HaulingAss
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2020
- Threads
- 28
- Messages
- 10,325
- Reaction score
- 20,742
- Location
- Western Washington, USA
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3
I think the single motor, RWD model might be cancelled due to low demand. Which means the cheapest model might be a dual motor for around the $50K range, which would make it very competitive with legacy gas trucks and blow the value offered by legacy EV trucks out of the water.
I haven't seen too many people in the last couple of years pushing the idea that Cybertruck would be under $40K, particularly not in the near future. Given enough time, there might eventually be a bare bones, RWD, lower range model under $40K but it could take a while, I wouldn't hold my breath.
The real loonies are those predicting six figure price tags. That makes no sense and has no evidence to support it. They just made it up out of thin air. Probably people trying to reduce mass-market interest in the Cybertruck due to the threat it poses to legacy sales, oil and gas interests, parts suppliers, auto dealerships, and auto repair shops. They think if they can get people to believe the Cybertruck is expensive and priced out of their reach, they might just break down and trade in their current truck for another brand-new gasser.
Some people will say anything, no matter how stupid, if they think it might prolong the era of legacy trucks, gas stations, repair shops, etc. just another year or two.
I haven't seen too many people in the last couple of years pushing the idea that Cybertruck would be under $40K, particularly not in the near future. Given enough time, there might eventually be a bare bones, RWD, lower range model under $40K but it could take a while, I wouldn't hold my breath.
The real loonies are those predicting six figure price tags. That makes no sense and has no evidence to support it. They just made it up out of thin air. Probably people trying to reduce mass-market interest in the Cybertruck due to the threat it poses to legacy sales, oil and gas interests, parts suppliers, auto dealerships, and auto repair shops. They think if they can get people to believe the Cybertruck is expensive and priced out of their reach, they might just break down and trade in their current truck for another brand-new gasser.
Some people will say anything, no matter how stupid, if they think it might prolong the era of legacy trucks, gas stations, repair shops, etc. just another year or two.
Sponsored