Model S behaves somewhat like a vehicle with a manual transmission but only when it comes to being at a standstill and braking. The car will roll forward or backwards when on a hill. Regenerative braking feels similar to downshifting and engine braking in a manual transmission vehicle. You can tweak these settings until the car resembles more of an automatic transmission, but this experience leaves little to be desired. Why mimic the past when you're driving the future?
After experimenting with reduced regenerative braking and creep mode, I'm really happy with the "default" modes - creep off and standard regenerative braking. Tesla has done a fantastic job in fine tuning the driving experience in order to give the driver the best of both transmission worlds.
Firmware
Tesla 2026 Spring Update drops 12 new features owners have been waiting for
Tesla announced its Spring 2026 software update, and it’s the most feature-dense seasonal release the company has put out. The update covers twelve named changes spanning FSD, voice AI, safety lighting, dashcam storage, and pet display customization, among other things.
The centerpiece for owners with AI4 hardware is a redesigned Self-Driving app. The new interface lets owners subscribe to Full Self-Driving with a single tap and view ongoing FSD usage stats directly in the vehicle.
Grok gets its biggest in-car upgrade yet. The update adds a “Hey Grok” hands-free wake word along with location-based reminders, so a driver can now say “remind me to pick up groceries when I get home” without touching the screen. Grok first arrived in vehicles in July 2025, but each update has pushed it closer to genuine daily utility. Musk framed the broader vision clearly at Davos in January, saying Tesla is “really moving into a future that is based on autonomy.”
On safety, the update introduces enhanced blind spot warning lights that integrate directly with the cabin’s ambient lighting, building on the blind spot door warning that arrived in update 2026.8.
Dog Mode has been renamed Pet Mode and now lets owners choose a dog, cat, or hedgehog icon and add their pet’s name to the display.
Dashcam retention now extends up to 24 hours, up from the previous one-hour rolling loop, with a permanent save option for any clip. Weather maps now show rain and snow with better color differentiation and include the past hour of precipitation data along the route.
Tesla has now established a clear rhythm of two major OTA pushes per year. As with last year’s Spring update, that cycle started taking shape in 2025 with adaptive headlights and trunk customization. The 2025 Holiday Update then added Grok to the vehicle for the first time. This Spring follows that structure: the Holiday update introduces new architecture, and the Spring update broadens it across the fleet.
Two notable features still did not make it. IFTTT automations, which launched in China earlier this year, were held back from this North American release for unknown reasons, and Apple CarPlay remains absent, reportedly still delayed by iOS 26 and Apple Maps compatibility issues.
Below is the full list of feature updates released by Tesla.
— Tesla (@Tesla) April 13, 2026
Elon Musk
Tesla launches 200mph Model S “Gold” Signature in invite-only purchase
Tesla’s final 350-unit Signature Edition closes the book on two cars that changed everything.
Tesla has announced a super limited Signature Edition run of 250 Model S Plaid and 100 Model X Plaid units as an invite only purchase in a bid to give its original flagship vehicles a proper send-off.
When the Model S first launched in 2012, the first 1,000 units sold were “Signature” editions that required a $40,000 deposit and cost nearly $100,000 each. Those early buyers were Tesla’s first real believers. This new Signature Edition deliberately echoes that moment, bookending a 14-year run with numbered collector hardware.
Both models are finished in an exclusive Garnet Red paint not available on any current Tesla production vehicle, with gold Tesla T badges up front, a gold Plaid badge and Signature badge at the rear, and a white Alcantara interior featuring gold Plaid seat badges, gold piping, Signature-marked door sills, and a numbered dash plate. The Model S adds carbon ceramic brakes with gold calipers. Every unit ships with Tesla’s Luxe Package, bundling Full Self-Driving (Supervised), four years of Premium Service, free lifetime Supercharging, and a Signature Edition key fob. Both are priced at $159,420, a roughly $35,000 premium over standard Plaid inventory.
The discontinuation is part of a broader strategic shift. At Tesla’s Q4 2025 earnings call, Musk described the decision as “slightly sad” but necessary, saying: “It’s time to basically bring the Model S and X programs to an end with an honorable discharge, because we’re really moving into a future that is based on autonomy.”
The Fremont factory floor that built these cars is being converted to manufacture Optimus humanoid robots, with a target of one million units annually.
Elon Musk
Tesla uses Model S and X ‘sentimental’ value to enforce massive pricing move
By slashing production and creating immediate scarcity, the company has transformed these remaining vehicles into limited-edition relics. The price hike is not driven by rising material costs or new features.
Tesla is using the “sentimental” value that CEO Elon Musk talked about with the Model S and Model X to enforce one of the most massive pricing moves it has ever applied as it begins to phase out the flagship vehicles.
Tesla quietly executed one of its most calculated pricing plays yet. After officially ending production of the Model S and Model X, the company raised prices on every remaining new and demo unit by roughly $15,000.
The refreshed starting prices now sit at:
- $109,990 for the Model S AWD
- $124,900 for the Model S Plaid
- $114,900 for the Model X AWD
- $129,900 for the Model X Plaid
NEWS: Tesla has raised the price on all remaining new (and demo) Model S and Model X vehicles left in inventory by $15,000.
New starting prices:
• Model S AWD: $109,990
• Model S Plaid: $124,900
• Model X AWD: $114,900
• Model X Plaid: $129,900 pic.twitter.com/qBEhsYAfXr— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) April 5, 2026
Every vehicle comes fully loaded with the Luxe Package, Full Self-Driving Supervised, four years of premium connectivity and service, and lifetime free Supercharging. What looks like a simple inventory adjustment is, in reality, a masterclass in monetizing nostalgia.
These are not ordinary cars. For many owners, the Model S and Model X represent the purest expression of Tesla’s original promise—the sleek, over-engineered flagships that proved electric vehicles could be faster, quieter, and more desirable than their gasoline counterparts.
Tesla removes Model S and X custom orders as sunset officially begins
They are the vehicles that carried Elon Musk’s vision from Silicon Valley startup to global automaker.
The final units rolling off the line carry an emotional weight that numbers alone cannot capture. Buyers are not simply purchasing transportation; they are acquiring a piece of Tesla history, the last examples of the very models that defined the brand’s first decade.
Tesla, with this move, understands this sentiment deeply.
By slashing production and creating immediate scarcity, the company has transformed these remaining vehicles into limited-edition relics. The price hike is not driven by rising material costs or new features.
It is driven by the knowledge that a certain segment of buyers, loyalists, collectors, and enthusiasts, will pay a premium precisely because these cars are about to disappear. The strategy converts emotional attachment into margin.
Where other automakers might discount outgoing models to clear lots, Tesla is betting that sentiment is worth more than volume.
The move also quietly rewards existing owners. Scarcity instantly boosts resale values for the hundreds of thousands of Model S and X already on the road, reinforcing brand loyalty among the very people who helped build Tesla’s reputation.
In the end, Tesla’s pricing decision reveals a sophisticated understanding of its audience. As the company pivots toward next-generation platforms, it has found a way to extract one final, lucrative chapter from its heritage.
For buyers willing to pay the new prices, the premium is not just for the car; it is for the feeling of owning the last true originals. Tesla has turned sentiment into strategy, and in the process, reminded everyone that even in the EV era, emotion remains a powerful line on the balance sheet.















