The window of the electric vehicle company’s proposed “cybertruck” was broken the last time Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla, walked onto the podium to promote it.
The car made a ground-breaking debut, intended to establish Tesla’s dominance in the profitable US truck sector.
The business is finally ready to begin shipping the cutting-edge product to customers four years later.
However, it’s unclear if the truck’s unique design will increase or decrease its likelihood of success.
The angular vehicle, which is constructed of bulletproof steel and resembles a rocket, has been called by Elon Musk the business’s “best product ever”.
Addressing to analysts on the street last month, he did, however, also express his desire to “temper expectations” and forewarn that the business would face “enormous challenges” before mass-producing the vehicle and making a profit.
“It will continue to require tremendous work,” he stated. “It’s not a matter of demand issue, because we have to produce it, and we must provide it at an amount that individuals can afford – extremely expensive things.”
He noted subsequently that the truck’s “bells and whistles” had complicated manufacturing and increased expense.
“We used the cybertruck to dig our own grave,” Mr. Musk claimed.
Traditional sedans have fallen so far from grace that certain automakers have ceased producing them for the US market, leaving trucks as one of the most popular automobiles sold there.
However, Tesla’s offer is coming to market at a challenging time—roughly two years behind schedule—as consumers’ capacity to make new purchases is stifled by the highest loan rates in decades.
Rivals like Ford and General Motors have announced in recent months that they will increase their production of electric cars more slowly than originally anticipated, citing the state of the market.