Car

Elon Musk hypes $30,000 Tesla self-driving Cybercab and larger Robovan at robotaxi event

After a decade of unfulfilled promises about driverless vehicles, Tesla CEO Elon Musk hyped the company’s Cybercab concept on Thursday night, showing off a low, silver two-seater with no steering wheels or pedals.

Rolling up to the stage in a Cybercab almost an hour after the company’s “We, Robot” event was supposed to begin, Musk said the company had 21 of these vehicles, and a total of 50 “autonomous” cars on location at the Warner Bros. studio in Burbank, California, where Tesla hosted its invitation-only event.

Musk offered no details about exactly where Tesla plans to produce the cars, but said consumers would be able to buy a Tesla Cybercab for below $30,000. He said the company hopes to be producing the Cybercab before 2027.

He also said he expects Tesla to have “unsupervised FSD” up and running in Texas and California next year in the company’s Model 3 and Model Y electric vehicles.

FSD, which stands for Full Self-Driving, is Tesla’s premium driver assistance system, available today in a “supervised” version for Tesla electric vehicles. FSD currently requires a human driver at the wheel, ready to steer or brake at any time. Earlier this year, Tesla tacked “supervised” onto the product name.

“It’s going to be a glorious future,” Musk said Thursday night.

Musk also revealed plans to produce an autonomous, electric Robovan that can carry up to 20 people, or be used to transport goods. He said it will “solve for high density,” transporting a sports team, for example.

He said the Cybercab and Robovan would employ inductive charging, meaning these autonomous vehicles could roll up to a station to recharge, with no plugging in required.

Tesla unveils its RoboVan at the We, Robot event on October 10, 2024.

Musk has spent years touting Tesla’s work in autonomous cars and promising that they would hit the market. Along the way, he’s repeatedly woven a fantastical vision for shareholders, setting and missing his own deadlines.

In 2015, Musk told shareholders that Tesla cars would achieve “full autonomy” within three years. They didn’t. In 2016, Musk said a Tesla car would be able to make a cross-country drive without requiring any human intervention before the end of 2017. That never happened. And in 2019, on a call with institutional investors that would help him raise more than $2 billion, Musk said Tesla would have 1 million robotaxi-ready vehicles on the road in 2020, able to complete 100 hours of driving work per week each, making money for their owners.

In April this year, Musk was still telling investors autonomy is the company’s future.

“If somebody doesn’t believe Tesla’s going to solve autonomy, I think they should not be an investor in the company,” he said on a call with analysts. “We will, and we are.”

At Thursday night’s event, which he previously characterized as a “product launch,” Musk welcomed attendees to “party,” and said they would be able to take test rides in the autonomous vehicles on location, in the closed environment of the movie studio lots.

Toward the end of his approximately 23 minutes on stage, the CEO said Tesla wanted to show its humanoid robot now in development, dubbed Optimus, was not just for “a canned video.”

Musk said, “The Optimus robots will walk among you,” then asked attendees to “be nice” to the robots, which would be serving drinks at a bar on-site. The presentation ended with Musk saying “let’s party,” and the livestream showing a group of Optimus robots dancing to club hits.

The event was Tesla’s first product unveiling since the company showed off the design for its Cybertruck in 2019. The angular steel pickup began shipping to customers in late 2023, and has been the subject of five voluntary recalls since then in the U.S.

Related Posts

Tesla Roadster to feature jet-style yoke steering and ‘rocket-y stuff’

*Flying* to a dealership near you? The incoming Tesla Roadster will be the fastest accelerating production car ever built… when it’s eventually built. Last month Elon Musk claimed the long-awaited…

Elon Musk predicts Optimus Gen 2 humanoid robot will be the ‘biggest product of all time’

Tesla CEO Elon Musk introduced a fleet of Optimus humanoid robots during the company’s highly anticipated ‘We, Robot’ event. According to Musk, the potential of the Optimus robot…

Tesla ‘We, Robot’: Elon Musk reveals new Robovan, a mini bus without a driver or steering wheel

At Tesla’s “We, Robot” event CEO Elon Musk introduced a new product called the Robovan, a fully autonomous vehicle that can carry up to 20 people and is…

Tesla updates Model X 5-seater with fold-flat second row seating

As we suspected earlier today, Tesla was about to update the second row seats on the Model X with a fold-flat design. We didn’t expect this to take place…

Tesla is launching new Adaptive Headlights for the ‘Highland’ Model 3

Tesla is launching new Adaptive Headlights in Europe, but they only apply to the new Model 3. When Tesla started building and shipping the new Model 3, labeled…

New Tesla Model 3 Performance pulls off 10.65-second 1/4-mile run

The reengineered Tesla Model 3 Performance is steadily establishing its reputation as the best-performing car in its price range, electric or otherwise. As shared recently on social media,…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *