Hardware is not software.
Actual real physical things have to be ordered and delivered and assembled. Minimizing the number of variables early on allows them to concentrate on achieving volume deliveries early.
Once the "rush of people whose needs and wants fit the early limited selection of...
So…..
You're still on the forum just to shit on Rivian after getting rid of yours?
Meanines on here because you're just trolling. Inflammatory title, just a link as primary post.
Yes, Rivian is a startup. Yes, they have teething pains. To be blunt - you should have known that going in. If...
I have owned five EVs with front trunks. I use(d) them all often. My R1T is the only one with powered open/close. All the others had gas strut open (some requiring a "hood popper" like an ICE car, some just pop electronically then lift.)
Is the powered close nice? Of course it is. Is it a deal...
One thing to remember - not everyone is on social media/forums! Or they're too busy actually enjoying their vehicle in person to post about it.
I have an early vehicle by another EV startup. Mine is VIN #11. I was at the event when the first four were delivered to paying customers - it took...
I got quoted ~$2400 USD to replace the windshield on my Model S last year.
Vehicles with driver-assist cameras have expensive windshield replacement costs.
If your reservation wasn't made during the first few days when ordering went live, you probably won't be too far behind anyway. Especially if you want a Launch. They'll only be doing the Launches for a few months - a new order today will still get a Launch before the Standard starts shipping...
Similar. Between selling my TSLA shares (for >1000% what I paid for them, sold *JUST* below their all-time peak before the huge drop,) selling my actual Tesla vehicle for a profit over what I paid for it two years earlier, and selling my old Ford F-250 for double what I paid for it 8 years...
Dammit, I reset all those settings, but Highway Assist broke again. I guess I need to go put those settings back on…
Again.
For the third time since this update was pushed out.
Well, that would require a complete redesign of the back end, since the R3 shown so far doesn't have a split tailgate like the R1S, it has an upward-opening rear hatch that has separate-open rear glass like my old late '90s Ford Explorer had.
You mean like the claim in late 2016 that "by the end of next year" (meaning 2017) a Tesla would be capable of driving from New York to Los Angeles with no human in the vehicle? (Including recharging itself at "upcoming automated Superchargers".)
And that by 2018 you'd be able to have your...
Yep. As was in my post - "...when prior-model-year may have shipped a little late." A 2023 built vehicle that didn't actually sell until February 2024 is absolutely what I meant. Also referring to any late 2022s that didn't sell until early 2023.
Other than that little "leak-over" on both ends...
tl;dr: Tesla renamed the purchase contract in their online customer portal from saying "Full Self Driving" in the title to saying "Full Self Driving (Supervised)" - but at the same time removed the ability to redownload the contract.
Hopefully owners saved their original contract copies that...
Assume it will be totaled. I know two people whose F-150 Lightnings were recently declared totaled for less.
If you're *VERY* lucky, the damage will only be on the body panels and it will be repairable. But if anything tweaked the frame even a little bit, that's going to be a total loss.
So really, so far 2023 has been the only year that has been firmly "this model year shipped during the matching calendar year, the only mismatches were at the absolute beginning of the year and the following year when prior-model-year may have shipped a little late."
They have done "before the calendar cutover" for major changes. The early Gen 1s, even those sold in 2021, were labeled 2022. The Gen 2 Quad was released in late 2025, but got a 2026 model year, because 2026 was the model year for NACS-equipped vehicles. When dual and tri were released with NACS...
Yeah, it's a slow transition. The new Tigard one is all J3400, no CCS. Happy Valley is partially converted, and Astoria and Lincoln City are still all-CCS.
Heck, for a "regular maximum-length" trip of 50 miles, even a standard household outlet would probably do you fine.
But a level 2 would let you take advantage of off-peak energy pricing. Which, if available from your electric utility, and you can shift other electrical loads outside "peak...