Gurule92
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2021
- Threads
- 201
- Messages
- 3,825
- Reaction score
- 7,373
- Location
- Colorado Springs
- Vehicles
- MYP
- Occupation
- "Cyber" stuff
- Thread starter
- #91
2.43!!!
Sponsored
i have FSD on my 2024 X. Not impressed. I have used it around town dozens of times and it has only completed one trip without messing up. Before I took delivery of the X, I was REQUIRED to endure a FSD demo. I did two - one in a Y and one in a S. Neither completed the task correctly. FSD is probably good on long trips on an Interstate, but it conked out on a trip from Reno to Topaz Lake on the way there and on the way back.They do have a new FSD like thing coming on the new ones thanks to the new chps
Does conked out mean you were in autopilot jail? I use FSD all the time since the newer updates. It's pretty sweet especially around town. Highway has been good since nav on api have FSD on my 2024 X. Not impressed. I have used it around town dozens of times and it has only completed one trip without messing up. Before I took delivery of the X, I was REQUIRED to endure a FSD demo. I did two - one in a Y and one in a S. Neither completed the task correctly. FSD is probably good on long trips on an Interstate, but it conked out on a trip from Reno to Topaz Lake on the way there and on the way back.
Tesla could have simply grafted a Plaid powertrain into the Cyberbeast, and it would have worked, but efficiency/range and cost would have suffered. The Cyberbeast has 15:1 reduction gear while plaid is 8:1. There would also be efficiency enhancements to the motor, Tesla never stops improving their vehicles, especially on the efficiency front, because that determines how many batteries it needs to go the target distance, how much it weighs, and how much it costs.Well that wouldnt really matter car vs truck. It should come down to HP and Torque, and then the supporting axles and such to handle it. The GVWR of a Model X Plaid and a CT is a lot different so the strains would be significantly more on things like axles, cv, etc. Maybe the Plaid layout cant do 800v or Rear Wheel Steer in the space available?
I wasn't sure who you were addressing, so I wanted to clarify that I also want Rivian to succeed. But I see a lot of beginning investors who don't seem to understand risk/reward, and how to grow wealth (it's pretty hard to do if you have to write down primary positions to zero). It's often better to sell your losers and move on, even if you have to take a 60% loss.And on Rivian, sorry @HaulingAss, wasnt coming at you! Was more just talking in general. I do think Rivian will survive. Will be good to know what these new margins look like on the refresh, and the R2 and R3 are going to be their real volume drivers. Not unlike what the Model 3 and Y did for Tesla. I do think you will see casting used in the R2 and R3, it would have been a TON of work to redo the R1 series, and you know that series is going to play a smaller and smaller role in the mix.
I'm guessing you have a much bigger stake in RIVN vs. TSLA.As a $TSLA and $RIVN shareholder I'm looking forward to both companies succeeding in their mission.
After driving a new 2024 R1T from delivery center on a 400 mile road trip, so many Tesla features I miss-- basic stuff like automatic lane changes. I'm in the "if no FSD, no purchase by me" camp.
Good on Rivian to reduce manufacturing costs and add functionality. Hopefully they make good on plans to show a profit in 2024Q4.
Does it though? My 2023 CT config says otherwise. Still blows my mind that I reserved my CT on reveal night 2 years before my Quad R1s and we've had the R1S for a year already. Crickets from Tesla on my CT order.Takeaway: the new quad R1 may never exist vs. the Cyberbeast which does very much exist. Today.
You should have bought the Dual Motor, like I did, you would probably already be driving it around.Does it though? My 2023 CT config says otherwise. Still blows my mind that I reserved my CT on reveal night 2 years before my Quad R1s and we've had the R1S for a year already. Crickets from Tesla on my CT order.
Conked out means FSD ceased to function and I had to go to manual mode. When that happens, RB kicks in and you need to jump on the accelerator to keep from getting rear ended or honked. Both time were at about the 45 minute mark. I keep my hands lightly on the bottom of the steering wheel and let it slide though my hands easily. Both times were on a straight-a-way. No idea why.Does conked out mean you were in autopilot jail? I use FSD all the time since the newer updates. It's pretty sweet especially around town. Highway has been good since nav on ap
Don't do it BeastForce1! The other CTs in my town are AWD, they all feel bad about theirs after seeing my Beast. It's worth the wait, unless you want to join the full-of-regret club. The Rivian Quad will just make that club feel even worse in 2025.You should have bought the Dual Motor, like I did, you would probably already be driving it around.
I'm not sure what you want Tesla to tell you, there is more demand than supply, and the demand landscape is constantly changing (so it's difficult for Tesla to predict how many will convert reservations to actual orders).
I think the take rate is rising, as the positive experiences of real people taking delivery start to drown out the initial negativity about stupid things like lack of FSD, lack of off-road capability, sharp corners, fingerprints, weak brakes, panel gaps, etc. etc. etc.
If the truck was over-priced crap, you would already have one! As it is, you have to wait your turn.
2.4 seconds, not 2.62.59 second 0-60 on warmed up street tires vs 2.6 seconds on AT tires for the Beast….I bet the beast beats it on warmed up street tires. Plus those headlights will always be Fugly.