If I was in dire need of a car I would buy something else now and come back to Rivian in a few years once the production backlog has cleared.This is replacing my vehicle which is costing me a ton of money in repairs. I’m debating whether to keep throwing money fixing this car or just buying something affordable until the R1S comes. A part of me doesn’t want to buy anything since a year will come by quickly. But honestly what if it takes 2-3 years due to production delays?
Agreed. Fund something you will appreciate if you need to keep it long term, but also something that you probably won't lose a massive amount on.If I was in dire need of a car I would buy something else now and come back to Rivian in a few years once the production backlog has cleared.
If it takes. 2-3 years you should be worrying about Rivian’s solvency because they will be failing expectations badly and burning through cash. They realistically only have about a year to prove their ability to scale as competition is fierce (aka Lightning/CT) and they will need to spend their way to scale on both their delivery trucks and the R1T/S. They don’t have that many orders as it is relative to Ford and Tesla so their market penetration is weak. Scaling on time is their primary ticket to raising more capital and remaining viable.This is replacing my vehicle which is costing me a ton of money in repairs. I’m debating whether to keep throwing money fixing this car or just buying something affordable until the R1S comes. A part of me doesn’t want to buy anything since a year will come by quickly. But honestly what if it takes 2-3 years due to production delays?
I used to have 2005 Mini Cooper and when it hit 80K miles, every month was a $800~$1200 repair for few months. Had enough and got rid of it and replaced it with 2yr old lease turn in Saab 9-3 (2008) for a song. We still have it and one of our kids drive it with 180K miles on it.This is replacing my vehicle which is costing me a ton of money in repairs. I’m debating whether to keep throwing money fixing this car or just buying something affordable until the R1S comes. A part of me doesn’t want to buy anything since a year will come by quickly. But honestly what if it takes 2-3 years due to production delays?
Are any of those going to work for those of us who want a usable third row? That is the key Rivian feature that keeps me waiting (and throwing money into maintaining my old bmw).All of these are good cars that I think any buyer will be happy with
A little dated but still ok depending on use case
- Hyundai Ionic 5 (great tech)
- Kia EV6 (great tech)
- Volvo XC40 Recharge (luxury, safety)
- Volvo C40 Recharge (fastback version of XC 40)
- VW ID.4 (comfort)
- Mustang Mach E (fun handling)
- Audi Etron (luxury)
Dated
- Kia Niro EV (practical)
- Hyundai Kona EV (practical)
- Chevy Bolt (budget, hard to get, be sure it has had the battery replaced)
Not out yet
- Nissan Leaf (uses charging tech being phased out of N America)
Embarrassingly bad
- Toyata BZ4X (meh specs)
- Subaru Solterra (meh specs)
- Nissan Aryia (unsure, could be ok)
- Mazda MX-30
Yeah I added an edit shortly after posting that as I know that is important to a lot of folks. Model X is the only other electric SUV with a 3rd row I know of. EV7 is supposedly coming in 2024 thoughAre any of those going to work for those of us who want a usable third row? That is the key Rivian feature that keeps me waiting (and throwing money into maintaining my old bmw).
If you need a car on a schedule, I wouldn't count on a Rivian - especially as you just put in your order recently and there are thousands over orders going back up to 4 years ago that are ahead of you.Given that I reserved pretty late in 2021, I don’t think I am actually going to get my R1S in 1-1.5 years from now. If they haven’t even started production of the R1S, how would they get mine in basically a year? Anyone else having doubts?