I'm buying a Quad-motor with my TSLA investment gains. Even if the price is $80K once all is said and done with the options I want, it will amount to less than $4K of original TSLA investment since I sold a bunch when it was up around $260 (split adjusted) and I only paid a bit over $12 for each of those shares in 2019.If the Fed keeps increasing interest rates on a quarterly basis, we’ll all be eyeballing the single motor again.
I can and do, often.Who drives two hundred miles without stopping? That's like, three hours. That's really pushing the bladder. And while there's a few lakes a hundred miles from somewhere, there's not alot of them. Get enough of these trucks rolling around and there'll be Level 2 charging for the trucks waiting for their boats to come back.
And how do you 'more capacity'? You have to stop and refuel, or you buy the one with extra-big tanks in the beginning. The vast majority don't have those tanks.
So why does this keep coming up? Honestly.
-Crissa
Yeah, spouse had a coworker at Stanford who lived in Salinas. Two hours without traffic!When I was working, my daily commute was a bit over 100 miles and I did this for 25 years. Luckily no accidents or tickets. This put me at an easy 2000 miles/month plus weekend driving. This was in crazy commute traffic over the Altamont Pass before they widened I-580 and I-205 to 6 lanes. For many Californian drivers, this was a daily commute distance with some of my neighbors driving even further.
I lived in the Central Valley for a long time. Did not commute though, the idea of robbing myself of 3+ hours a day seemed insane. Likewise the idea of living in the Bay Area and its chaos.Yeah, spouse had a coworker at Stanford who lived in Salinas. Two hours without traffic!
I've driven 680/580/205 in rush a few times and cannot imagine what would be worth living in the worse air quality of the Central Valley and giving up ten hours a week for...
The Delta is pretty and the gardening is sublime but...
-Crisda
Well, there's a reason I live in the Santa Cruz Mountains. I need my trees.I lived in the Central Valley for a long time. Did not commute though, the idea of robbing myself of 3+ hours a day seemed insane. Likewise the idea of living in the Bay Area and its chaos.
There's a thing called housing affordability, at least when I first moved there. I got a job in the Bay Area back in 1980 when housing was a little affordable but not really. Housing is not affordable anywhere now (on the West Coast) but owning two different houses in the early 80's for $50K and $110K let me keep the money I was making. I couldn't afford housing in the city I worked in, which was less expensive than where you live. As for air quality in the Central Valley, it was and is a lot better than the stench I had to endure growing up in Southern California. I worked at a government installation for 33 years, the last few years telecommuting from Anacortes, WA, a small, quaint town next in the Puget Sound. My commuting up here meant walking from my bedroom, down to the kitchen to make coffee/tea, then back upstairs to my office. I've been to Santa Cruz, had a college friend in Aptos, and love the California Coast but there are way too many people in the greater Bay Area. I like where I am right now.Yeah, spouse had a coworker at Stanford who lived in Salinas. Two hours without traffic!
I've driven 680/580/205 in rush a few times and cannot imagine what would be worth living in the worse air quality of the Central Valley and giving up ten hours a week for...
The Delta is pretty and the gardening is sublime but...
-Crisda
Yeah, that is better than a commute. I love the Olympic peninsula! My dad worked for the Quinault when I was in High School and we lived in Ocean Shores.There's a thing called housing affordability, at least when I first moved there. I got a job in the Bay Area back in 1980 when housing was a little affordable but not really. Housing is not affordable anywhere now (on the West Coast) but owning two different houses in the early 80's for $50K and $110K let me keep the money I was making. I couldn't afford housing in the city I worked in, which was less expensive than where you live. As for air quality in the Central Valley, it was and is a lot better than the stench I had to endure growing up in Southern California. I worked at a government installation for 33 years, the last few years telecommuting from Anacortes, WA, a small, quaint town next in the Puget Sound. My commuting up here meant walking from my bedroom, down to the kitchen to make coffee/tea, then back upstairs to my office. I've been to Santa Cruz, had a college friend in Aptos, and love the California Coast but there are way too many people in the greater Bay Area. I like where I am right now.
Exactly, the final price.Apologies if a similar thread already exists, but I was curious if anything might cause people to opt out of the Cybertruck as we get closer to launch.
After final specs, pricing and performance figures are released is there something specific that would lead you to cancel your reservation?
How about once test drives are available?
For me (and many others) a price change beyond 10-15% of the initial figures would be a deal-breaker. If the CT felt unwieldy and un-parkable in the city that would also cause some hesitation.
Otherwise, I'm all in ...barring some unforeseen pitfall.