paariv
Well-Known Member
There’s a third thing that angers people: Rivian falsely claiming R1Ts are customer-ready when they plainly are not. I bet this is why “customer” deliveries are practically nonexistent.I cannot write for @Ron S, but I think that it is reasonable to say that Rivian are doing everything they can to get you your R1T as soon as they feel confident that they are delivering a quality product free from known defects. While I don’t know what’s going on inside Rivian, it seems like there are two issues which are frustrating people: low production numbers and most of that production volume going to employees.
If there are low production numbers due to supply chain issues and/or because they are working out issues with process or component design issues then they are going as fast as they can.
If they are prioritizing deliveries to employees because of known component design issues and/or for validation as they continue to tweak processes or test redesigned parts (tonneau cover 2.0?) then they are going as fast as they can to deliver a quality product free from known defects.
If these aren’t the issues behind what’s frustrating long-time reservation-holders then what is? “The only reason Rivian isn’t delivering to 3rd party customers is because they are conspiring to annoy reservation-holders and concern investors by throttling output and delaying deliveries in a passive-aggressive power play.” doesn’t sound rational to me.
If Rivian were honest about why they aren’t really delivering to regular customers some 5 months after “production” began (there must be some quality issue driving this decision) then they would earn back a lot of goodwill.
We all get that this takes time, and that a new car from a new company won’t just immediately be perfect. I do think Rivian is doing its best to start real deliveries. But Rivian isn’t talking about the final quality challenges that are delaying things. Instead, they say that they’re building our cars, and even they claim to be delivering them (carefully omitting discussion of volume). But they are not actually delivering them!
This dishonesty (and this practice is dishonest, even if each statement Rivian makes is factual) is galling. And at some point it could be the basis for a pretty solid securities fraud suit. I’ve defended, and (my clients have) paid substantial money to settle cases based on much flimsier evidence of dishonesty.
Sponsored