Best Tesla Model Y Camping Accessories: We Packed a Juniper for a Weekend

Best Tesla Model Y Camping Accessories: We Packed a Juniper for a Weekend

Model YJacob Guo 14 min read
BASENOR Product Testing Lab · Model Y Camping Best Tesla Model Y Camping Accessories: We Packed a Juniper for a Weekend Camping in a Tesla...
Tesla Model Y Juniper & Model 3 Highland Screen Protector — BASENOR Tesla Guides

Tesla Model Y Juniper & Model 3 Highland Screen Protector: Why You Need One and Which Type to Buy

Buying GuidesDaniel Zhang 8 min read
The 2024+ Highland and 2025+ Juniper 15.4-inch touchscreen is the first Tesla screen with a matte anti-glare coating — beautiful, but softer and faster to scratch than any previous Tesla display. Here's why tempered glass beats PET film, why matte is the right finish choice, and the 8-minute install walkthrough.
BASENOR TPE door pocket insert installed on a 2025+ Tesla Model Y Juniper front door, integrated flush with the factory armrest and door card

Design Story: The Door Pocket Insert That Doesn't Block Your Emergency Exit

Inside BASENORJacob Guo 10 min read
Most aftermarket Model Y door pocket inserts cover the rear-door emergency release button. If the 12V system fails, your passengers can't get out. We scanned the button location and designed a 759.2mm full-length insert with a specific cutout that keeps it accessible.
2026 Tesla Model Y Juniper Accessories Fitment Guide — BASENOR Tesla Guides

2026 Tesla Model Y Juniper Accessories Fitment Guide

FitmentDaniel Zhang 5 min read

65% of legacy Model Y accessories don't fit the 2025+ Juniper. The difference isn't random — it follows three redesigned systems: interior console, wheel geometry, exterior trim. The full category-by-category compatibility matrix with every dimension that matters.

The Tesla New Owner Starter Kit 2026: What to Buy First, What to Skip — BASENOR Tesla Guides

The Tesla New Owner Starter Kit 2026: What to Buy First, What to Skip

CybertruckDaniel Zhang 6 min read

You'll be tempted to buy 30 accessories. You'll actually use half. The evidence-based list of what to buy first (by owner usage data, not marketing), what to wait on, and the three categories new Tesla owners waste the most money on. Includes non-BASENOR recommendations where the right answer is elsewhere.

Week One with Model Y Juniper: The Settings to Change, the Mistakes to Avoid — BASENOR Tesla Guides

Week One with Model Y Juniper: The Settings to Change, the Mistakes to Avoid

Model Y JuniperDaniel Zhang 8 min read

The Juniper is not a facelift — it's a re-engineered car that shares a name with the Model Y. Six Tesla defaults are quietly wrong for long-term ownership, and three simple day-1 changes make the car feel significantly better. The week-by-day playbook for Juniper owners specifically.

The Tesla Delivery Day Inspection Your Salesperson Won't Run With You — BASENOR Tesla Guides

The Tesla Delivery Day Inspection Your Salesperson Won't Run With You

CybertruckDaniel Zhang 9 min read

Your delivery appointment runs 60 minutes. The first 45 are paperwork. The last 15 are where every issue must be caught — because Tesla's resolution depends on documentation before you sign. The 32-point inspection your salesperson will not run with you, organized by the exact sequence of delivery.

Best Tesla Accessories for Arizona, Nevada & Texas Heat — BASENOR Tesla Guides

Best Tesla Accessories for Arizona, Nevada & Texas Heat

Model 3Daniel Zhang 4 min read

Phoenix data: an unattended Tesla hits 165°F cabin temp in 30 minutes. Glass roof sunshade drops it 35°F. Four heat accessories — ranked by measured temperature reduction, not marketing copy.

Why You Must Cover Your Tesla Under-Seat Air Vents (Before It's Too Late) — BASENOR Tesla Guides

Why You Must Cover Your Tesla Under-Seat Air Vents (Before It's Too Late)

FamilyDaniel Zhang 3 min read

Tesla's under-seat air vents are open — no grille, no filter. They swallow Cheerios, crayons, earbuds, and hair ties, which then rattle against the blower fan. A $16 cover takes 30 seconds to install and eliminates the problem for life.

BASENOR under-screen storage box installed in a 2024+ Tesla Model 3 Highland, integrated flush below the touchscreen with the cabin temperature sensor cutout visible

Design Story: How We Built an Under-Screen Storage Box Without Breaking Your HVAC

Inside BASENORJacob Guo 10 min read
Most concealed-mode under-screen boxes block Tesla's cabin temperature sensor — and the HVAC system throws heat-pump errors as a result. We 3D-scanned the whole cavity, found where the sensor lives, and designed an open-mode box with a dedicated cutout that keeps the climate control happy.
BASENOR sunglasses holder installed in the armrest cavity of a 2024+ Tesla Model 3 Highland with white leather interior

Design Story: How We Found a Home in Your Tesla for Sunglasses

Inside BASENORJacob Guo 8 min read
Tesla put zero sunglasses storage in the Model 3 Highland and Model Y Juniper. We 3D-scanned the narrow gap between the armrest and the cup holder ring, then molded a 191.6mm tray that fills exactly that space — so your sunglasses stop living in the cup holder.
BASENOR TPE cup holder insert installed in the twin cup holders of a 2024+ Tesla Model 3 Highland

Design Story: How We Engineered the Cup Holder Insert That Actually Stays Quiet

Inside BASENORJacob Guo 8 min read
Tesla's factory cup holders rattle every water bottle, coffee cup, and metal can they hold. We 3D-scanned both wells plus the center divider, then molded a 167.87mm single-piece TPE mat that drops in and shuts them up for good.