• 3 months ago
Motortrend's Ed Loh & Jonny Lieberman sit down with Rivian Founder & CEO
Transcript
00:00:00Welcome to The Inevitable, a podcast by Motor Trend.
00:00:15Hi there, and welcome to another episode of The Inevitable.
00:00:19This is the Motor Trend podcast, the Motor Trend Vodcast,
00:00:22about the future of the automobile, the future of mobility.
00:00:25But before we get to the episode,
00:00:27Ed here has got a special message for you.
00:00:30The Inevitable Vodcast is brought to you
00:00:32by the all-electric Nissan Ariya,
00:00:34inspired by the future, designed for the now.
00:00:36But let's talk about our guest, because this is a special episode.
00:00:38We went extra long with this guy, because we have been trying for over a year.
00:00:42No, over three years.
00:00:44Over three years to get...
00:00:45Since we started this dang podcast.
00:00:47...the founder and CEO of Johnny's favorite EV company.
00:00:50No, no, no, no. I wouldn't say my favorite.
00:00:52No, they make my favorite electric product.
00:00:56Okay.
00:00:57I don't care about the company.
00:00:58Founder and CEO of Rivian, R.J. Scarringe,
00:01:01joins us on the podcast today.
00:01:03It's a great interview.
00:01:05I do want to just give you guys a heads up.
00:01:07Yeah, stop listening to us.
00:01:09Yeah, maybe take a pause or, you know,
00:01:11definitely go and listen to The Verge's podcast.
00:01:14It's called Decoder.
00:01:15It's by the editor-in-chief, Nilay Patel.
00:01:18It's actually the first time I heard it.
00:01:20He did a very recent and a very good sort of primer on R.J.
00:01:24from a tech perspective.
00:01:26Well, but also the Volkswagen joint venture.
00:01:28Almost every question there is is really answered by that,
00:01:32but we were going to go heavy on that for this one,
00:01:34and we decided not to because it was such a comprehensive job done.
00:01:37So Decoder, the R.J. Rivian episode,
00:01:41it really gets into the nuts, bolts, nitty-gritty
00:01:44of the Volkswagen joint venture.
00:01:45Yes, and then so we attempted to build on that
00:01:48and talk about all the other things,
00:01:49the deep car guy stuff that we're interested in.
00:01:51Product.
00:01:52It will fill some gaps for you if you listen to that one first
00:01:55or soon after you hear ours.
00:01:57Or you can keep listening if you want.
00:01:59Yes.
00:02:00That being said, again, R.J. Scaringe,
00:02:02founder and CEO of Rivian, great guy, tall guy, smart guy,
00:02:05PhD, MIT.
00:02:07Yeah, and if you're watching, decide,
00:02:09does he look more like Steve-O or Clark Kent?
00:02:11I think he looks like Clark Kent, and it fits the narrative
00:02:14between Tony Stark at Tesla and Superman at Rivian.
00:02:19But he's a...
00:02:20It's Steve-O.
00:02:21Super, super, super smart, as you will find out.
00:02:23Yeah.
00:02:24And we ask him a lot of questions about where he's going,
00:02:27with software-defined vehicles, electric vehicles,
00:02:29Porsches he loves.
00:02:31So without further ado, R.J. Scaringe.
00:02:34So R.J. Scaringe, founder, CEO of Rivian,
00:02:37welcome to The Inevitable.
00:02:40First question, are EVs really inevitable for all?
00:02:45I'm asking because, and I know you've addressed this before,
00:02:48we've seen the noise, the slowing sales growth,
00:02:51some big companies, GM and Ford, they're talking about this,
00:02:54they're going to build more hybrids or P-HEVs,
00:02:57Accio, Toyota, saying, I told you so,
00:03:00the world's not ready.
00:03:02So are you still a firm believer?
00:03:05To what extent do you believe that we will all be driving,
00:03:08all, most, will be driving electric cars in the future?
00:03:12And if it's not 100%, what does your crystal ball tell you
00:03:16about how much adoption is going to be
00:03:18in the 15- to 20-year time frame, which is that 2040,
00:03:21which a lot of companies have put their carbon neutrality
00:03:23and all EV statement around.
00:03:25So a lot there, but is it inevitable?
00:03:28This is Ed's joke.
00:03:30Yeah, it's great.
00:03:32I mean, I think it's absolutely going to be the case
00:03:36that 100% of the vehicles in the world will be electric.
00:03:38The question is if, it's just when.
00:03:40We're really convicted on that.
00:03:42I think there's a lot of drivers around this.
00:03:45I'd say that you could break it down
00:03:47really to three big things.
00:03:49First is we need to have products that customers want.
00:03:51So there needs to be enough choice
00:03:53that's going to really compel or drive the demand side.
00:03:58The second is we need to have policy that supports that.
00:04:03And in some cases, you can see it with carrots,
00:04:06with incentives.
