Computer systems flip math into objects and pictures. Jason Fenske, generally known as the maestro at YouTube channel Engineering Defined, turns objects and pictures again into math to assist us perceive how issues work, what they imply, and, on this case, whether or not issues are true. Relating to the boast in regards to the Tesla Cybertruck that is towing a Porsche 911 beating a Porsche 911 over the quarter-mile or eighth-mile, Fenske’s math exhibits that no, these photographs weren’t true. So he made a video about it. And everyone knows what occurs with these sorts of Tesla encounters: The Sharks and The Jets present as much as battle it out within the feedback. On the time of writing, Fenske’s vid has 2.3 million views and eight,275 feedback Plus a postscript that Fenske added on X to make clear among the math elements to the Tesla-no-matter-what gang has one other 10,000 views.
Even a Tesla engineer wrote in to touch upon the vid, and never simply any engineer, however lead Cybertruck engineer Wes Morrill. Morrill’s thread on X — which has an extra 861,000 views on the time of writing — caught to the subject, put context to the video, and tried to clarify why Tesla phrased the competition within the method it did. In different phrases, it was the start of one of the best form of dialogue. As Fenske wrote, “A lot of folks, myself included, could learn from Wes’s professionalism.”
Nonetheless did not change the outcomes of Fenske’s evaluation, the comical recap of the re-analysis being, “Based on my math, I don’t think the Cybertruck beats the Porsche 911 in the 1/4 mile, if it’s also towing said Porsche. Hence, the title is what the title is, based on the contents of the video.”
Now that we have heard from Tesla, we’re ready to seek out out if Porsche wrote Fenske to remark in regards to the inexperienced 911 rendering, “You think you’re funny? Stick to the math.”