I would buy it in a second. It ticks every box on my want list. I don’t think I’ll need another vehicle when it comes out, but hopefully it - or something similar - is available when the time comes.
Yeah, I love this. Between the Slate with a bed cover, R2/R3, and Telo, there are some cool outdoorsy oriented EVs coming in the next few years that I’m looking forward to.
I bought a Saturn back when they were a thing. I ran that thing into the ground. The panels were not a weakness, and we get a lot of sun where I live, and I didn’t have a garage.
It all depends on the composite. GM used a polypropylene composites for several models in the 90s. And even after 30 years, the panels are fine. They only return back to steel panels because plastics have higher thermal movement so the fits had large gaps and consumers associated plastic as cheap and inferior as the inital dentless marketing wore off in the mid 2k’s.
What your probably refering is ABS composites that manufacturers love using for trim peices. ABS tends to have the stablizers just leech away.
I would buy it in a second. It ticks every box on my want list. I don’t think I’ll need another vehicle when it comes out, but hopefully it - or something similar - is available when the time comes.
Yeah, I love this. Between the Slate with a bed cover, R2/R3, and Telo, there are some cool outdoorsy oriented EVs coming in the next few years that I’m looking forward to.
Not sure about those polypropylene body panels though. Most cars are going to be exposed to the sun, a lot.
Polypropylene is already used for panels for a lot of cars. They seem to hold up.
Sure, it’s used as filler and bumpers a lot. But it’s almost always the first thing to deteriorate on the vehicle.
I bought a Saturn back when they were a thing. I ran that thing into the ground. The panels were not a weakness, and we get a lot of sun where I live, and I didn’t have a garage.
And I’ve owned multiple cars where the plastics just crumbled away. The metal body panels lasted long after.
It all depends on the composite. GM used a polypropylene composites for several models in the 90s. And even after 30 years, the panels are fine. They only return back to steel panels because plastics have higher thermal movement so the fits had large gaps and consumers associated plastic as cheap and inferior as the inital dentless marketing wore off in the mid 2k’s.
What your probably refering is ABS composites that manufacturers love using for trim peices. ABS tends to have the stablizers just leech away.