00:04:08In other cases, you can see it with sticks,
00:04:10which are fines for manufacturers
00:04:13for not having enough EVs.
00:04:15And then you're seeing it really in a strong way
00:04:18where certain countries or jurisdictions
00:04:21are committing to 100% new vehicles being electric
00:04:23by certain dates.
00:04:25So most of Europe has done that.
00:04:27A number of states in the US have done that.
00:04:29For example, in California, following 2035,
00:04:31you will not be able to buy a non-EV
00:04:33in the state of California, along with 13 other states.
00:04:35So that's the second.
00:04:37And then the third is infrastructure,
00:04:39which influences both of those,
00:04:41or is influenced by both of those.
00:04:43So around charging, to make sure people are able to,
00:04:46if you're not living in a house
00:04:48with a place to charge every night,
00:04:50if you're in a high-rise apartment,
00:04:52there's real challenges that need to be thought about.
00:04:54But to me, there's no debate.
00:04:57It's absolutely going to end there.
00:04:59Okay.
00:05:01So are you surprised at all at the bumps along the way,
00:05:04or did you expect there to be this kind of
00:05:07first early adopter,
00:05:09rather than pushback as we tried to approach scale,
00:05:11or is this all pretty obvious?
00:05:14You know, it all depends on one's perspective.
00:05:19So to me, I've never seen more excitement
00:05:21around electrification than what we have today.
00:05:23So if I run the clock back to, like, 2015, 2016,
00:05:27or take it even earlier, to 2011,
00:05:29like early, early days of Rivian,
00:05:31I'd go to meet with suppliers,
00:05:33I'd meet with investors and talk about this idea
00:05:35of an electric SUV or an electric truck,
00:05:38and people would look at me as if I had three heads.
00:05:41It was such a crazy idea,
00:05:43and, you know, questions around, you know,
00:05:45can it go off-road, can it get wet?
00:05:48Like, really, like, deep disbelief
00:05:52around the potential for an electric vehicle
00:05:55to be effective in this vehicle segment
00:05:57or across segments outside of very, very small cars.
00:06:01What's shifted most dramatically is beyond just,
00:06:04I'd say, the recognition that EV architecture
00:06:06works really well across a variety of form factors,
00:06:09sizes, vehicle mass classes, what have you,
00:06:13is that consumers are now, I'd say,
00:06:15across the board recognizing that this is the future state.
00:06:18And in most cases, customers recognize
00:06:21they may not be buying an EV today,
00:06:23but their next or their next, next purchase
00:06:25will likely be an EV.
00:06:27And I do think when we talk about, like, the slowdown,
00:06:30we have to recognize it's still growing.
00:06:32It's a slowdown in growth rate.
00:06:34In the first half of this year, it's grown by 11%
00:06:36relative to last year,
00:06:38or over 8% in vehicle sales in the United States.
00:06:40It's a fun headline, you know, but...
00:06:42But it's still growing. It's growing faster
00:06:44than, you know, vehicle sales are growing in the United States.
00:06:47But back to your point, like, I said this
00:06:49when I bought the car, but I bought a, you know,
00:06:51a Toyota GR Corolla, knowing full well
00:06:53it's probably the last, for sure the last manual,
00:06:55but the last gasoline car I'll ever buy.
00:06:57I was like, one last hit, and then rehab, you know?
00:07:00So...
00:07:01I think the other thing to keep in mind
00:07:03is there's...
00:07:05I talk about this quite a bit.
00:07:07There's a pretty extreme lack of choice
00:07:09that exists in the electric vehicle space,
00:07:11so it's easy...
00:07:13Right. I don't want a midsize SUV.
00:07:15What else is there?
00:07:17There's no choices.
00:07:19And I think it's relatively convenient
00:07:21for a lot of existing manufacturers
00:07:23to say, oh, there's no demand for it.
00:07:25And that takes the pressure off needing to electrify
00:07:27or move away from the highly profitable
00:07:29large truck, large SUV business that exists.
00:07:31There's very few choices.
00:07:33If you think of highly compelling,
00:07:35well-executed vehicles, sub $50,000,
00:07:37you know, I would say without,
00:07:39you know, without flinching,
00:07:41there's like maybe two or three good choices
00:07:43at most.
00:07:45And so, with that said,
00:07:47you know, you take Model Y,
00:07:49which is, of course, among those,
00:07:51the market's saturated.
00:07:53There's just not very many choices.
00:07:55And you compare that with the ICE world.
00:07:57If I'm buying something under $50,000,
00:07:59there's many form factors,
00:08:01many brands, many configurations.
00:08:03I just have a lot more choice.
00:08:05And I heard that you say that before.
00:08:07So let's substitute choice for price, though.
00:08:09Like how, in my mind, right,
00:08:11this is going to really open up.
