How We Engineered a 0.91mm Charger Mat That Still Charges
Most silicone charger pads are thick enough to kill Qi efficiency and too slick to grip the phone. We 3D-scanned the Tesla dock at 0.02mm and built a mat that's 0.91mm at the charging zone.
The Problem
Your Phone Slides Every Time You Brake
The Tesla Model 3 Highland's wireless charger is a slick angled plastic dock sitting in front of the armrest. It charges well. It holds the phone poorly. Accelerate from a stoplight and the phone slides forward into the ridge. Take a cloverleaf onramp and it walks sideways. Brake hard and it shoots toward the cupholders.
Tesla's surface is also a scratch magnet. After a year of phones, keys, sunglasses, and the occasional coin sliding across it, the factory-black plastic is a dull gray mess. And replacing the dock means a trip to service.
The aftermarket answer is a silicone pad. The aftermarket reality: most pads are 2mm+ thick, which drops Qi charging efficiency by a third, so your phone charges in 3 hours instead of 90 minutes. We didn't want to trade grip for charging speed.
This project's brief was a single-line constraint: match the factory dock's geometry exactly, hold the phone firmly under hard cornering, and stay under 1.0mm at the charging zone so Qi coupling doesn't suffer. Everything else was negotiable.
Precision First
We 3D-Scanned the Dock — Including the Ridge
Tesla's charging dock isn't a flat rectangle. It has a central guidance ridge that steers the phone toward the Qi coil, slightly asymmetric side walls at 3° inward taper, a cable passthrough at the rear, and a faint front lip that keeps the phone from sliding out. A mat designed as a flat sheet would cover the ridge and lose the guidance function. A mat designed to sit around the ridge would gap on the sides.
We brought a Scantech handheld structured-light scanner into a 2024 Model 3 Highland and captured the dock at 0.02mm resolution — including the ridge, the taper, and the cable gap. Ten minutes inside the cabin produced a point cloud that let us design the mat's underside as an exact inverse of the factory surface.



The scan confirmed the thing that makes universal-fit silicone mats wrong for the Highland: the ridge is 1.8mm tall, and nothing Tesla published spec-wise captures that number. Our mat has a mirror-image ridge on its underside — it seats around the factory ridge instead of bridging over it, so the phone still gets centered toward the Qi coil the way Tesla designed.
The Concept
Variable Thickness, Not Uniform Thickness
A uniform-thickness silicone sheet has to choose: thin enough to charge (but then too floppy to grip) or thick enough to grip (but then kills Qi efficiency). We picked neither. The mat is 0.91mm at the charging zone directly over the Qi coil and 2.4mm at the perimeter where phone grip matters. One molded piece, different zones, different jobs.
0.91mm Charging Zone
Directly above the Qi coil. Thinner than a business card. Measured efficiency drop versus no mat: under 5%. Charging speed is indistinguishable.
2.4mm Grip Perimeter
Thick silicone edge around the dock walls. Phone sits into a shallow cup, not on a flat surface. Slide resistance under acceleration tested up to 0.8g lateral.
Inverse-Scan Underside
Under-surface follows the factory dock geometry exactly, including the central guidance ridge. Mat seats flush, does not lift at the corners.
Cable Passthrough Notch
A notch at the rear of the mat matches the factory cable gap — so you can still route a cable if you want wired charging with a case on.
Trial & Error
Four Silicones, One Correct Durometer
Silicone's personality is set by its Shore hardness (durometer). Shore A30 grips like a soft grippy toy. Shore A80 feels like a hard phone case. The charging zone wants softer (for vibration damping); the perimeter wants harder (for slide resistance). We prototyped four separate durometer combinations before settling on the production formula.

Prototype 1 — Shore A40 Uniform
Single durometer, uniform thickness 1.8mm. Charged fine. Phone slid on smooth laminated side at 0.3g. Too thick, too soft, wrong answer in both zones.
Prototype 2 — A40/A70 Dual Zone
Softer center at 1.2mm, harder edges at 2.0mm. Grip better, charging still OK, but the transition between durometers showed a visible seam line. Unacceptable finish for a visible cabin part.
Prototype 3 — Gradient Durometer
One material, gradient hardness achieved via mold temperature zoning. Smooth visible surface. Grip good, thickness still 1.4mm at the coil — measurable charging efficiency loss on older iPhones.
Prototype 4 — 0.91mm/2.4mm Production
Thinned the charging zone to 0.91mm (the minimum that still molds reliably in this silicone). Full efficiency on Qi. Perimeter at 2.4mm. Gradient durometer kept. This is the production mat.
Verification
0.91mm, Caliper-Verified, Charge-Tested
A wireless charger mat has two jobs, and both need to pass the lab test: grip the phone without sliding, and not measurably slow down charging. We tested the production mat against four reference phones (iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 16, Pixel 9 Pro, Galaxy S24) on the factory Tesla Qi coil. Charging efficiency stayed within 4% of mat-free baseline in all four cases. Phone retention tested at 0.8g lateral acceleration (equivalent to a hard cornering maneuver) — zero slide on all four phones.



The spec sheet everyone else publishes just says "thin." Ours says 0.91mm. That number is the difference between 90-minute charging and 3-hour charging on an iPhone 16.
Materials
Why Molded Silicone, Not Cut Sheet
| Component | Material | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Mat body | Molded platinum-cured silicone, gradient durometer | One-piece construction. Softer in the charging zone (vibration damping), harder at the perimeter (slide resistance). No seams. |
| Underside contour | Inverse-molded to 3D scan | Follows the factory dock geometry including the guidance ridge. Seats flush, does not lift at corners. |
| Top surface | Fine-grain matte texture | Grips the phone without leaving marks. Wipes clean. Doesn't show fingerprints. |
| Perimeter lip | 2.4mm raised edge | Creates a shallow cup for the phone. Slide resistance at 0.8g lateral. |
We evaluated TPU and PU foam. Both rejected: TPU gets sticky in heat, PU foam compresses permanently over time. Platinum-cured silicone stays stable from −20°C to +200°C — which matters when your car sits in a summer parking lot at 70°C cabin temperature.
The Result
What You Actually Get
| Feature | What It Means for You |
|---|---|
| 0.91mm charging zone | Charging speed stays within 4% of mat-free baseline. No 3-hour charge times. |
| 2.4mm grip perimeter | Phone doesn't slide when you brake, accelerate, or corner. Tested to 0.8g lateral. |
| 3D-scan-derived underside | Seats flush on the factory dock, engages the center ridge, does not lift at the corners. |
| Cable passthrough notch | Route a wired cable through without removing the mat. |
| Gradient durometer | Softer at phone contact, harder at dock contact — one piece, no visible seams. |
| Matte finish | Doesn't show fingerprints. Wipes clean with a damp cloth. |
| Temperature-stable silicone | Stays pliable from −20°C to +200°C. Won't melt in summer parking. |
| Fits 2024+ Model 3 Highland | Scan-derived for this specific dock. Not for older Model 3 or Model Y. |
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this fit the Model Y Juniper or the older Model 3?
Will it slow down wireless charging?
Do I need to remove my phone case?
Will it scratch my phone?
Does it stay in place or slide around?
Will it melt in summer heat?
How do I clean it?
Ready for a Dock That Actually Holds Your Phone?
A 0.91mm Mat That Doesn't Trade Grip for Charging
3D-scan-derived fit. Variable thickness. Full Qi efficiency. No adhesive. For the Model 3 Highland owners tired of their phone sliding into the cupholders every time they brake.
Shop NowFits 2024+ Tesla Model 3 Highland · Free US Shipping






