IIRC, the Cybertruck is based off of a Model Y frame.Is it obvious that the Cybertruck can't be the basis of anything else? The Cybertruck platform has two big systems that define it: the drive-by-wire drive train and the very weird frame design that essentially treats the structural frame as the exterior without additional molded body panels. Full drive-by-wire is clearly the future of automobiles, and while rolling it out first on the Cybertruck is a weird decision, I'd imagine that the integrated drive-train is modular enough to at least party re-use on other vehicles.
The frame design, admittedly the more important part of platform modularity, is another matter. A platform where the structural unibody is the exterior of the car without any bolt-on body panels was a very unorthodox decision with incredible development headaches, and it's easy to point out a whole host of potential problems. But I don't think we know yet whether it's an architectural dead end. Conventional wisdom says it's probably a dead end, and convention wisdom is usually conventional for a reason. If I had to bet on it, I would bet that it is a dead end, but I also wouldn't bet my house. I'm going to reserve betting my house until I see a couple of years of real world testing.
I don't even think the market cares about the Toyota Corolla / Camry, as sedans are no longer the biggest sellers, even on a global market level.I think the problem is they start at $40K, with the most common being closer to $50K. The market is dying for the Toyota Corolla / Camry equivalent that starts at $25K and can be fully loaded for like $30K.
Fair enough.China puts up with the DPRK because it acts as a buffer between it and the RoK (and the US). And the DPRK knows this and exploits that to its advantage. However, China isn't a "very supportive ally" by any stretch.
You've since clarified that that "came off as" xenophobic instead of "being" sinophobic, so I'm cool.Edit: My initial point was that the OP didn't give any rationale for why they think buying Chinese is bad.
And I think the minivan market has been in decline compared to the SUV/crossover market for a while now. GM, Ford, and Stellantis have all dropped minivans from their lineups, as have Kia, Hyundai and others. So Tesla jumping into the van makret would probably be a mistake unless it can come in a commercial van version to compete with the Transit/Express/Sprinter/PromasterMinivan market is generally price-conscious for at least some segment of the population. When FCA started clearing out Caravan/Town and Country vans for ~$20K after the new model hit, they sold like hotcakes.. Decently reliable, can transport up to 7, haul 4x8s and close the rear door, > 20 mpg fully loaded, etc, etc..
So, the "exoskeleton" construction Elon promised at the unveiling (surprise surprise) never came to pass. It's a pretty standard Tesla cast-aluminum unibody with nonfunctional stainless panels bolted on for pure aesthetics.Is it obvious that the Cybertruck can't be the basis of anything else? The Cybertruck platform has two big systems that define it: the drive-by-wire drive train and the very weird frame design that essentially treats the structural frame as the exterior without additional molded body panels. Full drive-by-wire is clearly the future of automobiles, and while rolling it out first on the Cybertruck is a weird decision, I'd imagine that the integrated drive-train is modular enough to at least party re-use on other vehicles.
The frame design, admittedly the more important part of platform modularity, is another matter. A platform where the structural unibody is the exterior of the car without any bolt-on body panels was a very unorthodox decision with incredible development headaches, and it's easy to point out a whole host of potential problems. But I don't think we know yet whether it's an architectural dead end. Conventional wisdom says it's probably a dead end, and convention wisdom is usually conventional for a reason. If I had to bet on it, I would bet that it is a dead end, but I also wouldn't bet my house. I'm going to reserve betting my house until I see a couple of years of real world testing.
Yeah, that's where I'd think that if anyone could get sales volume high enough to bring their price per unit down and keep the selling price reasonable, Tesla might be able to do it given their success on the model Y specifically.Minivan market is generally price-conscious for at least some segment of the population. When FCA started clearing out Caravan/Town and Country vans for ~$20K after the new model hit, they sold like hotcakes.. Decently reliable, can transport up to 7, haul 4x8s and close the rear door, > 20 mpg fully loaded, etc, etc..
As an aside, if you're interested into a pretty robust deep dive into the history, politics and economics of North Korea and the North Korean society, I would highly recommend The Real North Korea: Life and Politics in the Failed Stalinist Utopia by Andrei Lankov. It's a very comprehensive and clinical look at the DPRK.Fair enough.
