Can't wait to ring in the new year with all the drunks that can't handle their liquor. Thank God I have Ativan for them and restraints for when they become combative ?Happy New Year everyone.
No. The EV6 is the only interesting one to me on that list.Anyone considering Cadillac Lyriq, Nissan Ariya, toyota bz4x, Lexus RZ450e, Kia EV6, GV60, BMW IX, porsche macan ev, audi q6 e tron, ……..?
I have a reservation for a Debut Edition Cadillac Lyriq. The Lyriq should be at the dealer in Spring/Summer 2022, my R1T estimate is Oct-Dec 2022. I will only get one of them. I go back and forth on which one I'd rather have, given the MSRP difference is almost $20k. But with no new tax incentives, the difference is "only" $12k. Part of my decision may be in how close I think Rivian can be to the stated delivery dates, but I am in no rush for a new vehicle (currently have 2016 Acura RDX 116k miles and a stock 2019 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 2 door 25k miles). Part of me wonders if the Lyriq is too much like my Acura RDX, while functional and no mechanical problems, isn't fun to drive, and really seems like soccer mom type car, especially since I got the Jeep. I wonder if I get the Lyriq, will I still be happy with it in a year or two (I usually put >100k miles on my cars). I plan on keeping the Jeep, for now, but maybe I will trade it also since I won't need the 4wd with a R1T (and I have had awful Jeep dealer service recently, which led to having no radio for almost 4 months).Anyone considering Cadillac Lyriq, Nissan Ariya, toyota bz4x, Lexus RZ450e, Kia EV6, GV60, BMW IX, porsche macan ev, audi q6 e tron, ……..?
With R1T you may be able to have one vehicle that can do what both Jeep and Caddy will do for you. It may be a bit better in PA winters than 2WD caddy. The reason I didn’t reserve the Caddy is my R1S Explore after incentives were much closer in price. I have loved most of my GM cars and like the company and I doubt you will regret driving the Lyriq but you will have to keep the Jeep. With Rivian, you can simplify. I think it is ultimately a matter of how attached you are to the Jeep, the price difference and ICE less life if you get ride of Jeep.I have a reservation for a Debut Edition Cadillac Lyriq. The Lyriq should be at the dealer in Spring/Summer 2022, my R1T estimate is Oct-Dec 2022. I will only get one of them. I go back and forth on which one I'd rather have, given the MSRP difference is almost $20k. But with no new tax incentives, the difference is "only" $12k. Part of my decision may be in how close I think Rivian can be to the stated delivery dates, but I am in no rush for a new vehicle (currently have 2016 Acura RDX 116k miles and a stock 2019 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 2 door 25k miles). Part of me wonders if the Lyriq is too much like my Acura RDX, while functional and no mechanical problems, isn't fun to drive, and really seems like soccer mom type car, especially since I got the Jeep. I wonder if I get the Lyriq, will I still be happy with it in a year or two (I usually put >100k miles on my cars). I plan on keeping the Jeep, for now, but maybe I will trade it also since I won't need the 4wd with a R1T (and I have had awful Jeep dealer service recently, which led to having no radio for almost 4 months).
It surprises you that other people have different priorities?I am really surprised by the number of people who basically fall into the "I will take the first electric pickup or SUV I can get my hands on" category as the engineering and technology that the Rivian vehicles contain and that other options currently lack (specifically the advanced suspension and four motor setup) are very important factors in my decision to go with the R1S.
The Model Y with 318 miles of range and just 2 motors currently costs ~$59k. I will be shocked if any real CT model is ever cheaper than that. If a quad motor or 500-mile version does ever see actual production, it’ll end up being $80k+ minimum.
I’m still not actually convinced the CT will ever be produced in large volumes. I think it’s a fantasy concept car.
Tesla also ordered a bunch of manufacturing robots for Elon’s “alien dreadnaught” that they ultimately couldn’t use because the idea was ridiculously stupid from the jump.Tesla has ordered Gigapresses to manufacture 300k CTs per year.
And Tesla is currently using every single robot purchased for Alien Dreadnaught and currently purchasing more. And ever increasing automation. The concept is not stupid and will eventually happen. Elon is almost always optimistic on timelines. But delivers eventually.Tesla also ordered a bunch of manufacturing robots for Elon’s “alien dreadnaught” that they ultimately couldn’t use because the idea was ridiculously stupid from the jump.
They’ll make some sort of truck, probably. I think it won’t look like the current concept, and it will not end up taking nearly the market share of 300k per year. It’s going to cost significantly more than they announced.
meh…getting the timing right is just as important for predictions as the thing happening at all.Elon is almost always optimistic on timelines. But delivers eventually.
The Model X and Y are a little bubble-y, but the Model 3 is a good looking car. The CT is absurd. It’s too big, it’s hideous, and it’s not particularly functional.And people have said that the Model Y, X and 3 are ugly too.
Agree completely. You do know it’s possible to think both good and bad things about a company, right? I believed the hype on the Model 3 being an affordable EV and on FSD. It was always bullcrap. Now I have a better perspective on where Tesla can succeed and where I think Elon’s just making crap up as he goes. CT sales at that level is a fantasy, just like a mass-market <$30k Model 3 was and just like a cross-country unassisted drive was.BTW Tribalism is the BEV fan community is retarded.
BTW Tribalism is the BEV fan community is retarded.