Youthful Misadventure: 10-Year-Old Drives SUV into Pond in St. Joseph County

In a startling incident in St. Joseph County, a 10-year-old boy is safe after he reportedly commandeered a family member’s SUV and subsequently crashed it into a pond early Monday morning. The police were alerted to a vehicle theft in the River Park area just before 7:30 a.m., where it was discovered that the young boy had taken the vehicle.

As the situation unfolded, multiple reports surfaced of the SUV being driven erratically along Ironwood Drive, including a hit-and-run incident at the intersection with Pleasant Street. The chaotic drive continued beyond the South Bend city limits, with a mailbox reported damaged near Fellows Street and Jackson Road. The chase came to a dramatic end when the vehicle sped across the lawn of St. Jude Catholic Church and plunged into a pond on the property.

Miraculously, the boy managed to exit the SUV by himself and was promptly taken to the hospital for treatment of minor injuries. This incident raises critical concerns about vehicle security and the importance of keeping car keys out of reach of children, underscoring the potential dangers of youthful curiosity combined with access to automobiles.

Unveiling Exclusive Upgrades for Your Toyota Land Cruiser for Next-Level Off-Roading

The new 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser fills a gap in the Toyota SUV market. It does this without taking over the Sequoia’s or 4Runner’s positions. The new Land Cruiser 250 is smaller than the previous version. Still it retains much of the upscale qualities and off-road abilities that make it a Land Cruiser. As an off-road SUV, aftermarket companies need to offer some great ways to upgrade this SUV.

Great names, but not the Toyota classics

When we think of Toyota off-roading, TRD and ARB are the first names to come to mind. Parts and features from these two names are part of the off-road-focused 2025 Toyota 4Runner. This follows the historical path of leaving the Land Cruiser off the TRD list. Still, several impressive off-road upgrades are available for the new Land Cruiser. Some of these parts come from JAOS, Toy-Factory, and Modellista.

JAOS Front Bumper Guard for the 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser
JAOS Front Bumper Guard for the 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser | Toyota

JAOS offers an excellent bumper integration

The new JAOS front bumper guard, made for the Toyota Land Cruiser, looks like it should come right from the factory. This bumper guard replaces the center section and outriggers while integrating a thicker front skid plate and tough-looking exposed fasteners.

Additional JAOS items include a set of 18-inch wheels, which look much different from the OEM wheels, and a set of mud flaps with the brand’s signature look.

Toy-Factory Bed Kit for the 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser
Toy-Factory Bed Kit for the 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser | Toyota

Your Land Cruiser can be your home away from home

One of the most significant aspects of overlanding is turning your vehicle into a place to sleep at night. If your SUV can be a comfortable place to sleep, you don’t have to look for a tent location or put your roof-top tent on the top of the vehicle.

The team at Toy-Factory created a kit that turns everything behind the front seats of the Land Cruiser into a padded bed surface. This could be the start of turning your Toyota SUV into your overlanding vehicle.

Modellista Wheels for the 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser
Modellista Wheels for the 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser | Toyota

Tack on some extras from Modellista

Adding Modellista to this list might be cheating because it’s part of the Toyota family. In fact, it’s from the Toyota Customizing and Development division, which includes TRD. This brand created some impressive aesthetic items that can be applied over the factory items to give the Toyota Land Cruiser an upgraded look. Modellista also offers a set of 20-inch alloy wheels with twisted spokes, which look incredible.

Adding a few items to your new 2024 Toyota Land Cruiser makes it more comfortable on the trails, capable in rugged settings, and alters the appearance to give your Toyota SUV a special look.

PepsiCo Ordered 100 Tesla Semis In 2017. Tesla Delivered 36 So Far

Tesla built roughly 140 Semis to date, according to historical data and a new report from Reuters.

Production of the all-electric Tesla Semi Class 8 rig is slower than anticipated, with the total fleet amounting to roughly 140 units since production began toward the end of 2022, historical data and new information revealed by Reuters suggests. Tesla never released official production figures for its biggest vehicle.

In late 2022, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said that the annual production of the Semi would reach 50,000 units in 2024. Fast-forward to June 2023, and the outspoken head honcho toned down his expectations and said that the company doesn’t expect to start higher-volume production of the electric Semi before late 2024, citing battery supply constraints. So let’s see how the manufacturing ramp-up went so far.

Tesla Semi production lags as EV maker gets to grips with delivery slowdown for passenger EVs

Tesla’s Semi Class 8 truck is nowhere near mass production status. Nearly two years after deliveries began, the American company built roughly 140 units, with approximately 100 being used by Tesla itself and 36 going to one of its biggest customers, PepsiCo.