00:08:13You said under $50,000.
00:08:15When you get under $40,000, and then when you get under $30,000,
00:08:17don't we think that the adoption curve
00:08:19goes nearly vertical?
00:08:21Wouldn't you say?
00:08:23Yeah, I mean, of course,
00:08:25demand's linked to pricing.
00:08:27But it is worth,
00:08:29you know, we often talk about the $25,000 cars.
00:08:31It's worth just reminding ourselves
00:08:33that the average price of a new car in the United States
00:08:35is just under $50,000.
00:08:37Yeah, it's like $48,000.
00:08:39So most people are spending, on average,
00:08:41between $45,000 and $50,000 already.
00:08:43And so if you take that as a price point,
00:08:45and you say, okay, let me look
00:08:47at what I could buy for that,
00:08:49there's just nothing there.
00:08:51You basically have a Model Y
00:08:53as your sort of singular great choice.
00:08:55I mean, I saw this excitement
00:08:57of what you were talking about
00:08:59when you revealed the R2 and the R3.
00:09:01Was the R2...
00:09:03I couldn't make it to the event,
00:09:05but I was just following the comments.
00:09:07R2 was like, oh, okay, cool.
00:09:09R3, people were just going gaga.
00:09:11Just like, oh my, that I want,
00:09:13that I want, that I want.
00:09:15It was a real...
00:09:17I don't know.
00:09:19It was just palatable excitement.
00:09:21R2, knowing nothing about it,
00:09:23it's another midsize SUV.
00:09:25R3 was something different that doesn't exist.
00:09:27Totally, yeah.
00:09:29R3 for us was so much fun
00:09:31because we were able to take
00:09:33the essence of Rivian
00:09:35and what we represent as a company
00:09:37and say, how would we put that
00:09:39into a really small package
00:09:41of something that's in a hard-to-define segment?
00:09:43It's like a crossover-y, hatchback-y thing.
00:09:45It's a Fiat Panda, baby,
00:09:47and I love Fiat Pandas.
00:09:49It's a Delta Integrale.
00:09:51It's a Fiat Panda.
00:09:53It's a Golf.
00:09:55It's a small wagon.
00:09:57It has all these things that people connect with
00:09:59from an enthusiast's point of view,
00:10:01which we absolutely love.
00:10:03We, of course, developed the car
00:10:05knowing that as car enthusiasts ourselves,
00:10:07it struck a chord with us.
00:10:09It's got some Lada.
00:10:11Actually, it's got some Russian Lada Niva.
00:10:13Oh, Lada Niva crossed with a Delta Integrale.
00:10:15With a Fiat Panda, all right?
00:10:17Give the Panda some love.
00:10:19Flat windshield? Come on.
00:10:21Okay, this was later on,
00:10:23but let's just stay on that for a second.
00:10:25R3, R3X,
00:10:27how are you going to...
00:10:29Now, again, I heard this.
00:10:31We mentioned the intro.
00:10:33The Decoder podcast talked a bit about this.
00:10:35How are you going to deliver
00:10:37on...
00:10:39This is a more price-sensitive vehicle.
00:10:41You still want to deliver on what the Rivian brand is,
00:10:43which is sort of this on-road,
00:10:45off-road capability,
00:10:47but at this lower price point.
00:10:49Can I ask what you're benchmarking?
00:10:51From a price point of view
00:10:53or a cost point of view?
00:10:55Cost, price, and performance.
00:10:57Oh, yeah.
00:10:59So you've...
00:11:01You spent some time in the past
00:11:03with some of our engineers.
00:11:05I know you had Max on podcast before.
00:11:07Drove across country with a lot of them.
00:11:09Yeah, exactly. So we spend a lot of time
00:11:11thinking about what are the attributes we want to achieve.
00:11:13And developing a vehicle
00:11:15is an exercise in coordinating
00:11:17many, many decisions.
00:11:19I often say millions of decisions,
00:11:21but in terms of core attribute trade-offs,
00:11:23you're really talking about thousands
00:11:25of decisions that have to be traded off
00:11:27against one another.
00:11:29And in the case of R2 and R3,
00:11:31both of them
00:11:33will have a level of capability
00:11:35that really positions them
00:11:37uniquely relative to the
00:11:39competitive set at those price points
00:11:41and a level of everyday functionality.
00:11:43And the way we're
00:11:45achieving that, which is different
00:11:47than R1, is we're not going to be stuffing the vehicle
00:11:49with as much extreme technology.
00:11:51So in the case of R1, it's
00:11:53electro-hydraulic damping,
00:11:55it's air suspension
00:11:57with six inches of right head adjustment.
00:11:59I mean, it's pretty wild.
00:12:01We launched with a quad motor setup,
00:12:03whereas in R2 and R3, it's McPherson strut
00:12:05in the front, passive coils,
00:12:07semi-active dampers,
00:12:09passive anti-roll bars,
00:12:11so we made real decisions around
00:12:13the architecture to take a lot of complexity
00:12:15and cost out of the chassis system.
