Watch A Tesla Semi Truck Lay Down Rubber While Accelerating Hard

A short video of Tesla's first lorry accelerating has emerged, and it's both weird and awesome...
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While it’s probably the least relevant stat for such a vehicle, we can’t help but be astonished at Tesla’s claim that minus trailer (or ‘bobtail’), its Semi can do 0-60mph in five seconds. Around about as fast as an E46 BMW M3, in other words.

Well, now we have our first chance to see a trailer-less Tesla lorry accelerating hard. In a 25mph zone. Naughty.

It just looks odd, doesn’t it? The prototype is seen laying down some rubber, before disappearing into the distance at a rate that doesn’t seem feasible for such a large vehicle.

Watch A Tesla Semi Truck Lay Down Rubber While Accelerating Hard

Bobtail-configurated acceleration is fun to watch and all, but much more important is the vehicle’s range. That’ll start at 500 miles, and Tesla says it’ll be possible to recharge from empty to 400 miles in just 30 minutes. The caveat is these charging speeds require a ‘Megacharger’, a new kind of DC charging station which the Californian firm would need to install at destination points and/or along busy routes.

Tesla intends to put the Semi into production during 2019, but given the persistent issues the company has been experiencing with the manufacture of the Model 3, it may well end up being a little later.

Comments

Anonymous

looking forward to seeing electric lorries

02/23/2018 - 23:35 |
0 | 0
Basith Penna-Hakkim

OMG Tesla should make a racing truck right now!!!!!!!

02/23/2018 - 23:40 |
0 | 0
675LT_ftw

But it’s a Semi?!?!?

02/24/2018 - 01:48 |
0 | 0
DJ N

It’s almost scary to see something so big move so fast…while doing it silently.

02/24/2018 - 07:31 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

i saw plants growing, it was much more fun than this, electricity belongs to hair driers and elevators,not vehicles

02/24/2018 - 15:25 |
2 | 6
Anonymous

So. Can we call this the electric slide?

02/25/2018 - 13:43 |
0 | 0
Lauge

I don’t know why, but i laughed so hard at this.

02/26/2018 - 08:06 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

What about the pollution of
building the batteries? It’s not easy nor cheap either. My 5 cent worth is that thw biggest factor is the pollution of making the batteries not the running/charging . Someone has to do the math of working those things out.

02/28/2018 - 06:52 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

I think this really has some potential if they have those ranges accurate……the range and charging time will be the deciding factor if this thing works or not IMHO.

06/17/2018 - 22:51 |
0 | 0

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