The CT uses structural adhesive to attach the stainless steel body panels to the cast aluminum unibody chassis. This is important because it needs an insulator between the two dissimilar metals to avoid galvanic corrosion issues that would rot out the unibody otherwise. I'm assuming that Tesla still does an electrochemical pretreatment for the unibody "body-in-white" before the SS panels are glued on (still not able to remove the paint line yet, Musk!) because otherwise these corrosion longevity problems would be seriously compounded in real world use.Is it obvious that the Cybertruck can't be the basis of anything else? The Cybertruck platform has two big systems that define it: the drive-by-wire drive train and the very weird frame design that essentially treats the structural frame as the exterior without additional molded body panels. Full drive-by-wire is clearly the future of automobiles, and while rolling it out first on the Cybertruck is a weird decision, I'd imagine that the integrated drive-train is modular enough to at least party re-use on other vehicles.
The frame design, admittedly the more important part of platform modularity, is another matter. A platform where the structural unibody is the exterior of the car without any bolt-on body panels was a very unorthodox decision with incredible development headaches, and it's easy to point out a whole host of potential problems. But I don't think we know yet whether it's an architectural dead end. Conventional wisdom says it's probably a dead end, and convention wisdom is usually conventional for a reason. If I had to bet on it, I would bet that it is a dead end, but I also wouldn't bet my house. I'm going to reserve betting my house until I see a couple of years of real world testing.
I've come to think that you're probably right and it'd be a mistake (see my post a couple above), but this description is also what makes me think that IF Tesla still has any magic dust to use, the minivan market might be a good place to use it.And I think the minivan market has been in decline compared to the SUV/crossover market for a while now. GM, Ford, and Stellantis have all dropped minivans from their lineups, as have Kia, Hyundai and others. So Tesla jumping into the van makret would probably be a mistake unless it can come in a commercial van version to compete with the Transit/Express/Sprinter/Promaster
Why would the roof/bed need to be redesigned if they switched to plate/sheet aluminum? Ford uses aluminum panels in the F150 without issue:So, the "exoskeleton" construction Elon promised at the unveiling (surprise surprise) never came to pass. It's a pretty standard Tesla cast-aluminum unibody with nonfunctional stainless panels bolted on for pure aesthetics.
I suspect much of the fundamental engineering could be translated to a more conventional-looking truck, but much of the roof and bed structure would need to be redesigned.
As much as sliding doors make ungodly large SUVs vastly more practical, I say that what the world really needs is a new Ford B-Max or Peugeot 1007.I've come to think that you're probably right and it'd be a mistake (see my post a couple above), but this description is also what makes me think that IF Tesla still has any magic dust to use, the minivan market might be a good place to use it.
A decent number of fans would insist it's the best vehicle ever, "because Tesla."
And minivans actually are incredibly practical.
And there's currently no competitors in this space.
The Transit Connect was built on the same platform as the BMax:As much as sliding doors make ungodly large SUVs vastly more practical, I say that what the world really needs is a new Ford B-Max or Peugeot 1007.
Behold!
View attachment 72849
I don't have to support either. They're both sufficiently terrible.Um, yeah nowhere near on the same planet. Falun Gong, Christianity, Hong Kong, Cultural Revolution, communist-Nationalist civil War, one child policy, the atrocities don’t end and the died are in millions but sure, omg xenophobia!
But sure Elon fucking Musk is the worse evil, good grief. (Do I seriously need to make an “all things relative” tab? He’s a useless bag of dicktips. Certainly not the reason to support 21st century Chinese industry.)
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grandmother was 14 when her family of proper owners in Guangzhou became refugees, fleeing to Hong Kong. -
Inflation may have eased off, but wages have not kept up with inflation except for in very specific sectors. The wealthy are doing great, the middle class who is really the segment related to this article are not doing well. Credit card debt is at record levels, and defaults are picking up. Give it a year once all the layoffs take place.Inflation is down, job market is great, wages are on the rise. Don’t spread this FUD that the economy isn’t doing well, because it is. The only “uncertainty” comes from the wealthy who are butthurt interest rates are up and they can’t get free money anymore.
I would argue it's the reverse, it's only specific sectors like tech that have seen layoffs and retrenchment this past year. Other sectors have seen things like record union wins, competitive hiring, and continued strong demand. So far despite inflation the worst effects have still been on balance sheets of companies for debt financingInflation may have eased off, but wages have not kept up with inflation except for in very specific sectors. The wealthy are doing great, the middle class who is really the segment related to this article are not doing well. Credit card debt is at record levels, and defaults are picking up. Give it a year once all the layoffs take place.
