Lobstahz
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2020
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 99
- Reaction score
- 188
- Location
- Boston, MA
- Vehicles
- R1S, Tesla Model 3
- Thread starter
- #1
I can't say I've enjoyed the Rivian news the past couple of days, but I think I'm still in. But this price hike hurts. A lot.
My primary rationale is:
* No other 7 seat EV SUV options except for Tesla, and as a Model 3 owner ... never again. Or the upcoming Volvo XC90 EV or Polestar version of that car.
* 0-60 in 3.5 seconds is sports car to super car fast
* Quad-motor is 'end game' for traction and grip. Perhaps 3 (1 front, 2 rear) would have been good enough on-road but 1 per wheel is real nice from a capability perspective.
This price hike changes expectations. Before Rivian was expensive, but a bit of a bargain for what they were offering and made it easier to overlook potential faults but now they're certifiably "spendy" and premium and will be expected to deliver against that. As an attempted sanity check I spent a bunch of time pricing our Audis both ICE and EV and I am hard pressed to get a SUV up past my $95k R1S configuration. So Rivian better deliver on build quality, fit and finish, cabin noise, comfort, etc because I know an Audi would. Before they would have gotten some benefit of the doubt, but that's been vaporized by these moves. So quite frankly, Rivian better deliver. I'm not sure how confident I am that they will though. So in summary, I'm still in, but keeping and eye on the exit.
We have thread(s) of who's out ... who's still in?
My primary rationale is:
* No other 7 seat EV SUV options except for Tesla, and as a Model 3 owner ... never again. Or the upcoming Volvo XC90 EV or Polestar version of that car.
* 0-60 in 3.5 seconds is sports car to super car fast
* Quad-motor is 'end game' for traction and grip. Perhaps 3 (1 front, 2 rear) would have been good enough on-road but 1 per wheel is real nice from a capability perspective.
This price hike changes expectations. Before Rivian was expensive, but a bit of a bargain for what they were offering and made it easier to overlook potential faults but now they're certifiably "spendy" and premium and will be expected to deliver against that. As an attempted sanity check I spent a bunch of time pricing our Audis both ICE and EV and I am hard pressed to get a SUV up past my $95k R1S configuration. So Rivian better deliver on build quality, fit and finish, cabin noise, comfort, etc because I know an Audi would. Before they would have gotten some benefit of the doubt, but that's been vaporized by these moves. So quite frankly, Rivian better deliver. I'm not sure how confident I am that they will though. So in summary, I'm still in, but keeping and eye on the exit.
We have thread(s) of who's out ... who's still in?
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