That said, the low-volume truck is the least of Tesla’s problems, with the latest report showing a rare growth decline in the passenger vehicle business.

One of the biggest customers for the Tesla Semi is PepsiCo. The company made initial payments for 100 units in 2017, but as of early April, the snack and beverage maker had received 36 Semis, according to a spokesperson quoted by Reuters. That’s the same number of Semis as in March 2023. In October of last year, the total number of Semis built had risen to around 60-70.

Earlier this year, logistics company Martin Brower claimed to have used two Tesla Semis to deliver goods to its restaurant customers as part of a pilot, Reuters wrote.

Tesla itself has a fleet of about 100 Semis, as the EV maker’s vehicle engineering chief, Lars Moravy, mentioned during an episode of Jay Leno’s Garage in December of last year. Considering the only Semis on the road in March of last year were those in PepsiCo’s fleet, the roughly 100 units in Tesla’s fleet were likely built between March and December of 2023.

UPS reserved 125 units of the all-electric Class 8 semi-truck, and Asko Norway, the logistics arm of Norway’s biggest food retailer, put a deposit for 10 trucks in 2017. Neither company has received their orders, with a UPS spokesperson saying for Reuters last week that the company is “working closely with Tesla to determine a date for us to take delivery of the trucks.”

For the companies that ordered the electric Semi hoping to reduce their carbon footprint, the lack of deliveries from Tesla forced them to turn to other truck makers, even though the efficiency and driving range are below what the Semi is capable of.

The Freightliner eCascadia, made by Daimler Truck, is the biggest competitor to the Tesla Semi. UPS, Walmart Canada, Sysco and Schneider National have dozens of eCascadia rigs on the road, with Schneider alone using nearly 100 units to haul goods including PepsiCo’s Frito-Lay products.

Compared to the Semi’s approximate range of 500 miles, Freightliner’s eCascadia offers roughly half the driving distance on a full charge, but wider availability made it the truck of choice for over 55 companies, according to Daimler Truck North America.

Mazda CX-80 Launches in Europe: A New Era for Three-Row SUVs

Unveiling the Mazda CX-80

Last week, Mazda expanded its SUV family with the introduction of the CX-80, a mid-size three-row crossover. Distinct from its American counterparts, the CX-70 and CX-90, with which it shares its foundational elements, the CX-80 will initially be marketed exclusively in Europe, with plans for a broader release the following year.

A Closer Look at Design and Space

The CX-80 is designed as a larger variant of the CX-60, which debuted in Europe last year. Although it mirrors the width of the CX-60, it stretches further with a wheelbase that is 9.8 inches longer and a roofline that rises an additional inch, offering significant space for third-row occupants.

Engine Options and Handling

Mazda’s CX-80 is available with multiple powertrain configurations to cater to varying preferences: gasoline, diesel, and plug-in hybrid. The gasoline and diesel versions feature a turbocharged 3.3-liter inline-6 engine, while the plug-in hybrid marries a 2.5-liter inline-4 with an electric motor, powered by a 17.8-kWh battery that ensures a respectable range on electric power alone. All variants are equipped with an 8-speed automatic transmission and a dependable all-wheel-drive system.

2024 Mazda CX-80 (Europe spec)
2024 Mazda CX-80 (Europe spec)
2024 Mazda CX-80 (Europe spec)
2024 Mazda CX-80 (Europe spec)

Technological and Comfort Enhancements

The vehicle employs a rear-wheel-drive platform with engines positioned longitudinally, enhancing handling with a double-wishbone front suspension and a multi-link rear setup. While the CX-80 opts out of more luxurious elements like air springs and adaptive dampers, it compensates with a highly functional interior. The cockpit boasts twin 12.3-inch screens for the gauge cluster and infotainment system, which integrates seamlessly with smartphones via touch capabilities, Apple CarPlay, and Android Auto.

These innovations make the Mazda CX-80 a compelling choice in the competitive SUV market, ideal for families or anyone seeking a vehicle that blends space, power, and cutting-edge technology.

Tesla Investors To Musk: ‘At Least Appear To Make Tesla Your Top Priority’

This week is set to be a tumultuous one for Tesla as investors seek answers about robotaxis, the stock price and Musk’s compensation.

Even experienced Tesla watchers and Elon-ologists like me will tell you the electric automaker is in an especially weird moment—and for Tesla, that’s really saying something. The stock price is way down, sales are too, the path forward feels more uncertain than ever as it apparently hinges on robotaxis, and the CEO spent the weekend posting about slavery and pedophiles.