We didn't start the fire... o/~Um, yeah nowhere near on the same planet. Falun Gong, Christianity, Hong Kong, Cultural Revolution, communist-Nationalist civil War
The issue with minivans is precisely the low load floor and stow-and-go seats that make them so useful. The stow-and-go wells are exactly where the batteries are in a skateboard-style EV.This is a sad state of affairs for me. We love minivans. It’s a much better vehicle for house chores than a pickup truck. More room than a 7 seater SUV. Just great.
An EV minivan with AWD, solar surfaces, and easy reconfiguration would be an awesome vehicle for so many things.
Still have hope for Canoo.
I do wonder what the market is they're trying to target. A robot with a general-purpose AI for household chores or receptionist duties would be immensely useful and popular, but that's the stuff of sci-fi; we're a long way from general AI. That leaves industrial uses where the robot is programmed for each task, but for those you generally want a robot with a specialized shape, not an android. And that market is already well-supplied by other companies.As far as I know the video of the robot picking up an egg didn't involve and particular trickery. They are all-in on machine learning for the robots.
I personally think they'll get some pretty neat demos out of them, but at the end of the day the price point and practical considerations are going to make them a market failure. Not unless there is a breakthrough with machine learning. IMHO this has been a big problem with Elon for a long time. He sees OpenAI demos and is totally wowed but has not tried to actually do real work with those tools and discovered the limitations. I suspect he is actually worried about the AI singularity happening in the next few years, and weirdly enough he's working as hard as he can to make it happen.
One would assume so.The CT uses structural adhesive to attach the stainless steel body panels to the cast aluminum unibody chassis. This is important because it needs an insulator between the two dissimilar metals to avoid galvanic corrosion issues that would rot out the unibody otherwise. I'm assuming that Tesla still does an electrochemical pretreatment for the unibody "body-in-white" before the SS panels are glued on (still not able to remove the paint line yet, Musk!) because otherwise these corrosion longevity problems would be seriously compounded in real world use.
Because there's still aluminum structure there that determines the shape of the roofline and bed sills and so on, that would need to be redesigned for a more conventional appearance. You can't just redo the stainless panels in aluminum because it's not rigid enough to hold the sharp creases and flat planes.Why would the roof/bed need to be redesigned if they switched to plate/sheet aluminum? Ford uses aluminum panels in the F150 without issue:
https://www.lightmetalage.com/news/industry-news/automotive/aluminum-still-makes-ford-trucks-tough/
Have a close look at the egg when the robot releases it; there's a very visible shift in its position, which strongly implies that they were using magnets to position it. And if they were using magnets, that in turn raises the question: was it a real egg? I'm willing to bet a very large sum of money that it wasn't.As far as I know the video of the robot picking up an egg didn't involve and particular trickery.
https://www.atlantafed.org/chcs/wage-growth-trackerIf you look at job-stayer versus job-switcher the peak for job stayers in 2022 was 6% median wage growth and 8.5% median for job switchers.I would argue it's the reverse, it's only specific sectors like tech that have seen layoffs and retrenchment this past year. Other sectors have seen things like record union wins, competitive hiring, and continued strong demand. So far despite inflation the worst effects have still been on balance sheets of companies for debt financing
Redo the stainless steel in aluminum and you might have to melt/round off some of those creases, resulting in ... a DeLorean pickup truck!Because there's still aluminum structure there that determines the shape of the roofline and bed sills and so on, that would need to be redesigned for a more conventional appearance. You can't just redo the stainless panels in aluminum because it's not rigid enough to hold the sharp creases and flat planes.

I’m not sure what you mean. It doesn’t need to be redesigned for a conventional appearance. And while aluminum might not be be able to do the flat planes and creases plate steel can, that doesn’t mean it can’t be used to a reasonable degree. If it needs redesign it isn’t to look different, but to look as close as possible.Because there's still aluminum structure there that determines the shape of the roofline and bed sills and so on, that would need to be redesigned for a more conventional appearance. You can't just redo the stainless panels in aluminum because it's not rigid enough to hold the sharp creases and flat planes.
If they drop the QA any lower it would start causing issues on other cars around it - and that might actually just work?Time to call Autopilot God Mode, double down on controversial Xeets and mislead customers on God Mode availability and pricing? Maybe drop QA a notch down?
Of course, that's been happening for decades: https://www.statista.com/statistics/185369/median-hourly-earnings-of-wage-and-salary-workers/. There was a covid-bump near the end of that chart (that looks much larger than it actually was -- note the y-axis labels), but purchasing power hasn't really budged since the 1970's.There are lots of things that don't factor into these calculations, but regardless significant fractions of the working population in the US alone saw their purchasing power decrease.
