AlDente
Well-known member
- First Name
- Roberto
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2022
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 583
- Reaction score
- 1,043
- Location
- CA
- Vehicles
- Tesla 2026 "Premium" Cybertruck DM
- Occupation
- Retired (of a fashion)
Huh? Tesla has a very good idea what the Total Addressable Market is for the Cybertruck and, like all their vehicles, it's a function intertwined with cost to produce. Unlike legacy truck makers, Tesla is not willing to sell it at a loss of tens of thousands of dollars for each truck they make.
Tesla knows that the more they make, the less it will cost, which is why they have been studying the design of the production lines involved for efficiency and speed optimizations. A production line is never a single line, particularly at at Tesla which is more vertically integrated than other automakers. There are multiple production processes that all feed the main final assembly line.
Tesla goes into production when they can configure a production line that makes sense. As processes and potential bottlenecks are better understood, they adjust the processes for speed and efficiency. This allows them to increase the production rate with fewer line workers and bring the cost per vehicle down over time.
The Model 3 went through this same dynamic. They even added a new production line inside a tent to get volumes where they needed to be to reach the right price point. Demand is very sensitive to price point.
The Model 3 started initial production in the summer of 2017 but had a very slow ramp due to over automation that wasn't working as seamlessly as planned. They had to re-configure the production line and processes multiple times before they could sell them profitably and at a low enough price that they could also sell them in very high volumes. As production volumes increased, the "pinch point" was the last 3-4 months of 2018, almost a year and a half after production started. That's because it costs time and money to achieve volume efficiencies, the payback comes when you can just run the production line and not mess with it.
The Cybertruck is designed to be easier to build due to extensive use of aluminum castings that are so consistent from part to part they can function as their own assembly jigs, a new kind of network using different wiring and different connectors (but less computers and less wiring/connectors), lack of a paint shop for final body finishing and a structure designed to assemble with fewer steps, fewer robot welders, leading to more cost effective assembly.
However, these optimizations are exactly why Elon planned a slow and gradual ramp for the Cybertruck. Anytime you make a clean sheet design, especially when increasing the content of new construction techniques significantly, there will be longer optimization curves, than if you make essentially the same car with 20 more hp that is an inch longer, has new color options, different tire sizes, and has redesigned styling flourishes inside and out (but uses all the same production technologies). Legacy auto might even slap on a new model name even though the underlying technology and assembly processes have not changed.
In the case of the Cybertruck, Tesla is challenging traditional automaking processes in fundamental ways. That comes with special challenges with regard to optimizing the production line, for example, the learnings around production of the stainless parts and how they feed into the general assembly line. Like how to best route and install a new kind of wiring. Everything must be optimized for speed and efficiency so the line can operate reliably with fewer line workers.
And we know Tesla is succeeding relative to legacy auto EV truck production because Tesla announced they hit Cybertruck net profit in Q3 2024 while legacy auto still sells their EV trucks at losses amounting to tens of thousands of dollars for every truck produced (even though they have been in production for more model years)!
Tesla's business plan is to make the trucks increasingly more affordable as production rates increase. That has been the plan all along, even though Cybertruck will not hit $39.9K, $49.9K and $69.9K without scary levels of deflation, combined with a serious de-contenting of the exceptional features the Cybertruck currently comes with at no extra charge.
Features like the best sounding audio in the segment, adjustable ride height with a massive 8" range of adjustment, adjustable compression and rebound damping that automatically adjusts on the fly to suit loads and conditions, steer-by-wire, combined with four-wheels that steer, to provide the easiest and most nimble manuevering in the segment, the most damage resistance of any truck on the market, the most rust resistance of any truck on the market, an automatic, self-disappearing, all-metal, tonneau cover that a 300 lb. man can walk on (and that encloses the largest volume truck bed in the segment), etc. etc, These features come even with the lowest spec $79.9K Cybertruck without FSD. And that is the price that will lower as efficiencies increase, but it we had better hope it never hits the announced prices because that would imply a devestating level of deflation (combined with de-contenting).
Looked at objectively, the $79.9K Cybertruck offers more value than a legacy EV or gas truck at the same price point, but there has been such a cacophony of false narratives and fake news that most traditional truck buyers still have no clue how much value the Cybertruck actually has. Most of them still think it is a highly flawed, fragile car pretending to be a truck that rusts easily and breaks down regularly. They simply are ignorant. That will not be fixed by expensive multi-million-dollar advertising campaigns, it will be fixed by firsthand exposure, butts in seats, testimonies from trusted friends, co-workers and family members. And that takes time. Remember, it hasn't even been a full year since it was made in any significant numbers. People still don't even know exactly what they are looking at, and how good it is.
The Cybertruck is already the best-selling EV truck in the world (fake news reports to the contrary), and 2025 is going to be a record-breaking year for Cybertruck sales and Tesla is already gearing up for exactly that. Watch and see.
By 2026-2027 contractors will figure out they can send their Cybertruck to Home Depot (without an employee in it) and have the friendly Contractor Support Team at HD load their truck with the needed supplies,charge their account, and send it on their way. Ford and GM have nothing like it.
Yep, it's going to sell in great numbers! This is not 'hopium' talking, it's common frickin' sense, but only if you already know what a great truck the Cybertruck actually is, and how much value it offers buyers. Some of us already know that, most do not.
That was easily the most content rich post of the day. Outside of your pure fantasy about 2026-27 FSD robot CT's, you forgot that Tesla is actually very concerned by the take rate of the now exhausted 2M res holders and they are scrambling to try and determine what exactly the real TAM is for this "unique" vehicle. As one of the legion of no thanks res holders, I will say the 2 main reasons I'm not driving one right now are:
1. They made the FS a stupid 100% over the original price estimates.
2. In order to have the CT fit in a standard garage they chopped the nose off leaving an imbalanced even weirder looking thing with a useless frunk and a unnecessarily long bed.
The Rivian bed length would have been fine considering a lot of current CT owners are SM "Influencers", not contractors. While some astute business owners are using the Cybertruck for work type functions I'm pretty sure any BEV pickup truck would have accomplished the same fuel and maintenance cost savings. I guess they consider the odd looks factor of the CT as getting attention and any attention is better than none. You might mention that many owners now report receiving more negative comments but hey if you love it and it works for you so be it. I drove one and it was nice to drive but I'm pretty sure my next vehicle will not be stainless steel nor, the curious rolling wedge of cheese shape that was so fresh looking in 2019.
Much to the chagrin of many here, I'm actually a multi Tesla owner and a fan of and investor in the company. Everybody makes mistakes and although the jury may still be out, I'm thinking the Cybertruck will be more Edsel than Model Y ...
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