Meanwhile, he’s asking investors to approve an unprecedentedly large $56 billion compensation package at the company’s annual meeting this summer—something approved at a very different time in Tesla’s history, and one that has been through significant legal turmoil just recently.

Yeah. It’s a lot. So today’s edition of Critical Materials is all about Tesla, because we need to parse what’s going on—maybe even what’s going wrong—at that company ahead of the Tuesday evening’s important Q1 earnings call. Let’s dig in.

30%: Tesla’s Retail Investors Are Getting Nervous

Tesla EVs at Tesla Center in Providence, RI (source: Tesla North America @tesla_na / X)

For those not familiar with the term, retail investors are non-professional investors (typically individuals) who put money into a company in hopes of financial gain. $TSLA is immensely popular with retail investors; you may even be one of them. And lately, they’re as miffed as anyone by what’s going on at Tesla.

The automaker has set up a Say channel for those investors to ask questions ahead of the earnings call—an event where Musk is expected to answer for the declining sales and say at least something about the robotaxi plan. And as Fortune pointed out, many of those investors are not happy with the state of things:

Tesla says it has one of the largest retail stockholder bases of any publicly traded company, and that they are “incredibly engaged and tend to have a very strong understanding of the company, and are an important base of support and feedback for management and the board,” Tesla said this week. Most companies of Tesla’s size are dominated by large institutional investors who interact with the company through preset engagement meetings rather than the more informal channels that smaller retail investors work through.

To be sure, not all the sentiment in the Q&A about Musk so far has focused on his conduct. The top-voted question about the Tesla CEO was in favor of approving his compensation and ensuring his control remains intact.

“Is the board working on a package to give Elon the 25% voting rights? I hope the answer is ‘yes,’ which leads to: Can it be expedited? Times are wasting,” said one anonymous retail investor with 265,000 shares.

Another small investor with 8,200 shares asked: “Why does Tesla’s board think that despite falling deliveries, tanking share price, increased China competition, lack of AI innovation, and a court finding of excessive compensation, Elon Musk merits restoration of his $54B executive compensation package?”

You can see more of their questions and comments over here, and for a crowd as die-hard as Tesla’s investor base is, the vibe is as scathing as I have ever seen:

“If we vote for your comp package will you please at least appear to make Tesla your top priority? (Not saying crazy things on Twitter would be nice too.)”

“Is there any discussion about oversight of Elon’s erratic behavior on X that is damaging the Tesla brand?”

“It’s clear that public perception of the company has taken a big hit due to Elon’s erratic behavior, and the negative trend has been accelerating since the X acquisition. What’s the threshold for reigning that in, or promoting someone more professional to lead the organization?”

“Elon, can you please let investors know how you prioritize TESLA vs. X/Twitter vs. US immigration policy? A few years ago it seemed clear to me the ranking, but today it’s not clear to me as an investor & outsider.”

And so on.

Granted, plenty of diehard $TSLA folks continue to be completely undaunted here. But for a company long defined by its unshakable faith in Musk and the mission, it does feel like cracks are showing more than ever before.

Investors will be able to vote on Musk’s pay package at Tesla’s annual shareholder meeting in June, so that matter won’t be settled this week. But Tuesday evening’s Q1 earnings call may have a lot to do with their mood later on.

60%: Tesla Is Losing Democrats

EV Politics Slide Deck

To me, it’s a shame that electric vehicles have become so politicized. It’s just a form of technology; it doesn’t need to be a source of naked partisan division. But for now, at least, coastal and more left-leaning places are the areas more likely to jump into EV adoption.

And as Tim Higgins at the Wall Street Journal—one of the best Elon-ologists out there, in my opinion—reports that Musk’s antics are turning off Democrats at a time when it really can’t afford to lose any new buyers:

Among 2022 model-year buyers, Democrats made up 40% of Tesla customers and 39% in 2023, according to Strategic Vision’s surveys. Things began to change in the 2024 model year survey, which began in October. The makeup of Democrats fell to 15% while Republicans jumped to 32% and independents swelled to 44%.

Those results show Tesla was losing sales among Democrats, Alexander Edwards, president of Strategic Vision, said of the fall findings.

In California, a solid-blue state, registrations of new Tesla vehicles fell almost 10% in the fourth quarter. That was a stunning reversal from the third quarter when registrations rose 43%, and perhaps a sign of things to come nationally.

Tesla doesn’t release U.S.-specific sales results. But Motor Intelligence estimates Tesla’s U.S. sales growth turned negative this year. Model 3 sedan sales fell 44% in the period that ended in March compared with a year ago, according to the research firm. Model Y sport-utility vehicles rose just 1.4%.

