New Tesla driver fumes over a mum's 'careless' act in a Queensland car park
- Woman caught banging Tesla with a pram
- Tesla captured incident on camera
- READ MORE: North Sydney: Ugly road rage incident caught on video
A new Tesla owner has shared the infuriating moment a 'selfish' young mother banged her pram into the side of his 'day-old' car.
But the complaining man was slapped down by an eagle-eyed TikTok user who noted his car did not appear to be damaged by the incident in a Queensland car park.
In the video captured by the Tesla's extenal camera, a woman was seen unloading an empty pram from her car that had been parked next to the Tesla.
With one hand, she turned the pram around to reverse it out of the narrow gap between the two vehicles.
As she turned the pram, and without paying enough attention, she carelessly banged the pram into the side of the Tesla.
Tesla owner Josh was understandably not impressed.
'Not even a day old', he said. 'People just don't give a fudge about other people's property nowadays I guess.'
Social media users were mixed in their response.
Many had sympathy for Josh and condemned the woman for being careless.
'She hits the car multiple times and is very much aware of it, she's being rough and doesn't care,' one said.
A proud Tesla owner has shared the infuriating moment a 'selfish' young mother banged her pram into the side of his 'day-old' car (pictured). However, the EV enthusiast was slapped down by an eagle-eyed TikTok user who noted his car didn't even appear to be damaged
Another agreed: 'This is why I park so far away from everyone, I'm sick of door dings and scratches on my nice car.'
Others suggested she should not be condemned for an accident.
'Are you referring to when the pram accidentally touches your car? It clearly hadn't damaged anything and wasn't intentional?' one argued.
Parking spaces in shopping centres across Australia are regarded as small, usually 2.4m wide by 5.5 m long.
Incidents like the one involving the pram and the Tesla are common, often leading to violent confrontations.
Glebe Hill shopping centre in Tasmania has come up with a genius move to prevent this by implementing special parking spots with double lines that allow a car door to be fully open without hitting the adjacent vehicle.