00:12:17And that same mindset
00:12:19flowed through the rest of the vehicle,
00:12:21so simplified everything from our door systems
00:12:23to the body structure to
00:12:25the interior.
00:12:27And the magic is
00:12:29achieving
00:12:31all the excitement that we have in our
00:12:33flagship products and the R1 products,
00:12:35but without as much cost
00:12:37and not having it feel like we took a lot
00:12:39of content out. So the interior on the R2
00:12:41is a much cheaper
00:12:43interior than what we have on R1.
00:12:45It's less than half the cost,
00:12:47but it still feels really premium.
00:12:49And people look at it and say, how are we going to deliver that?
00:12:51Well, it's all the little details,
00:12:53even down to the wood in the instrument
00:12:55panel on the top trim package
00:12:57for R2.
00:12:59It's real wood, it's open-pore,
00:13:01you can see it has
00:13:03that really natural feel.
00:13:05But it's a stacked laminate set
00:13:07that allows us to use
00:13:09recycled wood different than
00:13:11a single piece, which is what we do
00:13:13on R1, which is obviously much harder.
00:13:15But it's every single
00:13:17decision we have, we've looked at through the lens of cost.
00:13:19But isn't some of the secret sauce
00:13:21magic of R1 in the
00:13:23suspension? If you get rid
00:13:25of the
00:13:27hydraulic dampers and the
00:13:29air suspension, aren't you losing the
00:13:31back-road fun plus the
00:13:33off-road ability to some degree?
00:13:35What we actually lose is,
00:13:37and we have to
00:13:39accept that it's part of it, is we lose
00:13:41some of the breath.
00:13:43So with R1, you've driven it
00:13:45I'm a loner, yeah.
00:13:47You've driven it probably harder than most.
00:13:49The capability of the vehicle
00:13:51is so far beyond
00:13:53what most people recognize, particularly
00:13:55in the off-road environment.
00:13:57And we did that
00:13:59on purpose. We said we're launching an EV,
00:14:01we're going to say it's an off-road vehicle, we don't want anyone
00:14:03to say this really can't go off-road.
00:14:05And it is insane.
00:14:07I run around with Jeeps
00:14:09and Broncos, no problem.
00:14:11It's way off the charts, better than it needs to be
00:14:13for 99% of its use case.
00:14:15So on R2,
00:14:17it will be really great off-road,
00:14:19but it's not going to be as extreme
00:14:21as what we've done with R1.
00:14:23And what that allows us to do is to shift
00:14:25essentially the attribute trade-off
00:14:27to be capable on-road
00:14:29and capable off-road,
00:14:31but without having to have
00:14:33the suspension switch personalities,
00:14:35which is what we do in R1.
00:14:37The electro-hydraulic dampers, what that really gives us
00:14:39is an infinitely variable
00:14:41anti-roll characteristic.
00:14:43So when you put it in sport, it feels like it's a go-kart.
00:14:45When you put it off-road, it's like there's no anti-roll bar.
00:14:47And that was from
00:14:49that Monroe
00:14:51kinetic
00:14:53electro-hydraulic system, right?
00:14:55From McLaren.
00:14:57The other car that uses it and is
00:14:59well-known is the McLaren.
00:15:01I went on the launch of the MP4-12C
00:15:03that that product debuted.
00:15:05And this is great, because you just answered
00:15:07sort of the question from our testing director,
00:15:09Eric Tingwall. He made me.
00:15:11He said, please ask him,
00:15:13was it a mistake to put that system in
00:15:15because it's expensive?
00:15:17And I think I mentioned this
00:15:19when we were driving a Moab two years ago.
00:15:21Was it a mistake?
00:15:23Tingwall.
00:15:25I tell you this the whole time.
00:15:27Is it over-engineered?
00:15:29I hear your explanation. You wanted a debut product
00:15:31to exceed the expectations
00:15:33of your harshest critics.
00:15:35But if 99% of the drivers
00:15:37are not hitting
00:15:39this edge case...
00:15:41Where are you getting this 99% from?
00:15:43Well, you said it. You just said that you drive it harder than most people.
00:15:45Oh, well, I'm weird.
00:15:47Is it over-engineered?
00:15:49Was it too much? Was it a step too far? Would you do it again?
00:15:51Yeah, absolutely do it again.
00:15:53The thing to keep in mind is
00:15:55in building
00:15:57a product that's going to underpin
00:15:59and act as the foundation for the brand
00:16:01or the handshake of the world for the brand,
00:16:03authenticity is really important.
00:16:05Defining a product
00:16:07around the average use case
00:16:09versus the peak use case can lead
00:16:11to
00:16:13highly marginal products and things that aren't exciting.
