Oden's Beast
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2024
- Threads
- 13
- Messages
- 220
- Reaction score
- 747
- Location
- Jupiter, Florida
- Vehicles
- 2024 Cyberbeast
Exactly what Mongo just said, and…I believe the "off-grid camping" scenario I was responding to was separate from the long-distance towing scenario. It was @Oden's Beast who put forth the idea that staying within 100-120 miles miles of a Supercharger when in the backcountry was a big limitation. When I'm in backcountry areas I'm generally on roads with a maximum speed limit of 50-60 mph and my Cybertruck gets well over 300 miles of range from a full charge overnight. I responded to the towing limitations separately. People who tow a big trailers a lot, anywhere but short trips, know enough to buy a 3/4-ton to 1-ton truck (or heavier) depending upon the exact application.
The fact that the Cybertruck handles exceptionally well towing heavy trailers right up to it's rated limit (unlike other 1/2-ton trucks), does not automatically make it the right tool to tow big trailers over the open road. IMO, not even the Silverado EV with the 220 kW battery is good at doing that. People who know what they are doing already know this. I'm not sure why @Oden's Beast seems to think a range extender would make a dent in the problem. If the 220 kW of the Silverado can't make it good for towing travel trailers long distances, why does he think a battery range extender would?
It makes no sense.
I'm so glad Tesla didn't try to accommodate a niche use case (heavy, long-distance towing) that would have automatically disqualified it from being a good off-road truck. The Sierra/Silverado's with the big battery are literally incapable of traversing difficult terrain that is a cake-walk for the Cybertruck. This is not hyperbole, it's the honest truth, they are complete dogs off-road, even the Trail Boss that pretends to have off-road aspirations. The Cybertruck is the real deal.
Oh, now you’re omnipotent, and assuming I’m even talking about hauling large travel trailers(?). I’ve been purposefully talking very generally about its towing ability, I never mentioned hauling a max load rated trailer across the country (?). But hey, if you feel it helps sell your narrative and your use case as to why it is absolutely the perfect “truck” as it is…. feel free to say that I’m hauling something at max capacity, please go for it.
By the way, if I was actually hauling a 35’ travel trailer across the country, I’d use a truck rated to match it.
For reference, one of the things I do haul is a Keifer Built horse trailer, a two horse unit. Empty weight is right at 3,000 pounds, with two of my horses and tack, it comes in at just over 5,000 pounds. Hardly F-250 or 350 Territory. This trailer loaded, is less than half the rated capacity of the truck. Is that enough safety factor for you? I am lucky to get 100 miles from 100% state of charge, just over 80 miles from a 80% charge (it’s a sail). I went to Ocala National Forest to ride them with my wife, that’s normally only a three and a half hour drive for me, roughly 230 miles. My drive time literally doubles hauling with this “truck”. So now, I have horses stuck in a trailer, nearing the max time that they really should even be in the trailer. That extra 25% range would eliminate one of those stops completely, and cut my travel time accordingly. I don’t think that’s a big ask. I literally used this trip as one of the use cases in my calculations to buy.
Yes, it was me talking about overlanding. Here again, that extra 25% enables multiple more days on the trail without having the extra anxiety of “will I make it back out“… “let’s cut our trip short…so we can go charge”. That alone was worth its price to me. Now I’ll likely be bringing in generators and listening to their hum rather than nature. Yay! Or more likely, using a different vehicle.
Also, for driving down maintained or partially maintained forest service roads, I agree, the CT is awesome for this. But honest to goodness hard core off roading, with its long wheel base and overhangs (see Jeep, Broncos, Toyota/Lexus, Land Rover, G wagons, etc) and its heavy weight, it is hardly the perfect vehicle for doing this at any extreme either.
It’s a compromise for the extremes, it does most other things extremely well, they did great trying to get the best possible outcome for each, and it does them really good.
It seems (maybe I’m wrong) that you also feel that me wanting a longer range vehicle is somehow going to affect Tesla’s profits(?). Is that your position?
You do understand that I was (and still am) willing to pay them a substantial amount of money for this option, I was not asking for a subsidy from them, you realize this right?
Tesla is not shy at all on ensuring they sell vehicles or accessories at a profit. I was, and still am, willing to pay their asked price for this option, not sure how this negatively affects their financial performance or risks shareholder value,
I guess I’m just missing the point on this one too, above my pay scale. Silly of me to think they, a global manufacturer, would have the engineering and management skill set, to actually BOM cost out an option and determine it’s profit margin and sale price before launch. How naive of me.
All I wanted was to pay them a lot, for a little more range, but I guess that’s not reasonable of me to now ask for. I’m truly sorry that me still asking them for this true ER option, upsets you so much.
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