I don't even think the market cares about the Toyota Corolla / Camry, as sedans are no longer the biggest sellers, even on a global market level.
What it really seems like the market is dying for is a Chevy Equinox sold at (pre-2022 inflation) Chevy Equinox EV announcement prices.
The Bolt EUV also demonstrated that a smaller vehicle sold for sub-$30K out-of-pocket dollars will also do very well on the market, so presumably a Niro/Kona subcompact EV that was $10-15K less would also sell like hotcakes.
And I think the minivan market has been in decline compared to the SUV/crossover market for a while now. GM, Ford, and Stellantis have all dropped minivans from their lineups, as have Kia, Hyundai and others. So Tesla jumping into the van makret would probably be a mistake unless it can come in a commercial van version to compete with the Transit/Express/Sprinter/Promaster
Yeah, that's where I'd think that if anyone could get sales volume high enough to bring their price per unit down and keep the selling price reasonable, Tesla might be able to do it given their success on the model Y specifically.
Maybe their typical SR/LR model split with a couple gimmicky items "as standard" to keep the manufacturing costs low through standardization and then a few high margin options for the less price sensitive.
That said, I didn't realize Kia has already cancelled the Carnival, so maybe the minivan market really isn't as strong as I thought it might be.
I dunno, it looks like such complete dogshit that I think they need to whole-ass any redesign they might consider.I’m not sure what you mean. It doesn’t need to be redesigned for a conventional appearance. And while aluminum might not be be able to do the flat planes and creases plate steel can, that doesn’t mean it can’t be used to a reasonable degree. If it needs redesign it isn’t to look different, but to look as close as possible.
Oh I missed that, didn't know they renamed the Sedona so I was looking for that, they hid it amongst the SUVs on their website. They really made it look like an SUV too, at a quick glance you wouldn't tell if you didn't notice the door handle locationWhat style of vehicle, pray tell, is the Kia Carnival, if not a minivan?
That’s a choice. They could get away without doing so.I dunno, it looks like such complete dogshit that I think they need to whole-ass any redesign they might consider.
And yet the average age and education of a worker has increased since then. People may be advancing in careers as they age, but those advances don't pay as well as they used to. https://files.stlouisfed.org/files/...rker-diversity-and-wage-growth-since-1940.pdfOf course, that's been happening for decades: https://www.statista.com/statistics/185369/median-hourly-earnings-of-wage-and-salary-workers/. There was a covid-bump near the end of that chart (that looks much larger than it actually was -- note the y-axis labels), but purchasing power hasn't really budged since the 1970's.
That's a case in point. There's a reason there was no follow-up to the EV1. The EV1 wasn't a viable car (nor was it intended to be); it was an experiment. That's why it was lease-only and was crushed after 3 years.Except...no?
The GM EV1 in the 1990s was technically fine, it was just economically infeasible because of the cost of batteries at the time, and the technical shortcomings of the lead-acid and NiMH chemistries available at the time.
Note that I didn't say "Musk" but "Tesla". I agree with you. Musk does deserve some credit, too, for recognizing the potential and funding (and later taking over) Tesla.The widespread adoption of lithium-ion batteries in consumer electronics completely changed the technical and economic realities of the situation, which was not missed by Martin Eberhard and Mark Tarpenning when they founded Tesla. The technical foundations of the vehicle that would become the Tesla Roadster already existed before Musk invested in the company the year after its incorporation.
Still later than the Tesla Roadster. There also were milk-delivery trucks and golf carts since the 1950s (if not earlier). But they were only useful in their niches.And literally the Nissan Leaf began sales in 2010, two years before the Model S, the first mass-produced Tesla, ended up in any customer hands.
To say nothing at all of the numerous smaller volume "compliance EVs" available at the time, like the Mitsubishi i-MiEV, that had been on the market since 2009.
It may surprise you that I'm actually defending Tesla here. But credit where credit is due, IMO.I know people crave simplicity, but it seems like there's always this need for historical revisionism around Tesla specifically.
I like the automatic wipers on my Avalon, especially since they'll start going faster if it starts raining harder. It tends to work pretty damn good, with a tendency to go a little faster that I would generally prefer. Toyota figured this out over 14 years ago. The fact that Tesla can't figure it out speaks volumes to their engineering. Obviously it's something I could easily do without, but it's nice to have, much like the RFID keys and push button start