00:16:15Case in point,
00:16:17if we were purely logical
00:16:19beings, everyone would have
00:16:21a Timex. There'd be no such thing as a
00:16:23$5,000 watch or $10,000.
00:16:25It keeps time equally well.
00:16:27Better.
00:16:29Oh, yeah. I've got to wind this every morning.
00:16:31There you go. Case in point.
00:16:33Although this is $248.
00:16:35But you can buy a watch for $10.
00:16:37Casio, whatever it's called.
00:16:39You see it across many
00:16:41different things. In the automotive world,
00:16:43we see it all over the place.
00:16:45Most people who are buying a 911,
00:16:47it's an amazing vehicle. They're not taking it to the track.
00:16:49And if you actually
00:16:51look at the data and the number of people that do track days
00:16:53with a 911, it's not very high.
00:16:55But it would be inauthentic to the brand
00:16:57if they said, you know what?
00:16:59Most people are using this to drive
00:17:01down the interstate.
00:17:03They're orthodontists. They go to work and back.
00:17:05And let's take all the performance out.
00:17:07Let's take all
00:17:09the amazing chassis work
00:17:11out, the dynamics out.
00:17:13And then it would lose a sense of what it is.
00:17:15And so in the same way for us
00:17:17with R1,
00:17:19it's intentionally delivering
00:17:21for that
00:17:23extreme 1% use case
00:17:25because that's what builds
00:17:27its brand. And people like to know that
00:17:29it has that ability. You may drive it a certain way
00:17:3199 times out of 100,
00:17:33but if you find yourself on a trail,
00:17:35you're not going to ask yourself, can I make it up?
00:17:37Right. It's also
00:17:39a very American sort of
00:17:41mindset. I'm not going to use it all the time,
00:17:43but I need to have it. I can't buy an EV.
00:17:45I might have to take a road trip.
00:17:47I have to go tow 11,000 pounds.
00:17:49Can we stick with R2 for a bit?
00:17:51Well, the one thing I asked, but he didn't mention.
00:17:53Can you talk about
00:17:55who's in your head in terms of
00:17:57the ultimate performance of R2
00:17:59or R3 from a benchmarking?
00:18:01Are you looking at...
00:18:03Do you get to drive much of the competitive set?
00:18:05Yeah, we drive them all the time.
00:18:07I mean, it's one of the fun
00:18:09parts of
00:18:11my job is getting to drive our products
00:18:13and driving relative to others. I mean, for R2,
00:18:15I should say
00:18:17in general.
00:18:21I think one of the
00:18:23things
00:18:25that can be challenging in the auto industry
00:18:27is often
00:18:29manufacturers use benchmarking as a way to
00:18:31arrive at attribute targets.
00:18:33As a result, you see this
00:18:35convergence of
00:18:37vehicle
00:18:39characteristics.
00:18:41You see that with dimensions. You see that with
00:18:43vehicle profiles.
00:18:45You see that with vehicle packaging.
00:18:47And, of course, you in the end see it with performance
00:18:49on a relative basis across
00:18:51different criteria.
00:18:53And I think case in point is what's happened
00:18:55with Model Y. It's a wonderful product.
00:18:57It's been wildly successful.
00:18:59And most of the EVs that are in the space
00:19:01that compete with the Model Y
00:19:03are dimensionally almost identical.
00:19:05They have maybe a different... They look a little different
00:19:07from the front, a little different from the back, but the occupant package
00:19:09is the same. The side view profile of the vehicle is the same.
00:19:11Yeah, they're within 5% in
00:19:13almost every category.
00:19:15With R1, very clearly, we took a different
00:19:17approach. You could say on paper
00:19:19it's going to be cross-shopped
00:19:21with the Model X. It's a 7-passenger
00:19:23SUV. It's got 4 doors.
00:19:25It has 4 tires.
00:19:27It has a steering wheel. It does 0 to 60
00:19:29in around 3 seconds.
00:19:31It's got 350 to 400
00:19:33miles of range. But
00:19:35other than those statements I just made,
00:19:37it couldn't be more different in its execution
00:19:39and how it
00:19:41presents itself in terms of brand. It's not to say
00:19:43it's right or wrong. It's just
00:19:45providing, I think, a really important
00:19:47choice
00:19:49that has texture and is different
00:19:51than what else is out there.
00:19:53R2, we've had the same approach, where
00:19:55there's a lot of folks that have
00:19:57followed the leader and ended up with something that's
00:19:59very similar and is
00:20:01generally a worse version
00:20:03of a Model Y or narrowly
00:20:05differentiated from Model Y.
00:20:07R2, it's very similar dimensions to
00:20:09Model Y. It's slightly shorter.
00:20:11It's slightly narrower,
00:20:13so it's a slightly smaller car.
00:20:15The occupant package is much bigger
00:20:17because of the profile of the vehicle.
