Tesla Cybertruck’s size won’t change for production after all
Months after Tesla cyber truck The company’s CEO, Elon Musk, said the electric pickup is probably a little smaller for production. Musk often hovered a figure of around 3% smaller. However, that no longer seems to be the plan.
Musk tweeted on Saturday saying that even a 3% smaller cyber truck would be too small after discussing the design with Tesla’s chief designer Franz von Holzhausen. Now the plan is to keep the pickup “pretty much” the size of the prototype. What is good news for those who think Tesla’s first scheduled pickup is too big is that Musk has a smaller “world truck” in mind for the future.
We’ve known for a while that Cybertruck is a mammoth, but to repeat the fact, let’s review a refined augmented reality app. An app showed the prototype pickup in a rather normal American garage and the nose remained centimeters outside the structure. It’s not a Tesla-specific problem: As trucks have grown bigger in recent years, Americans have started to modernize their garages to fit the big rigs. Those who plan to receive a cyber truck may also need to make plans for a larger garage.
We should see Tesla’s cyber truck start production late next year, and by then we’ll surely find out where the company wants to build it. The automaker has a central location in the U.S. to build the pickup and model Y for the east coast. We reportedly learned Tesla last week narrowed locations to two cities:: Tulsa, Oklahoma and Austin, Texas.