QuanTim
Active member
I read your "novel" too, also very goodNot that I should be talking but…
Does it count as a summation if it’s TLDR?
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I read your "novel" too, also very goodNot that I should be talking but…
Does it count as a summation if it’s TLDR?
It's just the safety capsule. Not sure it really even qualifies as a body in white, with as little that's on it.Why not the exoskeleton?
So aside from the safety cage, what parts are traditional?I don’t see the exoskeleton design. The BIW appears to be very traditional.
Confirmed.Will y'all stop it with the "exoskeleton" references?!? They're meaningless!!! Every car without a cross braced roll cage can be called "exoskeleton". Anything that Tesla produces can be argued to fit the loose definition of exoskeleton. There is no legal definition of the term in relation to automobiles that can be referenced to declare that a unibody, or stamped metal and castings covered with non-structural metal, or even body on frame construction is inconsistent with Elon's comment. So long as it doesn't have bones on the inside covered with tendons, ligaments, muscle and skin, exoskeleton fits. ?
I am looking forward to seeing that also.. HOWEVER, i suspect they have a staging area they can store a ton of em in.. and leave em under cover till they WANT us to see them.It's getting good around here. Almost everyday we're getting photos and leaks. Can't wait to see them rolling down the ramp at GFTX! They won't be able to hide them, lol.
As many others who quoted this have said, this does not look traditional. Looks pretty weak, as it should. The exoskeleton was never meant to provide most of the structure, but it was meant to contribute to it. It was meant to enable what is essentially a monocoque design to compete in hauling capability.I don’t see the exoskeleton design. The BIW appears to be very traditional.
IF casting is the bottleneck, I guess sacrificing a front end for a repair job we have sold 1 less potential new Cybertruck.One of the continuing and more expensive costs of CT ownership will be insurance. A major factor in the cost of collision insurance will be how expensive it is to repair the CT after a wreck.
Curious about what others think. I am wondering how difficult (or easy) body work will be on a CT after an accident. It seems like there will be lots of bending and twisting forces that could carry through the entire "sub frame" indo/exoskeleton. Body shops will need lots of new techniques, tools and jigs. Any body repairs, at my initial estimate, look to be significantly more difficult and therefore much more expensive than traditionally designed vehicles.
Tesla owns an insurance business, they will make a product that can be repaired. If you manage to crack the frame the truck will be totaled like anything else. Otherwise the parts Tesla puts together to make the CyberTruck can be replaced to fix the CyberTruck. There are Tesla engineers with the primary responsibility of focusing on figuring how out it’ll be fixed and creating instructions for Tesla and 3rd party body shops.One of the continuing and more expensive costs of CT ownership will be insurance. A major factor in the cost of collision insurance will be how expensive it is to repair the CT after a wreck.
Curious about what others think. I am wondering how difficult (or easy) body work will be on a CT after an accident. It seems like there will be lots of bending and twisting forces that could carry through the entire "sub frame" indo/exoskeleton. Body shops will need lots of new techniques, tools and jigs. Any body repairs, at my initial estimate, look to be significantly more difficult and therefore much more expensive than traditionally designed vehicles.
This describes all Teslas.Any body repairs, at my initial estimate, look to be significantly more difficult and therefore much more expensive than traditionally designed vehicles.
Modern vehicles are totaled if they roll-over or are impacted at typical crash speeds of 30 mph and above. Cybertruck will survive fender-benders in a similar manner to any other vehicle because the rails on the front and rear castings are designed to be replaceable.One of the continuing and more expensive costs of CT ownership will be insurance. A major factor in the cost of collision insurance will be how expensive it is to repair the CT after a wreck.
Curious about what others think. I am wondering how difficult (or easy) body work will be on a CT after an accident. It seems like there will be lots of bending and twisting forces that could carry through the entire "sub frame" indo/exoskeleton. Body shops will need lots of new techniques, tools and jigs. Any body repairs, at my initial estimate, look to be significantly more difficult and therefore much more expensive than traditionally designed vehicles.