Canthoney
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Andrew
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2020
- Threads
- 85
- Messages
- 868
- Reaction score
- 2,441
- Location
- Kansas City
- Vehicles
- 2025 Rivian R1S Tri-Motor, 2022 Rivian R1T
- Occupation
- Project Management
- Thread starter
- #1
Sponsored
I bet you would be surprised how much complexity was taken out from the initial prototypes till now.Every one of those parts require assembly. More assembly and parts = more time and costs.
There are huge opportunity to reduce production time and costs, if they actually redesign below the skin with manufacturability in mind.
Frankly, I'm shocked at how little effort was paid to reducing parts count and ease of manufacturing....
One of the advantage of EVs, inherently, is lower parts count compared to ICE equivalent. EV's simply require less parts from propulsion standpoint alone, but there are other simplified items too (and can be self contained, such as HVAC).I bet you would be surprised how much complexity was taken out from the initial prototypes till now.
Beefy overbuilt has almost nothing to do with safety or durability. Its just heavy.As a buyer, I like the beefy “overbuilt” construction. Lighter would be fine, but I wouldn’t want it in exchange for safety or durability. Opportunity to reduce cost is only important for stockholders and future models/production.

Odd comment in video. No Rivian primary designer has not worked at other auto manufacturers."This is their first go and you can see the traces of that"
My concern as a future owner is capital efficiency leading to a healthy company. I'm mildly concerned with this video. I'm more concerned about Rivian's spending on public level 2 chargers. I assume that idea came out of a marketing class project at a local community college.As a buyer, I like the beefy “overbuilt” construction. Lighter would be fine, but I wouldn’t want it in exchange for safety or durability. Opportunity to reduce cost is only important for stockholders and future models/production.
On a relevant note; Just heard Elon is banning teleworking for all Tesla employees. That may translate to Rivian getting more Tesla refugees.Odd comment in video. No Rivian primary designer has not worked at other auto manufacturers.
As a buyer, I like the beefy “overbuilt” construction. Lighter would be fine, but I wouldn’t want it in exchange for safety or durability. Opportunity to reduce cost is only important for stockholders and future models/production.
Level 2 chargers definitely have a place, particularly where we've been seeing them pop up, like at parks or campsites. Those are places you are staying all day or even overnight (look at the Under Canvas Moab location, perfect solution). Also, from what I understand, some/many of these are just rebranded existing chargers that required little investment from Rivian. Level 2 is fairly simple technology and requires nothing unique or proprietary from Rivian. They are marketing/branding billboards essentially.My concern as a future owner is capital efficiency leading to a healthy company. I'm mildly concerned with this video. I'm more concerned about Rivian's spending on public level 2 chargers. I assume that idea came out of a marketing class project at a local community college.