Musk, for his part, has said before that he doesn’t plan on stepping off his public pedestal. And I also think Tesla’s own sliding sales in places like California have a lot to do with the fact that the lineup is getting old as well. But right now, Tesla could use some wins, and the X/Twitter stuff is just not helping.

90%: Tesla’s Price Cuts Go Global

Tesla Model X Depreciation

Meanwhile, Tesla continues to slash prices, and not just in the U.S. like we saw this weekend. Here’s Quartz to explain:

The automaker cut the price of the revamped Model 3 in China by 14,000 yuan ($1,930) to 231,900 yuan ($32,000). It also cut Model Y prices by a similar amount. Musk also trimmed the price of one model of the Model 3 in Germany to 40,990 euros ($43,670.75) from 42,990 ($45,750) euros.

In the U.S., Tesla slashed $2,000 off Model Y SUVs, Model X SUVS, and Model S sedans by $2,000. It also cut $4,000 off the price of Tesla’s Full Self-Driving amid a push to increase its collection of user data; just days earlier, the company slashed the subscription price of the software to $99 per month from $199 per month.

Prices across other countries in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa — areas where, as of last week, Musk now oversees Tesla sales — have also been slashed, Reuters reported.

If you haven’t bought a Model Y yet, now may be a better time than ever before.

100%: Are You A $TSLA Investor?

Here at InsideEVs, we don’t cover the Wall Street side of things too much; I leave that to the financial publications. But it’s an important part of any company’s story, and in Tesla’s case, it’s often the story.

So are you invested in Tesla? Would you be, after this? And if so, what’s your read on both the current state of things and the Musk’s pay?

Introducing the Neta L SUV: Revolutionizing the EV Market with Affordability

Neta L SUV Debuts

In a significant expansion of its electric vehicle lineup, Neta Auto, under the aegis of Chinese EV giant Hozon Auto, launched the new Neta L SUV. Today’s launch showcased the model in its extended-range electric vehicle (EREV) configuration, with the announcement of future availability in battery electric vehicle (BEV) versions.

Detailed Specifications and Pricing

Available in four distinct models, the Neta L EREV pricing starts at RMB 129,900 ($18,000) and reaches up to RMB 159,900. The entry-level model is slated for an official release in August, though pricing details were disclosed at today’s event. Structured on the innovative Shanhai platform, the Neta L is designed as a five-seater mid-size SUV, stretching 4,770 mm in length, with a width of 1,900 mm and height of 1,660 mm, and boasts a substantial wheelbase of 2,810 mm.

Innovative Features and Enhanced Performance

The Neta L is powered by a 1.5L four-cylinder engine, supplemented by a 40.27 kWh battery pack, allowing it to cover up to 310 kilometers per charge according to CLTC standards. Mirroring the innovation seen in Li Auto models, the Neta L is equipped with luxury features including a built-in refrigerator and twin 15.6-inch screens. The SUV also offers a seat with comprehensive 8-point massage and zero-gravity features for maximum comfort. In addition, Neta provided a sneak peek of the Neta S shooting brake model, which is expected to premiere at the upcoming Beijing auto show.

($1 = RMB 7.2439)

As Neta prepares for a potential Hong Kong IPO, this model’s launch marks a strategic step in bolstering their market presence, particularly following a slight decrease in their vehicle sales in 2023. The Neta L combines affordability with cutting-edge technology and luxurious amenities, positioning it as a formidable contender in the global electric vehicle market.

Range Rover Sport SV review: Crosses the boundary from SUV to supercar

I have no intention of robbing a bank, officer. Absolutely not. Nothing to see here, please move along. However, entirely hypothetically you understand, were I to succumb to the temptation of ill-gotten gains, then the new Range Rover Sport SV would likely be both a) the perfect getaway car — four adults in comfort, plenty of room for the loot, will outrun any panda car across any terrain — and b) the requisite opportunity to launder north of £180k in exchange for the (already sold-out) Edition One specification you see here. Though it’s a bit chicken and egg, I guess, as without robbing a bank most of us aren’t going to have the readies for this set of wheels in the first place. That said, it’s the same money you’d need for an Aston Martin DBX, Bentley Bentayga or Lamborghini Urus, each similarly specified and (variously) as capable, as well assembled and as quick. So maybe it’s less about if you could, and more about if you should. To which (spoiler alert), the answer is an emphatic yes. And here’s why.

The Range Rover has, forever, been the first and most convincing of the high-end, multi-purpose, go-anywhere, do-anything SUVs. Others, individually, may squeak it on performance, or luxury, or supercar brand status, but none has quite the bandwidth of a Range Rover. It is supreme off-road, sublime on it, has a unique, classless cachet all its own and, simply put, can do more, more of the time. It’s a Swiss army knife of a thing, if the Swiss army were based out of Fortnum and Mason.

