hammick
Well-Known Member
I see no option to vote. I logged out and back in, still nothing.Sure but its likely hammick viewed, looked to vote, did not find it, went to comment, was forced to login then commented - as happened to me.
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I see no option to vote. I logged out and back in, still nothing.Sure but its likely hammick viewed, looked to vote, did not find it, went to comment, was forced to login then commented - as happened to me.
Thanks. I see this.At the top of the thread, this is what I see to vote.
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Thanks. I've tried the app, Safari and Chrome all on my MacBook. No dice. Cleard cache and restarted still doesn't show. I'll try later from a Windows laptop I have.Try opening up a browser, not the app. If hat doesn't work, try a browser in incognito mode and logging in there.
It is because you already voted. It shows your vote as "RIT Owner: Yes"Thanks. I see this.![]()
as an owner of a very early R1S quad I can tell you that worry number 1 isn’t really an issue I even think about. And number 3 is actually kind of the opposite for me, after driving my nephews gen 2 and a few demo drives of tri motors. I much prefer my 1st gen(meridian sound, real door handles, forest edge interior, etc)I'm aware those with issues are more vocal on forums than those without.
My family wants a third-row vehicle and we love the concept of an EV. While we can afford to budget around $60k, we can't afford mistakes with big purchases and a lot of the common gripes on this forum do make us nervous.
But the styling, interior comfort, and off-road capabilities keep us coming back to the R1S. If we eventually decided to move forward, it'd be for a used 2022-2023 R1S, hopefully quad-motor.
The biggest issues as I understand them are:
1. Vampire drain/sudden death due to 12v battery that is too small (yes, I see trickle charge solutions, but having to do this for a supposed 'luxury SUV' feels absurd). This seems catastrophic if the 12v suddenly fails while on a camping trip, or stopped for a rest on a road trip in remote area, etc, though it appears the issue affects R1T more than R1S? (true/false?). And that a dead EV shuts down the vehicle entirely (cant access interior, battery compartment, etc).
2. A service network that is less extensive than other major car manufacturers (less of an issue for us as we live in SoCal which has numerous service centers within ~25mi radius). But - you never know where life will take you and perhaps eventually we're in an underserved area.
3. Early model years that hadn't quite ironed out kinks regarding suspension, drivetrain, even simple fit/finish compared to newer 2024-25 models (which are too expensive for us).
And categorically, its always nerve-wracking to be shopping for relatively young new cars from a startup manufacturer. It's hard not to wonder "whats wrong" with a particular car when people are looking to get out of it after just a couple years. Are we overthinking this, or is the due diligence warranted here?
Perhaps the simplest way to assess these concerns is asking owners:
If you could go back in time... Would you buy your Rivian again?
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Whoops. Thanks for solving the mystery. I don't own an R1T but I'd buy my R1S again. I'm nominating myself for the dumbass of the week award.It is because you already voted. It shows your vote as "RIT Owner: Yes"
I would buy again. I love my R1S and have had no issues... just a couple of minor ones after a couple of software updates where I had to turn off my garage door when near home setting and turn it back on again. I'm spending, with overnight off rate charging at home, about 1/4 per mile for electricity over gas (my old smaller SUV got about 22mpg). The only thing I regret is it sounds like the promise of self driving won't be fully realized in version 1... wish there was the ability to upgrade cameras and the brains so I could do it. But nonetheless, every update makes it better.I'm aware those with issues are more vocal on forums than those without.
My family wants a third-row vehicle and we love the concept of an EV. While we can afford to budget around $60k, we can't afford mistakes with big purchases and a lot of the common gripes on this forum do make us nervous.
But the styling, interior comfort, and off-road capabilities keep us coming back to the R1S. If we eventually decided to move forward, it'd be for a used 2022-2023 R1S, hopefully quad-motor.
The biggest issues as I understand them are:
1. Vampire drain/sudden death due to 12v battery that is too small (yes, I see trickle charge solutions, but having to do this for a supposed 'luxury SUV' feels absurd). This seems catastrophic if the 12v suddenly fails while on a camping trip, or stopped for a rest on a road trip in remote area, etc, though it appears the issue affects R1T more than R1S? (true/false?). And that a dead EV shuts down the vehicle entirely (cant access interior, battery compartment, etc).
2. A service network that is less extensive than other major car manufacturers (less of an issue for us as we live in SoCal which has numerous service centers within ~25mi radius). But - you never know where life will take you and perhaps eventually we're in an underserved area.
3. Early model years that hadn't quite ironed out kinks regarding suspension, drivetrain, even simple fit/finish compared to newer 2024-25 models (which are too expensive for us).
And categorically, its always nerve-wracking to be shopping for relatively young new cars from a startup manufacturer. It's hard not to wonder "whats wrong" with a particular car when people are looking to get out of it after just a couple years. Are we overthinking this, or is the due diligence warranted here?
Perhaps the simplest way to assess these concerns is asking owners:
If you could go back in time... Would you buy your Rivian again?
That is why I bought an extended warranty. I plan to keep mine longer.Worry #1 is yes silly to even be an issue as the 12v is very underpowered. But it can be planned for and mitigated. I have tools to manually open the R1S frunk in the hitch, and in the frunk a 30Ah lifepo that can jump or even run in place of the stock 12v.
I actually was stranded earlier this month in my Tesla Mode Y. Had some crazy vampire drain over a week and I arrived from a cruise with it at 0%. A23 battery wouldn't pop open the frunk as I had read it could. Was a mess to fix so I now want to be totally prepared.
Overall had the R1S for about 14 months and one of my favorite vehicles I've ever owned. I'm thinking of how I can eventually replace our Y with the R2... or maybe we just get two R1S's.
I think you'll absolutely love the vehicle the next 4 years.
The only concern I have is long term owning the vehicle. I'm not sure what maintenance will be like at 110k miles after 5 years. The suspension and so much of the vehicle is extremely complex that some of these things might get BMW or more level of expensive to maintain.
Yeah I know theres no engine or oil, but just in the gen2 update for example they cut out 44 lbs of wiring that went for 1.6 miles in each R1.... thats going to be a hell of a disaster if some electrical systems start to have issues.
I have a 2011 Rogue that is not a great car but gets me from point A to point B. I fear the ticking time bomb of my CVT regardless of fluid changes. I'm waiting on my R1S Dune order another month but having second thoughts vs just going with a Dual Motor Large with fewer options because of uncertainty and the Dune is pricey.Well, we paid off our lease on the R1T this month. Last night, the husband walked into my office with an old printout of an R1S (from last August) and asked me if I can see what the updated price would be! The gears are turning!
We love our R1T, it's just a solid vehicle. He has is 2015 Nissan Rogue that is about to hit the 160k mile mark Great car, good driver, but... just turned 11. I do believe an R1S is in our future.