Model S never consistently did more than 2,000 a week (biggest US month was Dec 2016 when they did under 6,000 and X was under 4,000). I'd consider anything over 8,000 a month of Model 3 ramped up.Here is global delivery graphed, with 25,000 being a good quarter (about 8,333 per month at best) Tesla: vehicle deliveries by quarter 2017 | Statistic If they can do >8,000 a month of Model 3 and still do 8,000 a month of S and X I'd be very happy with that. That would mean they doubled total car production in less than a year (on the way to a 200,000 car year).If it got to 14,000 a month of Model 3 it'd be leaving S/X combined in the dust. That'd be record breaking not ramped up. We'd be on the way to tripling the prior years production (well over 250,000 cars a year at a 14,000 per month rate of Model 3 plus 8,000 a month rate of S/X).And before someone talks about 5,000 a week run rate goals, remember that is 5,000 before downtime (holidays, maintenance, upgrades, what ifs). Even if they get the line doing 5,000 a week, it won't do that 52 weeks straight.