The Sport model, as the name suggests, is a slightly more sporting take on the full-fat Rangie formula, oft-favoured by footballers and/or their wives and girlfriends. But it’s a two-and-a-half tonne 4×4, so it’s a matter of degree — there’s only so much sport you can add. Until now, that is. Because it’s fair to say the new Range Rover Sport SV rewrites a number of laws, those of physics among them.

“A slightly more sporting take on the full-fat Rangie formula” (Image: Provided)

The visual clues are there: a deeper front end newly wearing side vents, quad tailpipes out back and swollen rear arches to house 23-inch wheels (made of carbon fibre for a further £6,900 if you wish, with brakes to match for £7,000 more). And the SV doesn’t flatter to deceive — beneath the (also carbon-fibre) bonnet is a BMW-sourced, 4.4-litre, twin-turbo V8 pushing out 626 horses that move this leviathan from 0-62mph in 3.8 seconds and on to 180mph.

But more clever and more impressive than any of that is the car’s deportment — how it carries the dual challenges of performance and weight using a basket of tech including four-wheel steering, a quicker steering rack and what’s called 6D suspension, where regular anti-roll bars go in the bin to be replaced by four dampers connected diagonally by 25 metres of pipework. Me neither, but let me explain the net effect…

On broken roads, in standard Comfort mode, all about is calm and surprisingly refined. Switch to Dynamic mode and the steering is meatier, the car noticeably more roll-resistant. But in SV mode, the car drops 25mm, knows you want to play ball and — in the unlikely surrounds of the Portimão racetrack — this sportiest of Sports crosses the boundary from SUV to supercar, however unlikely that may sound.

I’m two laps or more in before I recalibrate all that’s going on and remember I’m driving a Range Rover. What’s happening beneath is delivering a driving experience that’s borderline discombobulating — there’s no body roll, no nose lift under hard acceleration and
no sense of major weight transfer under hard, hard braking. I see beyond 200kph on the main straight, but instead of a sense of impending doom, I’m just excited to barrel into corners, point the nose and get the throttle on at the first opportunity. It’s a video game made real.

And then, should you wish (and as I did), you can simply drive off-track, even off-road, and glide serenely home as though nothing unruly had happened. Switch on the extraordinary Body and Soul seats (so extraordinary we’ll come back to them for a future piece all their own) that use music producer-honed technology to vibrate and resonate along with your chosen music, and all is right with the world.

Like I say, officer, nothing to see here.

Range Rover Sport SV
626bhp
553lb/ft
0-60mph in 3.6 secs
180mph
276g/km
£171,405
landrover.co.uk

Kia Sportage Wins Us News’ Plug-In Hybrid of the Year for Its Affordability

This crossover PHEV could save you money in more ways than one.

What is a “Sportage?” According to Kia, the model name is a combinations of “sport” and the suffix “age” which means, “a state or condition of.” Sportage is the perfect word for the automaker’s most outdoorsy vehicle.

Kia and its distant Hyundai cousins have been absolutely killing it in the electric vehicle segment. So it’s no surprise that Kia just nabbed US News‘ plug-in hybrid of the year.

A white EV is charging in close left side view charging in front of a building
EV charging | Askolds via iStock

The Sportage is not the only PHEV the publication reviewed. The 2024 Volvo S60 Recharge went home with “Best Luxruy Plug-In Hybrid.” But for the regular segment, US News was taken with the Sportage’s affordability.

The most obvious metric of affordability is price. And with a $39,590 MSRP, this crossover is competitive. But it is engineered to save its drivers even more. The Sportage has a hefty all-electric range of 34 miles. That means most commuters will only need to fill up for roadtrips. Even when you are burning gas, the Kia Sportage PHEV gets 35 mpg. That’s one way to stretch your dollars.

The Kia Sportage is not without its flaws. For example, the 2023 Sportage had more owner complaints than most vehicles.

Stolen SUV found in Stark County pond

A fisherman spotted an SUV in Cook’s Lagoon in the 1800 block of Mahoning Rd NE early Sunday morning.

According to Canton Fire Division Chief Steve Henderson, the Canton man spotted the roof of the SUV in the middle of the pond just before 9 a.m.

The Canton Fire Department’s Water Rescue team and Canton police officers were sent to the scene.

The SUV’s doors were locked, so rescue personnel had to break the windows to search the vehicle.

Division Chief Henderson said the vehicle was unoccupied and had been reported stolen from an address in Plain Township on Saturday.

The SUV was removed from the water and the incident remains under investigation.