E90400K
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Francis
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2025
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 391
- Reaction score
- 255
- Location
- Middle of the Mid Atlantic
- Vehicles
- A Ford truck
It's a reasonably conceivable scenario where a young-aged, median-income family with recently wed adults and small children live in an apartment and have no access to at-home, overnight, L2 charging. Everyone agrees that relying solely on the public infrastructure to charge an EV is not a good use case because time to recharge and cost to recharge are not reasonable (in the USA at least).It's not necessary, nor is it helpful, to repeatedly post conjured-up scenarios where choosing to buy Slate Truck would be a poor buying decision.
Slate has stated a significant consideration for standing up its company and producing a low-price EV pickup that is reconfigurable to a 2-door SUV is because the median-income family in the USA can't afford (or shouldn't try to afford) a monthly car payment over $400. Slate has been clear that is their target market. Additionally, there are studies upon studies and reports upon reports that median-income families in the USA are priced out of the housing market, let alone the single-family home market, which one can only conclude such families live in apartments or a condominium building where the is little to no EV charging infrastructure and those people must rely on the public charging infrastructure.
You stated the Maverick is not a competitor to the Slate Truck. I think the Maverick is a competitor to the Slate Truck and I gave one reasonable scenario why. I think my posts are necessary and are helpful.