08-13-2023, 12:59 PM | #23 | |
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And then competition. Ford, for example, will not concede the pickup truck market to anyone. Others like Chevy, Ram and Toyota will additionally make RIVN's business life miserable because of competition. And then dealers. What more needs to be said about the dealership model that hasn't been said already on this site? RIVN needs to built out sales, parts, service and charging channels to be successful. They can jump on the charging system bandwagon with other manufacturers, but creating a sales/parts/service channel will be their burden to bear. It's not about wanting, or not wanting, any company to succeed or fail. It's objectively clear that RIVN has a tall, steep climb ahead, and it will be interesting to see how it works out for them. |
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08-13-2023, 02:42 PM | #24 | |
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And no need to break down the economics and order of operations of what needs to happen, when, and how. I'm well versed in how this all works. And what RIVN is set out to do can be done just as TSLA did it. The primary difference, for better or worse, is TSLA was a first mover. TSLA was largely free cash flow negative until sometime in 2018. It took over eight years to get to that point. A primary cog, not the only one, in the success wheel for RIVN is a function of the availability of capital and investors willingness to keep funding the business. The investors know what they're in for. This is the proverbial long game. RIVN will not be consistently free cash flow positive for many years. I'll say this to the folks who seem to know more than everyone else with respect to RIVN's fate: Take a six or seven figure short position in RIVN. Do it. Look, I think we're generally aligned on this. I also am very interested to see how this works out. In the interest of full disclosure, I'm not a material investor in RIVN.
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08-13-2023, 03:13 PM | #26 | |
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I don't care who thinks what about RIVN or its products. This is an interesting exercise in capitalism and Business 101. That's all. I make no predictions on RIVN's fate, only that they are on a large, steep climb. I own no RIVN shares, and I don't own their products. Under the current circumstances, I have no intention of investing or buying their products in the foreseeable future. If conditions change, I may or may not change my position. |
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08-14-2023, 04:00 PM | #27 | |
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I don't have pictures, but I've seen entire door frames bent (at the top), and sitting crooked, trim pieces at strange angles, entire front ends with over 1/2" gaps from the headlights on one side and tight on the other, horribly misaligned fenders meeting the front door causing 1/2" or larger gaps randomly to open up. I am not the kind of guy who has to have everything be perfect and check panel gaps with a feeler gauge, but they're egregiously bad. Tesla is somehow leagues ahead of Rivian, and their fitment is terrible too. Lucid (Based here in AZ I think) is even worse. Overspray over the whole car bad on multiple cars, including a sapphire I've seen causing huge issues for the new owners. Some refusing to take delivery and all that jazz. I'd also venture to say that rivians look terrible in the front. It looks like a character from Big Hero 6, my nephews favorite movie.
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08-14-2023, 10:00 PM | #29 |
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I have one on order, the SUV, will likely cancel if I can convince my wife. Less and less a fan, rather a Model X or even a Polstar. Those headlights are awful and I’m hearing 6k mile tire replacements as common.
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08-14-2023, 10:11 PM | #30 |
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Plaid X with the non-stupid steering wheel seems like a great daily SUV/Egg thing. I'm legitimately considering one and doing a BBK and full suspension on it... It might look like crap but it'll turn and brake I think (hope)
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08-15-2023, 05:36 PM | #31 | |
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Completely stock R1S quad motor. https://insideevs.com/news/681888/ri...rubicon-trail/ |
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08-15-2023, 05:43 PM | #32 |
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08-15-2023, 05:56 PM | #33 |
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It is from conserve mode. R1T/R1S can decouple its rear motors to be more efficient. Power is reduced in conserve mode, but that still means people are ripping around putting 418hp to just the front tires. Civic Type R's have been known to go through front tires in less than 10k miles, they are a lot lighter and have 100+ less hp.
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08-15-2023, 06:57 PM | #34 |
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I was getting about 220-230 miles of highway driving at 70-80 MPH. This is pretty bad considering the massive 135 kWh battery. The vampire drain issue was due to the air suspension constantly adjusting the level even while parked. It's possible that they have already fixed that. Another problem is that the phone key was way too sensitive. As I walked around the house and got closer, it would unlock the car, triggering the air suspension to level, the software to load etc... eating up that battery. Overall it's like a baby Hummer EV too heavy for its own good...
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08-17-2023, 09:54 AM | #35 |
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Last edited by sspade; 08-17-2023 at 10:01 AM.. |
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08-17-2023, 10:06 AM | #36 |
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According to the CFO, the company will begin turning a profit in the fourth quarter of 2024.
For a company founded in 2009, is that considered acceptable? Tough to imagine investing in a company like that. |
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08-17-2023, 01:32 PM | #37 |
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There's nothing out of the ordinary about this in the automotive industry where the barriers to entry are incredibly high. Starting an automotive company, especially an EV company, is capital-intensive. I'm certain the COVID-19 pandemic set them back a bit as well.
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