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Transportation Power

Tesla Starts Production of Electric Semi Truck (engadget.com) 95

Tesla's long-delayed semi-truck has started production, and the company will begin making deliveries as soon as December 1st, Elon Musk has announced on Twitter. Engadget reports: The first batch of Semis will be delivered to Pepsi, which ordered 100 vehicles from the company back in December 2017. As TechCrunch notes, other big companies had also ordered trucks from the automaker, including Walmart and UPS. And in May this year, the automaker opened reservations to more customers for a deposit of $20,000. A Semi costs between $150,000 and $180,000, depending on the range, and it could go as far as 500 miles on a single charge. The Tesla Semi was unveiled back in 2017, with production expected to start by 2019. "While that obviously didn't happen, Musk told employees in an email back in early 2020 that the vehicle was already in limited production and that it was 'time to go all out and bring the Tesla Semi to volume production,'" notes Engadget.

Deliveries were delayed yet again to 2021 and then to 2022 due to the global supply chain shortages affecting the tech and auto industries.
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Tesla Starts Production of Electric Semi Truck

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  • They canâ(TM)t reliably churn out their existing product lines, people are waiting multiple years for orders, and have to frequently return them for various fixes and issues. How will they fulfill orders from the trucking industry where any delays are magnified immensely. PepsiCo alone owns 36,000 trucks in the US, 100 is not even a drop in the bucket.

  • Will it have Full Self Driving? Cause that would be bad-ass. Truck driving jobs will be really cozy for the next few years if FSD becomes real this decade. Of course at some point 30 to 50 years from now they will ditch drivers entirely, but by then we better have universal basic income setup.

    • by Osgeld ( 1900440 )

      have you seen a fully self driving car let alone cargo truck that isn't some lab experiment, pull your head out of your ass

  • If it's longer than a mandated rest period, whatever you save on fuel will get gobbled up by wasting driver time.

  • Maybe I'll go get a F-150 Lighning. I can see electric delivery trucks for local use. Way better in ports as they won't be stinking up the air (looking at you, San Pedro and Long Beach!).
    • If you want a truck to be a truck, then the lightning is a much better choice, because it's shaped like a truck.

      If you want a truck to be a car, the Rivian R1S is a better choice, it's here and it's working and they've been working out the bugs on a prior off-road model already.

      If you want to pay for features you may never get, buy a Tesla.

  • They're not for sale and five years late. Anyone else would call it a trial.
    • They're not for sale and five years late.
      Anyone else would call it a trial.

      I don't blame you for being annoyed at the delay from what Musk said, but "not for sale" is really splitting hairs on the definition of what being "for sale" is. Yes, you're technically right, the first ones are only being built, and there's a purchase agreement in place for them, but since the whole point of the article was to say that they would be delivered in December, they're really close to being actually sold but haven't actually been sold yet, but we have a pretty specific timeframe when that will c

      • And he's certainly the leader of the pack, way ahead of anyone else in BEV's, I mean look at poor Rivian for comparison

        If you mean "poor rivian" in terms of sales, they haven't been around as long and their vehicles cost more than Teslas, so that's foolish. If you mean in terms of capabilities, they have off-roaders on the market now and working very, very well. They can climb slopes that leave most gassers at the bottom. Meanwhile cybertruck is still imaginary.

  • Meh (Score:4, Interesting)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Friday October 07, 2022 @09:28PM (#62948273) Journal

    It has 500 mile range which is HALF that of a commercial truck.
    Also hilariously, at https://www.tesla.com/semi [tesla.com] it says NOTHING about load capacity. There are some questions.
    An analysis: https://cleantechnica.com/2019... [cleantechnica.com]

    • It has 500 mile range which is HALF that of a commercial truck.

      Not every truck is used for interstate/international deliveries.

      • by torkus ( 1133985 )

        It has 500 mile range which is HALF that of a commercial truck.

        Not every truck is used for interstate/international deliveries.

        It's the same nonsense logic people use to "prove" that BEV's can't possibly replace the ICE...

        Short/medium haul trucking suffers from poor fuel economy just like cars (or worse) and that's exactly where EV's excel...and presumably where these trucks are aimed.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Other companies have been delivering electric trucks for years already, and they have proven practical and indeed better than fossil fuel powered ones.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      The range is fine. 500 miles in Europe is usually in excess of what drivers are legally allowed to do in a day, so stopping for charging is no problem. They have to take regular, mandatory breaks anyway.

      This will be a difficult market for Tesla to break into, as there are many established players who have been delivering EV tr

  • The REAL pollution from vehicles is diesel exhaust, which contains toxic soot and sulfur dioxide. This should be the first target of EVs. In addition, the corporate owners of these vehicles can afford and amortize the up front costs.

  • "up to 500 miles" What does that mean? With no load? At what speed? Range is usually stated at 55 mph, which no truck drives at on the highway. For example, this article [caranddriver.com] speculates that a F-150 Lightning pulling max load will lose more than half of its range. And that's without figuring in cold temperatures.

    Obviously this truck is aimed at short-distance hauling. It would be useless for long-distance due to short range and long recharging times. So, the expected range under load and at speed is crit

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