Tesla cyber pickup 2020-2021


Tesla CEO Elon Musk unveiled the company’s all-electric pickup, the Cybertruck, on Thursday night at one of his company’s signature promotional events in Los Angeles. The vehicle, which represents a large metallic trapezoid, will start at $39,900.





Tesla cyber pickup 2020 2021 Key points





  • Elon Musk took the wraps off Tesla’s first pickup truck, dubbed the Cybertruck, at an event in Los Angeles on Thursday.
  • An on-stage demo that was supposed to show breakproof glass went wrong at the event, as the glass broke.
  • It will start at $39,900 and begin production in 2021.




Cybertruck Single Motor RWD





Specifications





Single Motor RWD





  • 0-60 MPH<6.5 SECONDS
  • RANGE250+ MILES
  • DRIVETRAINREAR-WHEEL DRIVE
  • STORAGE100 FT3
  • VAULT LENGTH6.5 FT
  • TOWING CAPACITY7,500+ LBS
  • AUTOPILOTSTANDARD
  • ADAPTIVE AIR SUSPENSIONSTANDARD
  • GROUND CLEARANCEUP TO 16"
  • APPROACH ANGLE35 DEGREES
  • DEPARTURE ANGLE28 DEGREES




tesla cyber pickup 2020
tesla cyber pickup 2020








The truck is Tesla’s sixth vehicle since it was founded in 2003, and its most experimental. It will be competing in a market against the Ford F Series, which has been the best-selling pickup for more than 40 years in the U.S., followed by General Motors’ Chevrolet Silverado, another formidable competitor.







Musk previously said that Tesla intended to price its base model at under $50,000, that the truck’s styling would be “cyberpunk,” rather than traditional, inspired by two films -- “Blade Runner” and “The Spy Who Loved Me.” The CEO also previously suggested that demand for Tesla’s pickup may be less than demand for the company’s flagship Model S sedan and Model X SUV combined owing to its unique design.




https://twitter.com/TheTeslaShow/status/1197737671860400130




Cybertruck Dual Motor AWD





Specifications





Dual Motor AWD





  • 0-60 MPH<4.5 SECONDS
  • RANGE300+ MILES
  • DRIVETRAINDUAL MOTOR ALL-WHEEL DRIVE
  • STORAGE100 FT3
  • VAULT LENGTH6.5 FT
  • TOWING CAPACITY10,000+ LBS
  • AUTOPILOTSTANDARD
  • ADAPTIVE AIR SUSPENSIONSTANDARD
  • GROUND CLEARANCEUP TO 16"
  • APPROACH ANGLE35 DEGREES
  • DEPARTURE ANGLE28 DEGREES



[video width="1240" height="620" mp4="https://rankuphub.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/11_Desktop_Video.mp4"][/video]





Cybertruck Tri Motor AWD





Specifications





Dual Motor AWD





  • 0-60 MPH<2.9 SECONDS
  • RANGE500+ MILES
  • DRIVETRAINTRI MOTOR ALL-WHEEL DRIVE
  • STORAGE100 FT3
  • VAULT LENGTH6.5 FT
  • TOWING CAPACITY14,000+ LBS
  • AUTOPILOTSTANDARD
  • ADAPTIVE AIR SUSPENSIONSTANDARD
  • GROUND CLEARANCEUP TO 16"
  • APPROACH ANGLE35 DEGREES
  • DEPARTURE ANGLE28 DEGREES




Tesla CEO Elon Musk introduces the Cybertruck at an event on Nov. 21, 2019.





At the event on Thursday, the CEO introduced Tesla Chief Designer Franz Von Holzhausen to demonstrate how much of a beating the Cybertruck could take.





The design leader took a sledgehammer to the body and a metal ball to the side window of the Cybertruck. He shattered the window, to Musk’s surprise, but the metal ball did not go through the glass. Earlier, Musk had claimed the truck was bulletproof against a 9mm handgun.





screenshot cybertruck 2




Elon Musk introduces the Cybertruck at an event on Nov. 21, 2019. The glass on the vehicle shows a couple of spiderweb hammers after a demonstration that was supposed to show breakproof glass did not go as planned.





Musk also promised “one more thing,” after the truck demo -- and showed off an electric all-terrain vehicle, which was designed to roll up into the back of the Cybertruck.





Tesla didn’t disclose pricing or say whether and when it intends to manufacture and sell its ATV during the live-streamed presentation.





Toni Sacconaghi, senior technology research analyst at AB Bernstein, said on CNBC’s Power Lunch on Thursday, ahead of the unveiling, “The pickup market is really big, it’s about 3 million units in the U.S. and that’s about 65% of the size of what we think the addressable market is for the Model 3 and Model Y,” referring to Tesla’s most mainstream car, an electric sedan, and forthcoming crossover SUV. He said if Tesla’s product was niche, it could at least be made at one of its existing factories in the U.S.





In a research note out Friday morning, Sacconaghi said “Tesla’s Cybertruck looks weird... like, really weird. Musk had warned investors that Tesla’s pickup would be “really futuristic, like cyberpunk Blade Runner,” and he wasn’t kidding. Add a little bit of dirt, and you could even say it gives off a retro-future vibe a la Mad Max.”





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