00:20:19And in terms of its ability
00:20:21to perform as an SUV, it's worlds
00:20:23different than a Model Y. You can actually
00:20:25take it off-road. You can take it
00:20:27through a riverbed. You can do the kinds of things
00:20:29you'd expect from an SUV.
00:20:31And that's with R2.
00:20:33R3,
00:20:35it's hard-pressed to find something that you could
00:20:37compare it to.
00:20:39It's like the heart of a rally car.
00:20:41It's got a lot of ground clearance.
00:20:43It's 220 millimeters of ground clearance,
00:20:45which is a lot for that size
00:20:47of a car. And then
00:20:49with the tri-motor, it's
00:20:51insanity.
00:20:55It'll be cross-shopped with things you wouldn't expect.
00:20:57It's like, do I buy a hyper car
00:20:59or do I get this
00:21:01four-door hatchback
00:21:03crossover thing that's going to be way quicker?
00:21:05Let's talk product for a second here.
00:21:07You've always
00:21:09only said R2, but shown
00:21:11what I think will be called an R2S.
00:21:13Are you going to do an R2T?
00:21:15Clever guy.
00:21:17I'm very smart.
00:21:21Or an R3T, because you haven't said R3S yet.
00:21:23Yeah, so of course
00:21:25when we launched R2, people didn't
00:21:27expect R3.
00:21:29The
00:21:31presence of R3 and R3X
00:21:33indicates our
00:21:35goal of making this what we call
00:21:37mid-size platform.
00:21:39Something that has a number of applications.
00:21:41And R2 is an
00:21:43application, R3 is a
00:21:45vehicle, but
00:21:47we could together come up with some
00:21:49really interesting ideas for other things
00:21:51that would be on that platform
00:21:53and might be R2-based or R3-based.
00:21:55We've shown an example of a performance version of
00:21:57R3, which is R3X.
00:21:59Doesn't take too much imagination to say maybe there's an R2X.
00:22:01No, I was going to get
00:22:03to R2X, but I was also going to get to R1X.
00:22:05There's an R2T.
00:22:07All those kinds of things one could imagine,
00:22:09but we haven't announced any of those.
00:22:11Just seeing if you break any news.
00:22:13You also make that commercial van,
00:22:15which just has one of the motors,
00:22:17but you could easily put a second motor in,
00:22:19I assume, and you could make a
00:22:21consumer, all-wheel drive,
00:22:23overland-y, van-life
00:22:25kind of thing. RVs do really
00:22:27well in motor trends, so we are very interested
00:22:29in whether you're going to do... We see them all
00:22:31the time in LA. Yeah, everyone's got a sprinter.
00:22:33During the pandemic, a lot of my friends were buying
00:22:35sprinters. I was like, what are you doing?
00:22:37It's funny you say put another motor, Johnny, because
00:22:39I've had a number of customers
00:22:41reach out and say, can you put three more motors?
00:22:43Sure, sure.
00:22:45A quad van would be pretty nuts.
00:22:47I've got to say,
00:22:49driving the new tri-motor, that works pretty
00:22:51good. Yeah, it covers most of these
00:22:53cases. Yeah, it kind of does,
00:22:55annoyingly. But seriously,
00:22:57is there a consumer version of
00:22:59the delivery van? We're not planning one today.
00:23:01We've thought about it
00:23:03in a world of infinite
00:23:05time and resources, maybe we'd do that,
00:23:07but... Too small a market?
00:23:09Margin's not there?
00:23:11For us, the most important thing we have in front of us
00:23:13is R2.
00:23:15The need to have a product
00:23:17that sits right in the heart of the market,
00:23:19from a size point of view,
00:23:21a sub $50,000 price point,
00:23:23that's what will allow
00:23:25us to have a step change in volume.
00:23:27The way we've
00:23:29approached developing our vehicles,
00:23:31we're very heavily vertically integrated, so we
00:23:33build our motors, we build our
00:23:35electronics, our software stack,
00:23:37so we built a really
00:23:39call it
00:23:41a high
00:23:43metabolism engineering
00:23:45organization with a lot of content, and it needs
00:23:47to, in order for the business to make
00:23:49sense from a financial point of view,
00:23:51we need to have volume against
00:23:53all that technology.
00:23:55For the level of volume we have today,
00:23:57we're insanely
00:23:59vertically integrated.
00:24:01It starts to really make
00:24:03sense, and all that vertical integration pays off
00:24:05in a really healthy way
00:24:07once we have the volume, but the inverse
00:24:09is true as well. Low volume,
00:24:11high vertical integration is a challenging
00:24:13business because your fixed costs are just so high.
00:24:15We've seen
00:24:17that happen with Tesla. Tesla went
00:24:19from Model S and X, and they added Model 3
00:24:21and Model Y. The volume exploded. Their level of
00:24:23vertical integration gave them structural cost advantages
00:24:25which are persistent and real,
00:24:27and we see
00:24:29we agree with that logic.
