Proxy
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Me
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2023
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 198
- Reaction score
- 224
- Location
- Ventura County
- Vehicles
- R1T R1S
- Occupation
- Professional
Excellent delivery experience for me.
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Also I'm a bit philosophical because after I spent months obsessing on these details and being so angry, I was driving on the freeway and this moron in his $105,000 BMW merged straight into the side of my car and dented both the doors. It got fixed but I had to battle his insurance and eat some costs to have it done right. I took it as a sign from above that I was being a bit overboard and that the Universe will throw you curve balls. If you can take a deep breath, plan a fun trip with your truck, watch as people ask you about it and take pics and smile at you - you'll be on your way to being a happy Rivian guy! Best of luckHey thanks for your response and I agree life is too short to nitpick everything to pieces. Honestly I was willing to live with a lot of issues and I was already expecting them like the gaps everywhere. I guess the deal breaker for me was the marks and dings on the vehicle which for me as someone who details his vehicle religiously was a major let down. I’m going to try and get past this and hope my next experience is better. If it isn’t oh well this brand isn’t for everyone but I really hope it works out because I want it to be.
You can google the Rivian Normal plant production capacity. It comes up 150,000, but that was before they added on. It is 175,000 now. Must be some non-R1 vehicle going to make up the difference. They are having problems pulling labor so likely won't ever maximize the plant capacity. And I'm not anti-Rivian at all. Thinking of trading my R1T on another one. The internal 2023 production goal to max out employee bonus was 62,000 units.This is why I can't take some of these rants seriously.
The total annual production capacity of the Normal plant for R1 vehicles is currently 65k. It is not, and has never been, and is not ever planned to be, 175k. Rivian will be reconfiguring the Normal plant in 2024 to increase the R1 capacity to 85k.
If you don't know that, then how in hell can you know better than Rivian what the "adventure demand" is?
I'm not sure why your proximity to the plant has anything to do with the accuracy of your statement. The SEC filings and statements from the CEO and CFO over the past 5 years have been 100% consistent that the plant capacity is 150k Rivian vehicles. The current mix is 1 line for R1, with a capacity of 65k, and 1 line for EDV, with a capacity for 85k. Again, multiple re-iterations of this as recently as the Q3 earnings report a few weeks ago. The plant is being reconfigured in 2024 to change the mix to 85k R1 and 65k EDV.I live 35 miles from the Normal plant. When fully built out the plant capacity is 175,000. Mitsubishi produced 150,000 in their hey day. It could be they are planning an additional model to be built or the delivery van to take off, but the plant assembly capacity is 175,000.
Wait, Google agrees with me but you know better?You can google the Rivian Normal plant production capacity. It comes up 150,000, but that was before they added on. It is 175,000 now. Must be some non-R1 vehicle going to make up the difference. They are having problems pulling labor so likely won't ever maximize the plant capacity. And I'm not anti-Rivian at all. Thinking of trading my R1T on another one. The internal 2023 production goal to max out employee bonus was 62,000 units.
Yes, that's exactly I'm saying. It is NOT 175k. Why are you quoting me like you're correcting me? You should be quoting @Golfer04, because that's who is throwing around the unsubstantiated 175k number.Rivian claimed in their IPO filing that the plant is “currently equipped to produce up to 150,000 vehicles annually”, with plans to increase it to 200K by 2023. From page 119 of their S-1:This is why I can't take some of these rants seriously.
The total annual production capacity of the Normal plant for R1 vehicles is currently 65k. It is not, and has never been, and is not ever planned to be, 175k. Rivian will be reconfiguring the Normal plant in 2024 to increase the R1 capacity to 85k.
If you don't know that, then how in hell can you know better than Rivian what the "adventure demand" is?
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1874178/000119312521289903/d157488ds1.htmThe factory building covers approximately 3.3 million square feet and is currently equipped to produce up to 150,000 vehicles annually. We believe that we will be able to increase the annual production capacity of the Normal Factory up to 200,000 vehicles by 2023 as we introduce additional R1 platform variants and expand the facility. Over the next couple of years, we expect to establish additional domestic production capacity in order to support our product development roadmap and fulfill future anticipated demand.
Rivian’s own paperwork claimed the 150K number. That’s where it comes from.
The plant was expanded since that information, but I'm not going to argue with you Fanboy. Think what you want. The results will be the results.Yes, that's exactly I'm saying. It is NOT 175k. Why are you quoting me like you're correcting me? You should be quoting @Golfer04, because that's who is throwing around the unsubstantiated 175k number.
The current production capacity FOR R1 VEHICLES, which is what we were talking about, is 65k. The remainder of the total capacity of the Normal plant is dedicated to EDV. So 150k = 65k R1 + 85k EDV. There was nothing wrong or inaccurate with what I said.
So what you're saying is that you have no evidence whatsoever for your belief. Whereas every single financial statement ever filed by Rivian (and Google too!) agrees with me about the plant's production capacity of 150k with a current mix of 65k R1 and 85k EDV?The plant was expanded since that information, but I'm not going to argue with you Fanboy. Think what you want. The results will be the results.
Here's a link to the post from another member with the checklist (link to pdf at the bottom of the post).Awesome happy to hear that. This checklist you speak of can you link it? Or is it just an informal one you made up? I definitely want to go prepared next time and atleast document some issues to get fixed.
I'm not trying to correct you, I'm just explaining where the number comes from. There was talk of extrapolating "adventure demand", which seems like the future tense. In the future Rivian could make a camper version of the EDV, or dedicate more of the plant's capacity to adventure vehicles. I didn't think we were talking about the capacity for only R1s, and only in the current instant.Yes, that's exactly I'm saying. It is NOT 175k. Why are you quoting me like you're correcting me? You should be quoting @Golfer04, because that's who is throwing around the unsubstantiated 175k number.
The current production capacity FOR R1 VEHICLES, which is what we were talking about, is 65k. The remainder of the total capacity of the Normal plant is dedicated to EDV. So 150k = 65k R1 + 85k EDV. There was nothing wrong or inaccurate with what I said.