Deleted member 17810
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The knight suit of armor isn't an exoskeleton because...it's a suit.
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I’m saying the on-stage prototype was absolutely not built as a 3mm stainless steel monolith with no internal structuresSo you think it was built as a body on frame with stainless steel panels?
Unless you or someone cut the prototype you don’t know either so why bother with this kind of statement? I suspect that the entire prototype was indeed 3 mm stainless but that is based on what everyone at Tesla said and not on any ramblings of my own.based on what?
it was a prototype, in most places using ~less than 1mm sheet metal to approximate the look
they didn’t have the breaks etc needed to form the 3mm of the entire CT into “an exoskeleton in the true sense of the word”
Even an exoskeleton suit such as those in The Matrix, Avatar, or in real life are providing extra weight or load redirecting capabilities to an otherwise fairly flimsy endoskeleton creature. I am not arguing against the use or misuse of the term; only saying that it is used quite liberally across industries. It is clear that Elon’s use of the term has brought out the worst form of trolling but I believe his intention was always to mean that the skin of the Cybertruck will be extremely durable compared to other trucks and I expect that to remain the case no matter what anyone calls it.The knight suit of armor isn't an exoskeleton because...it's a suit.
Tesla never said that - it said the truck it was going to build would be 3mmUnless you or someone cut the prototype you don’t know either so why bother with this kind of statement? I suspect that the entire prototype was indeed 3 mm stainless but that is based on what everyone at Tesla said and not on any ramblings of my own.
then, why don’t you go visit it? It’s on display. And ask folks around here who have gone to see it. It’s unanimously with folks would describe in the collector auto world as a “12 footer.” I let looks pretty good from 12 feet or more away. Get any closer and you can tell real fast it’s a prototype.The reveal prototype still exists, and will continue to exist for posterity. We'll one day find out who's right. I say it was a structural exoskeleton.
Who said it wasn't a prototype?Get any closer and you can tell real fast it’s a prototype.
I think that was the original idea to have the stainless body and simply attach things to it, but I believe that might have all changed with the large casting front and rear and battery structure in between that has evolved. It looks like the truck body can simply be fit on top and attached to the three piece structure, with the evolution of the mega castings.”FullyGrounded said:
We do understand that the frame is like the backbone of the vehicle, right? And, now, we've taken and moved that from the protected, to that which protects and will take the brunt of damage.
Now, they will also crease it to allow for it to crumple. You've just made my back weaker. And, off road, that is so critical. Frames will flex if they can. Well, will it crumple? So many questions that Elon and physics need to answer. I'm, right now, not sold on an exoskeleton. I'm sure there are those that will beat on this exoskeleton body, and then we will see what the result is.
serious question:Look at a bridge over water. it's a truss, that leverages the tall size of the structure to handle more bending stress with less materials.
You are correct that a Bridge Truss involves typically dozens of links. CT is like a large Triangle (3-Piece Truss). But the reason Bridges have so many links is that those in Compression can buckle if they are too slender compared to their length. So the extra links prevent that. CT is quite shorter of a span. and there are other elements that would help prevent buckling.serious question:
other than being triangle-shaped at a macro level, in what ways is the now-known functional structure like a truss?
still serious:If my assumptions and math is right, the same amount of metal in the top and bottom of CT, compared to that in a Conventional Truck would, provide 12 to 25 times as much capacity for Beam stress caused by payload acting between the two axles.