Yeah you're right. The Toyota hauls more weight and tows more weight. Refuels in 5 minutes and has no range limitations. It does truck stuff....only if you believe the mid-sized Toyota ICE pickup and the Slate Truck are substitutes for one another, which they aren't.
The Ownership Experience in general, and long-term Cost-Of-Ownership in particular, are vastly different.
That dog won't hunt.
Maybe 1% will.And it will last 300,000 miles.
Hard pressed not to consider as competitive to a Slate. A truck with paint, radio, and 6' box.![]()
With the way they built stuff nowadays I have a hard time believing it will last that long. Toyota isn't what it used to be.Yeah you're right. The Toyota hauls more weight and tows more weight. Refuels in 5 minutes and has no range limitations. It does truck stuff.
And it will last 300,000 miles.
Truck Model | Starting MSRP (Base Trim)* |
Rivian R1T | $70,990 |
Ford F150 Lightning | $54,780 |
Chevrolet Silverado EV (commercial) | $57,095 |
GMC Sierra EV | $64,495 |
Tesla Cybertruck | $72,235 |
GMC Hummer EV Pickup | $96,550 |
Slate Truck | ~$27,500 |
Wow. Only 1 that is not more than double the Slate price using $27,500 instead of $25,000. I am in the same boat. I will not consider an ICE truck. I already know it is more cost effective to keep driving my Leaf and renting a pick-up when needed than owning an ICE pick-up. When the Slate comes out I will be happy to upgrade from the Leaf to the Slate and no longer need to rent trucks periodically.I want to haul stuff, not people. And do it with electrons not oil. That means the only comparibles for me are:
Truck Model Starting MSRP (Base Trim)* Rivian R1T $70,990 Ford F150 Lightning $54,780 Chevrolet Silverado EV (commercial) $57,095 GMC Sierra EV $64,495 Tesla Cybertruck $72,235 GMC Hummer EV Pickup $96,550 Slate Truck ~$27,500
When you refuel it in 5 minutes are you spending 2 figures or 3? When I refuel my vehicles overnight I am spending low 1 figure.Yeah you're right. The Toyota hauls more weight and tows more weight. Refuels in 5 minutes and has no range limitations. It does truck stuff.
And it will last 300,000 miles.
Mine would be the 1%.Maybe 1% will.
And it will require a lot of maintenance and repair cost and hassle to make that happen because of all the extra moving parts.
Two digits for the Tacoma, but it has a relatively small capacity.When you refuel it in 5 minutes are you spending 2 figures or 3? When I refuel my vehicles overnight I am spending low 1 figure.
I'd be worried about all that leaking electricity after a few years. Have you ever seen electricity stains? Oh, boy!I’m going to repost a picture I took yesterday.
This is what you can expect with a 25 year old pickup truck with 150k+ miles. This is why you should buy the Slate.
Any questions?
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Sad to say, I agree. I drive a 2006 Tacoma. My significant other is always pressing me to buy a new truck. At 135K, the old girl drives like a new truck, no squeaks or rattles (driven in the Arizona desert exploring monthly btw) and is the most reliable vehicle I have owned in my 65 years on this planet.With the way they built stuff nowadays I have a hard time believing it will last that long. Toyota isn't what it used to be.
Never sell, you can only regret it, you'll never say "glad I sold my faithful truck"Sad to say, I agree. I drive a 2006 Tacoma. My significant other is always pressing me to buy a new truck. At 135K, the old girl drives like a new truck, no squeaks or rattles (driven in the Arizona desert exploring monthly btw) and is the most reliable vehicle I have owned in my 65 years on this planet.
I have a hard time believing a new Mexican built Taco can come close to this reliability. I am aggressive with all maintenance and I expect 400K from the old girl.
I agree. The thing is, If I like the Slate as much as I think I will, I don't need 2 vehicles. Or, I can justify them by using the Slate M-F and the Taco for serious desert use on weekends.Never sell, you can only regret it, you'll never say "glad I sold my faithful truck"
Sounds like the perfect use of both! Will help keep miles off the Taco!I agree. The thing is, If I like the Slate as much as I think I will, I don't need 2 vehicles. Or, I can justify them by using the Slate M-F and the Taco for serious desert use on weekends.
I think with the weight (maybe??) and range anxiety, using the Slate for weekend desert explorations is not an option at this time.
And it can hurt.I'd be worried about all that leaking electricity after a few years. Have you ever seen electricity stains? Oh, boy!