00:24:31Speaking of volume, there's about 1.5
00:24:33billion consumers in China.
00:24:35I got a bunch of questions there,
00:24:37but let me just...
00:24:39That's such a good transition. Why are you stepping on it?
00:24:41Here's a better one, which is
00:24:43because he brought up Tesla,
00:24:45and recently,
00:24:47whatever Model 2,
00:24:49Elon said that's going to be a RoboTaxi,
00:24:51and then earlier this week, GM said
00:24:53they're going to cancel plans
00:24:55for their original
00:24:57RoboTaxi, and the next Bolt will be the
00:24:59RoboTaxi.
00:25:01Is a RoboTaxi in the cards?
00:25:03Would it be based on R3
00:25:05or R2?
00:25:07Where's Rivian's?
00:25:09Really, where are you on autonomy, I guess?
00:25:11In terms of products,
00:25:13we don't have a RoboTaxi planned,
00:25:15but in terms of vehicle
00:25:17sets, you could imagine
00:25:19the
00:25:21platforms can support
00:25:23lots of different things.
00:25:25If we ever decided to do that, we have a
00:25:27set of platforms we could choose from.
00:25:29To Johnny's
00:25:31question, the approach we've taken
00:25:33to autonomy took a big
00:25:35step forward with our generation
00:25:37to R1.
00:25:39Gen 1 had a
00:25:41collection of cameras.
00:25:43Importantly, the front-facing forward camera is a
00:25:45Mobileye-based system.
00:25:47As a result of that,
00:25:49architecturally, it meant that we
00:25:51have a late fusion of information, because
00:25:53we take a camera that's forward-facing from Mobileye
00:25:55that does a lot of processing, and it
00:25:57doesn't give us raw. The output of that
00:25:59is it detects objects,
00:26:01it classifies the objects, and it assigns
00:26:03vectors to those objects.
00:26:05Architecturally,
00:26:07that approach makes it very hard to use an
00:26:09AI-centric model,
00:26:11where you're collectively using the full perception
00:26:13stack, having an early fusion,
00:26:15using
00:26:17more advanced
00:26:19AI training techniques to
00:26:21collectively assess from a perception point
00:26:23of view what's around you,
00:26:25and then using that to drive
00:26:27both the planning side, the path planning
00:26:29side, and then, of course, the controls.
00:26:31What went into Gen 2
00:26:33is
00:26:35a whole new camera set. We have 55
00:26:37megapixels of cameras.
00:26:39We developed the cameras in-house.
00:26:41Five radars, including an imaging radar
00:26:43and the front-facing radar.
00:26:45Significantly more compute,
00:26:47about 10x the compute.
00:26:49Switching to NVIDIA. Yeah, it's an NVIDIA Orin platform.
00:26:51We
00:26:53brought all that in-house.
00:26:55No more Mobileye?
00:26:57Yes, so moving away
00:26:59from Mobileye.
00:27:01The key here is
00:27:03what you experience in terms
00:27:05of feature set in the vehicle today represents
00:27:07the beginning
00:27:09of something that has a lot
00:27:11more headroom than what the
00:27:13Gen 1 platform had. The Gen 1 platform is going to
00:27:15continue to get better, so don't worry, your car will still
00:27:17get better. But it's asymptotic.
00:27:19It's going to be relatively modest improvements,
00:27:21whereas the Gen 2 platform has
00:27:23so much headroom, and we
00:27:25built offline training methods
00:27:27so that it gets better
00:27:29very quickly over time.
00:27:31Yeah, I mean, what? NVIDIA
00:27:33Orin is like 235
00:27:35240 tops.
00:27:37So you got a lot, and that's an
00:27:39order of magnitude more than...
00:27:41I was curious, because I couldn't find it,
00:27:43what did you have before NVIDIA?
00:27:45Was it Renesas?
00:27:47We never announced
00:27:49who, but it was a much
00:27:51lower...
00:27:53Yeah, it was a much lower
00:27:55compute platform, not NVIDIA.
00:27:57Let's stay on that. This is great, because I did want to get
00:27:59into
00:28:01the difference between Gen 1 and Gen 2
00:28:03at a more granular level. So you went from 17 ECUs
00:28:05to 7.
00:28:07Pulled out
00:28:0910 ECUs, 44 pounds of weight, 1.6
00:28:11miles of wiring.
00:28:13Congrats. How much do you save
00:28:15on that? If you had to calculate,
00:28:17is there a...
00:28:19We've never given a specific number.
00:28:21I've said thousands of dollars
00:28:23just to... On a per unit
00:28:25basis. So it's very
00:28:27significant, though.
