HaulingAss
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2020
- Threads
- 28
- Messages
- 10,426
- Reaction score
- 20,966
- Location
- Western Washington, USA
- Vehicles
- Cybertruck DM, 2010 F-150, 2018 Performance Model 3, 2024 Performance Model 3
Perhaps Tesla will rethink the electric pickup and design something more affordable and real world tested. CT was a mistake from its conception: Elon was fixed on his vision and he clearly is not qualified to do design or the child that suggested that a truck should look like the future. As it turns out, the future does not look like the cybertruck. The first clue was the omission of wipers in the prototype and the wipers are still problematic. Ballistic SS panels that were promised to be structural ended up being facade and glued leading to a recall that didn't fix the design. The casting, while a great idea, are aluminum and likely not appropriate for long term truck abuse due to aluminum being prone to metal fatigue.
Too many compromises and too expensive. Tesla will do better next time.
Too many verifiably false narratives crammed into one post:
1) My mono-wiper works great. The fact that the initial prototypes didn't have a wiper is meaningless. There is likely a little room for improvement, and improve it will. It already has with an OTA update.
2) The Cybertruck outsold every other electric pickup last year buy a good margin, including pickups that were in their second or third year of production. Whatever happened to the "first-mover" advantage?
3) The stainless steel certainly is structural, there's no way the load area could handle 2500 lbs. of payload on undulating terrain without those large rear stainless panels firmly affixed to the underlying structure. This has been confirmed by numerous people in a position to know.
4) The aluminum castings are highly unlikely to start failing due to fatigue. Tesla's structural engineers are well-versed in material properties. The fact that other trucks are not aluminum is because no other manufacturer had the balls to invest the kind of money required to make it a reality. Even Ford thought they were going out on a limb to change from steel body panels to aluminum. And that's only a body on frame truck. Tesla has the engineering and materials science chops to make it a reality. Worrying about metal fatigue is sometthing you should leave to the materials science and structural engineers, it's not a secret how you avoid it from becoming a problem, it just takes accurate engineering analysis (which Tesla is world class in).
Do you have any narratives grounded in reality to share? Why don't you just stick to bashing it's looks? Because you don't have to like it, even though plenty of others do.
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