Imagine a bare-bones electric pickup: it’s the size of an old Hilux, it seats two, and the bed fits a full sheet of plywood. Too good to be true? Wait until you hear that the Slate Pickup is …
Imagine a bare-bones electric pickup: it’s the size of an old Hilux, it seats two, and the bed fits a full sheet of plywood. Too good to be true? Wait until you hear that the Slate Pickup is being designed for DIY repairability and modification, and will sell for only $20,000 USD, after American federal tax incentives.
Using the cellphone for infotainment makes for a less expensive product and a very clean dash. (Image: Slate Motors)
There are a few things missing: no infotainment system, for one. Why bother, when almost everyone has a phone and Bluetooth speakers are so cheap? No touch screen in the middle of the dash also means the return of physical controls for the heat and air conditioning.
There is no choice in colors, either. To paraphrase Henry Ford, the Slate comes in any color you want, as long as it’s grey. It’s not something we’d given much though to previously, but apparently painting is a huge added expense for automakers. Instead, the truck’s bodywork is going to be injection molded plastic panels, like an old Saturn coupe. We remember how resilient those body panels were, and think that sounds like a great idea. Injection molding is also a less capital-intensive process to set up than traditional automotive sheet metal stamping, reducing costs further.
That being said, customization is still a big part of the Slate. The company intends to sell DIY vinyl wrap kits, as well as a bolt-on SUV conversion kit which customers could install themselves. The plan is to have a “Slate University” app that would walk owners through maintaining their own automobile, a delightfully novel choice for a modern carmaker.
With a color wrap and an SUV add-on, it looks like a different beast. (Image: Slate Motors)
Of course, it’s all just talk unless Slate can make good on their promises. With rumors that Jeff Bezos is interested in investing, maybe they can pull it off and produce what could be a Volkswagen for 21st century America.
Interested readers can check out the Slate Motors website, and preorder for only $50 USD. For now, Slate is only interested in doing business within the United States, but we can hope they inspire copycats elsewhere. There’s no reason similar vehicles couldn’t be made anywhere from Alberta to Zeeland, if the will was there.
What do you think? Is this the perfect hackermobile, or have Slate fallen short? Let us know in the comments.
Though I generally agree -- is it even possible to have a product with enough funding to get to market these days without having some rich backer?
Especially with a product as complex as a car, I suspect having one organically pop up in this economy without being tied to one of these people is largely impractical.
So we just compromise on our values and let billionaires destroy the planet so that they can deliver more stuff for them to sell to us?
Maybe we do not need more cars. If you buy one, it's not like your old car just gets recycled-- someone else starts driving it, so there's just more cars on the road.
I don't think the solution to our environmental problems truly lays on electric vehicles, but rather, high speed rail, walkable and more compact cities, and extensive public transit.
This is basically my dream truck, small ev with a decent sized bed, repairable, moddable, and simple. This would be perfect for my daily 10mile commute and weekend projects. I don't preorder video games, so I won't be preordering a truck. But if they keep the price under 30k, and the power train is serviceable I'll buy it day one.
So everyone knows, it doesn't take 8 hours to charge on regular 120v outlet. It's more like 72 because of the amps required. It takes roughly about 8 hours on 220v and 3 hours on whatever the hell Tesla chargers use that require additional power run to your house. So it has a standard recharge rate with a range of 150 miles.
The only hack I want to know if I can do is installing a standard radio with CarPlay. I get I can use a phone and a speaker but it’s not quite the same as CarPlay which I’m very used to. Otherwise I’m so sold on this concept.
Theoretically possible but it looks like it will be complex and time-consuming. You'll have to fabricate a hole/mount to stick it in, as well as speaker mounts, the run all the wiring to the speakers.
I doubt a 2 door truck/SUV with no speakers is going to appeal to most people. Before EV incentives, it's about the same price as a Ford Maverick which has those things and back seats. Once this thing is optioned and modified to fit in your life, it will be more than the cost of a Maverick that doesn't need those. I think this will be most appealing for businesses that move a lot of small loads around a city.
So 20k for a golf cart with a bed that goes 90mph. And this is with federal tax credits which who knows will be around next week let alone next year given the current administration. Still seems a bit steep. I’m not saying its not a step in the right direction but still…
I mean their response to “does it have CarPlay” is bring a shitty Bluetooth speaker into your car and use your phone. And they sell stupid little plastic things to can clip to your dashboard like those things you put in the holes of your crocs.
All I want is a reliable truck with 200 miles of range that could pull a small trailer (with obviously shorter range) and a few bells and whistles like a decent head unit and power windows for under $30k. This seems so close.
I don't think people realize that in order to be cost-effective, it needs to be efficient, because the batteries are by far and away the most expensive component, and if the numbers they've provided are true, this is very much not, which is driving up the price, and it's very simple to see how and why, the thing is shaped like a tall brick.