I feel like it’s more for someone going to Home Depot and IKEA most weekends than someone who needs a truck bed daily to haul gravel and 15 horses 800 miles across a glacier
Yeah, used cars are always better value than new ones because someone else has already eaten the depreciation. That’s why no one makes new cars, they just can’t compete on value.
I find “daily” to be too strict a criteria, go for “routinely.” I’m a woodworker, I haul lumber, tools, scrap and finished projects around in my S10, sometimes multiple loads a day, sometimes not for weeks. It’s been 8 days since I hauled something heavy in my pickup, I bought a new compressor and it wasn’t gonna fit in my Buick.
Plus…some people want a truck because they like them. If you want the unwashed masses to drive more EVs, you’re going to have to allow EVs to be things other than expensive luxury sport sedanover Model Y clones or “cut off your genitals to save weight and get better mileage” self-flagellation machines for self-loathing Green party voters like the Leaf and Bolt. Bring back fun little toy cars like the Geo Tracker and the Subaru BRAT but with electric powertrains. Something that’s just as fun to slide through the mud as a Wrangler or Bronco but 7/8ths as big, something a blonde named Tina wants to drive to her job at the Great Clips in Rocky Mount.
Not jabbing at you in particular, but how often does the average 4-door sedan owner use their back seats? If you’d reqire a truck bed more often than rear seats, the argument for a small pickup is logical.
I have passengers far more often than I use a bed. Honestly I think I might use a truck bed once a year at most and that’s if I’m looking to use it.
Families, etc. All probably use those back seats more than they would a truck bed. But your argument isn’t wrong- I just agree with op that for a lot of people a bolt is a more attractive option assuming you’re not super into the core of the slate- ie. No tracking, etc etc
And if you need a truck bed daily you’re probably going to buy a truck with a full size one, instead of a 5ft bed which barely gives you more storage space than the trunk of a wagon.
Full sheet of plywood is 250cm long. That truck has a 150cm long bed. You’re going to need roof racks or a trailer anyway. I know because I regularly haul full sheets of plywood and plasterboard with a pickup truck that has a 180cm long bed. Leaving the tailgate open doesn’t help much either because while the bed technically is wide enough for a full sheet, in practice it’s not because of the wheel arches on both sides. It wont lay flat and is quite hard to tie down.
Regarding the wheel arches on compact pickups: Most compact pickups that can’t fit a sheet of plywood flat on the floor between the wheel arches have notches in the side of the bed for crossboards. That allows you to easily build a platform for sheet goods. Like this:
That’s what the rectangular notches in the side of the Slate’s bed are for:
I have a similar setup on my truck even though it doesn’t have those notches. I just don’t like having the overhang flopping in the air and not even being supported by the tailgate anymore so I just don’t bother with it. A mid-size pickup simply isn’t good for that. If it’s just a few sheets I’ll put them on the roof but for more than that I just use a trailer instead.
I want the Slate to succeed, but unless you need a truck bed daily, a used Bolt offers greater value for the average person at a lower price.
I feel like it’s more for someone going to Home Depot and IKEA most weekends than someone who needs a truck bed daily to haul gravel and 15 horses 800 miles across a glacier
Oh stow that counterproductive bullshit.
Yeah, used cars are always better value than new ones because someone else has already eaten the depreciation. That’s why no one makes new cars, they just can’t compete on value.
I find “daily” to be too strict a criteria, go for “routinely.” I’m a woodworker, I haul lumber, tools, scrap and finished projects around in my S10, sometimes multiple loads a day, sometimes not for weeks. It’s been 8 days since I hauled something heavy in my pickup, I bought a new compressor and it wasn’t gonna fit in my Buick.
Plus…some people want a truck because they like them. If you want the unwashed masses to drive more EVs, you’re going to have to allow EVs to be things other than expensive luxury sport sedanover Model Y clones or “cut off your genitals to save weight and get better mileage” self-flagellation machines for self-loathing Green party voters like the Leaf and Bolt. Bring back fun little toy cars like the Geo Tracker and the Subaru BRAT but with electric powertrains. Something that’s just as fun to slide through the mud as a Wrangler or Bronco but 7/8ths as big, something a blonde named Tina wants to drive to her job at the Great Clips in Rocky Mount.
Username checks out.
But in any case, I get what theyre saying. If I bought this I’d probably not use half my vehicle most, if not all, the time.
Personally very much like the idea of a slate car but not on offer yet.
Not jabbing at you in particular, but how often does the average 4-door sedan owner use their back seats? If you’d reqire a truck bed more often than rear seats, the argument for a small pickup is logical.
I have passengers far more often than I use a bed. Honestly I think I might use a truck bed once a year at most and that’s if I’m looking to use it.
Families, etc. All probably use those back seats more than they would a truck bed. But your argument isn’t wrong- I just agree with op that for a lot of people a bolt is a more attractive option assuming you’re not super into the core of the slate- ie. No tracking, etc etc
And if you need a truck bed daily you’re probably going to buy a truck with a full size one, instead of a 5ft bed which barely gives you more storage space than the trunk of a wagon.
Good luck hauling a full sheet of plywood in a wagon.
Full sheet of plywood is 250cm long. That truck has a 150cm long bed. You’re going to need roof racks or a trailer anyway. I know because I regularly haul full sheets of plywood and plasterboard with a pickup truck that has a 180cm long bed. Leaving the tailgate open doesn’t help much either because while the bed technically is wide enough for a full sheet, in practice it’s not because of the wheel arches on both sides. It wont lay flat and is quite hard to tie down.
Regarding the wheel arches on compact pickups: Most compact pickups that can’t fit a sheet of plywood flat on the floor between the wheel arches have notches in the side of the bed for crossboards. That allows you to easily build a platform for sheet goods. Like this:
That’s what the rectangular notches in the side of the Slate’s bed are for:
I have a similar setup on my truck even though it doesn’t have those notches. I just don’t like having the overhang flopping in the air and not even being supported by the tailgate anymore so I just don’t bother with it. A mid-size pickup simply isn’t good for that. If it’s just a few sheets I’ll put them on the roof but for more than that I just use a trailer instead.
Doesn’t that apply to ANY vehicle with a truck bed? You’re just comparing apples and oranges.
I’m a bit out of the loop, the slate doesn’t have a modem and GPS? I assume the bolt does? Seems like an important factor these days.
It’s a car, not computer. Lack of wireless connectivity is nothing but a plus in my books. My phone has an internet and GPS for when I need them.
That was my point.
Seems like something I’d want to avoid at all costs these days.
Yes, but it’s moot from a privacy standpoint for most if you bring your cell phone in the car.
Yes we know phones have radios in them thank you.
Whatever the right amount of distrust in phones, the distrust in car makers is much much greater.
If you’re worried about it, it’s trivial to throw your phone in a faraday bag.