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    Home » Nearly All Cybertrucks Have Been Recalled Because Tesla Used the Wrong Glue
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    Nearly All Cybertrucks Have Been Recalled Because Tesla Used the Wrong Glue

    News RoomBy News RoomMarch 21, 20253 Mins Read
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    Nearly All Cybertrucks Have Been Recalled Because Tesla Used the Wrong Glue

    Tesla said Thursday it would recall nearly all the Cybertrucks it has produced to repair a stainless steel trim panel that the carmaker said could become detached from the vehicle while driving. It’s the eighth recall for the distinctive all-electric pickup, which hit US roads just over two years ago.

    Unlike many other Tesla-related recalls, though, this one cannot be fixed with an over-the-air software update; the trucks must be brought into a service center for repairs. The recall affects more than 46,000 Cybertrucks manufactured between November 2023 and late February 2025.

    The recall is related to a cosmetic applique on the vehicle’s exterior, which is attached to the rest of the truck by a kind of glue, according to a filing published by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the US’s road safety regulator. On affected Cybertrucks, the adhesive can separate from the rest of the truck, creating a possible “road hazard” for others and increasing the risk of a crash.

    Complaints about the trim first bubbled up in social media posts; Tesla reportedly halted Cybertruck production last week. Tesla says in the filing that it began to investigate the issue in early January. The filing says Tesla will repair the issue with another kind of adhesive “not prone to environmental embrittlement.”

    Dale Harrow, chair and director of the Intelligent Mobility Design Center at the Royal College of Art London, labels this latest glue recall for the Cybertruck as “surprising.”

    “Glues are used a lot more than people think in car body construction these days,” he says. “Rather than having a mechanical fixing, weld or a screw or a bolt, it’s very effective gluing panels together for a lighter construction. It’s become very popular. Jaguar, Lexus, Audi, they’ll use glues at some point. So I’m very surprised. It’s not as if it’s an unknown science. I’ve not heard [of problems] anywhere else.”

    There are numerous glues the auto industry uses to bond panels and parts together, Harrow says, adding that different adhesives are used depending on strength of bond needed, particular circumstances, and materials involved. However, what is different with the Cybertruck compared to other vehicles is its highly unconventional use of stainless steel for its panels.

    “Stainless steel is the big difference,” Harrow says. “So maybe there’s been an issue there?” Harrow points out that this fault appears to be happening in cold weather, and that it might be that the stainless steel is conducting cold better, possibly just enough to make a difference in the curing process.

    “I could surmise that something on the production line is not quite bonding at the right temperature or getting the right UV coverage? And that could be due to the stainless steel having a different density from standard steel. It’s not a small company, and it’s not doing things on the cheap. So I’ll be very surprised if there wasn’t the knowledge within the company to fix this. But it would need quite a bit of investigation, I think, to find out the real cause of it.”

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