My email from Rivian ended up in my junkmail, here's what the actual invite says: Our configurator is launching! Hi John, Our configurator is launching Monday, November 16, for preorder holders. This is a full week before everyone else gets access. In anticipation, we’re sharing more about our equipment packages, features, pricing and the Launch Edition — a special launch configuration with U.S. deliveries for the R1T starting in June 2021 and R1S in August 2021. Canadian deliveries begin in November 2021. Thank you for being on this journey with us. We couldn’t be more grateful to be building a community of adventurous souls committed to leaving the planet better for our kids and our kids’ kids. Time to Build - Rivian Stories
I guess for me I took the EV charging part as just newbies that were too lazy to do basic research. It was kind of fun watching a pre-production car. The drama is a bit dull generally, and the sometimes silly antics isn't very interesting. It would have been more interesting if they explored the country more away from the road itself (people, sights). I almost enjoyed the production team scenes more than the some of the scenes with the actors. The best part of the trip is really the scenery. So for me unlike most stuff on TV it is one to actually look at -- especially now that I finally upgraded a 20 year old TV. I love nature and road trips. I don't think I would want to do this trip though. Or I would take a trip with more paved roads.
I want something for doing long road trips that are comfortable for boon docking. Don't expect to use 4WD but unpaved roads. Want to be able to carry paddle board, bike and sleep in the vehicle. -- not at the same time -- Having some storage, refrigerator, sink etc... is nice but not a requirement. The reason for a van style is that it needs to be comfortable to be in the back. Sit up straight and move around. A SUV or truck shape just doesn't do that. Boondocking in a SUV is just a pain as there is a constant shuffle of gear around and sitting in the front seats is not relaxing....
Anyone else notice how complex the R1T's interior is? How many nooks and crannies there are to collect grime. For a vehicle meant to get used and get dirty, I think it will take quite a bit to have it any other way. What do others think?
A long hood does not correlate to a long crumple zone! The crumple zone cannot extend beyond the front axle. A lot of body-on-frame pickups/SUVs have a long hood and a short crumple zone. An EV with a very short hood may have a longer crumple zone than an ICE vehicle with a long hood.
Configured my truck. What was nice is I was able to go with the Explorer package and still get the underbody armor. And I was able to get The 400+ mile battery. Lastly I put in the expensive 5k kitchen. One way to think about it is by not getting cooled seals, better audio system, etc I was able to get the kitchen. I will have to wait to see if the kitchen is worth it. One last, but important note: small print said estimated price. So unlike Tesla, it appears configuring does not lock in the price at this stage.
I don't want perforated seats in a pickup, so I chose the Explore package. I would have liked to have a powered tonneau cover; perhaps that'll be optioned later.
Thanks for setting my expectation for the 400+ pack at 20k so I could stomach the 10k it is priced at now. I wonder if that price will hold to 2022.
I was also pleasantly surprised. It would be a bad look if they suddenly changed it upward, so I feel relatively confident with our "all in" pricing at this point. As configured, it's a pretty good value for an EV pickup with ~180kWh of capacity. At least compared to what I've been spending with Tesla.
Seems like the Rivian R1T/S Launch edition launches in June 2021 at $75k/$77.5k with 300+ miles of range. Then about 6 months later the R1T/S with 300+ miles of range for the same price. CT will have 500+ miles for the same or less price (depending on when reserved) in late 2021. So I'm seeing 200 more miles of range for the same price with CT. Sound right?
The one I reserved has 400+ miles of range (180kWh battery) for $79k. The base model (300+ miles) would have been $69k, as the larger battery was a $10k bump.
There is the Tesla Truckla: If that's not truck-like enough for you maybe this battery electric mining truck would fit the bill:
This is good. Rivian got some of Tesla's least smart employees. Imagine the value of stock options they left on the table! Culling the weakest members of the herd makes the herd stronger.
I don't expect they will stockpile many weeks of production before they deliver them. It's not like they need to be aged or cured after manufacture. Apparently the prototypes don't have the power of the production vehicles. I hope this doesn't foretell major delays. I want Rivian to do well but they are not inspiring confidence that they can hit their delivery targets or that the products will be as good as claimed.
I think the New Paradigm Answer is: "EVs never need servicing"... My guess is at a Rivian service center.