00:28:29I actually think, for some reason,
00:28:31the electrical architectures
00:28:33of vehicles don't get enough attention for cost opportunities.
00:28:35I think we get
00:28:37maybe because, as humans,
00:28:39it's easier to associate with mechanical systems, so we
00:28:41get caught up in things like
00:28:43high-pressure die castings is
00:28:45this big windfall of savings, but
00:28:47by far and away,
00:28:49a bigger structural cost
00:28:51advantage is to remove
00:28:53Tier 1 dependency, and therefore
00:28:55very complex ECU architectures
00:28:57and the proliferation of many, many ECUs.
00:28:59If you were to look at our Gen 1 system
00:29:01with 17, that's still a lot less
00:29:03than, let's say, a
00:29:05traditional OEM vehicle with 50 to 100 ECUs.
00:29:07I was going to say, it was a real paradigm shift
00:29:09with Tesla, but where, I remember
00:29:11BMW would almost brag, like,
00:29:13the 7 Series has 130 ECUs.
00:29:15The seats got four.
00:29:17One for AC, one for heat, one for
00:29:19massage. It's not a good thing.
00:29:21It was kind of a flex.
00:29:23How many ECUs you got.
00:29:25What makes it, what I think
00:29:27is that beyond cost savings,
00:29:29what's missed on
00:29:31architectures like that that's really challenging
00:29:33is if you want to do an over-the-air update,
00:29:35the coordination across so many
00:29:37different suppliers, because none of those ECUs
00:29:39are in-house at the traditional OEM, so you've got
00:29:41to coordinate with...
00:29:43Johnson Controls, talking to Bosch, talking to whoever.
00:29:45The simple example is, I want to change the
00:29:47experience when I walk up to the car with my phone
00:29:49in the pocket. You have
00:29:5110, 15 different ECU
00:29:53suppliers that you have to work across, whereas
00:29:55with us, it's one or two ECUs, and it's
00:29:57all in-house.
00:29:59I went to the software conference two years ago, and I talked to
00:30:01those guys, and apparently the paradigm
00:30:03was it used to be, because these are all hardware manufacturers,
00:30:05and the software was free.
00:30:07I talked to the head of engineering at Lucid, and he said, yeah,
00:30:09and the software was garbage, because they're hardware guys.
00:30:11They didn't know how to do this stuff.
00:30:13Is the goal ultimately then, because
00:30:15again, on the Decoder podcast you talked about,
00:30:17and this is great, because this is the thing I think
00:30:19the car, the casual car fan needs to
00:30:21get in their head. It goes from
00:30:23domain control,
00:30:25one ECU dedicated to
00:30:27one system, like the window switches
00:30:29or the headlights or something like that, to this
00:30:31idea of zonal, and then is it
00:30:33you're going to central?
00:30:35Is eventually the goal to have
00:30:37one big computer, one big chip?
00:30:39Or is there, no, you're like, no, you'll never
00:30:41really get there. Tesla has
00:30:43what, hardware 4 has one
00:30:45devoted to FSD, and the other one devoted to
00:30:47everything else.
00:30:49What's the goal as you
00:30:51really build a software platform?
00:30:53Seven ECUs is the right number.
00:30:55It somewhat depends on the vehicle
00:30:57packaging and size.
00:30:59The way that we've set up
00:31:01with Gen 2 is we have a
00:31:03computer that's dedicated to self-driving,
00:31:05and we have a computer that's dedicated to
00:31:07all the in-vehicle infotainment
00:31:09platform. Those are housed in
00:31:11the same enclosure, and it's a liquid-cooled
00:31:13enclosure, because
00:31:15there's both high-compute platforms.
00:31:17And then there's three
00:31:19zonals that exist. And the reason
00:31:21it's three and not two, or
00:31:23not one, or not zero,
00:31:25where you're leveraging, let's say, the infotainment
00:31:27compute module, is the
00:31:29desire to minimize wiring.
00:31:31And so,
00:31:33it's really just a trade-off
00:31:35between how many runs
00:31:37of wire do I need to go back to if I have one
00:31:39single computer versus having
00:31:41a computer in the rear of the vehicle,
00:31:43a computer in the front of the vehicle, and then you minimize the harness
00:31:45that has to run between all the
00:31:47things that it's powering.
00:31:49So the dual NVIDIA DRIVE ORANGE, is
00:31:51that one for the infotainment
00:31:53and the other one? It's just both self-driving.
00:31:55Oh.
00:31:57And there's a separate
00:31:59compute platform that exists for...
00:32:01And to expand on that, so
00:32:03if you have a dedicated self-driving
00:32:05ECU, you're going to be
00:32:07rolling out ADAS that's much more
00:32:09capable than what the truck's vehicles currently do.
00:32:11What you experience today is
00:32:13like what's just launched into
00:32:15Gen 2 is
00:32:17similar capabilities to what we
00:32:19had in Gen 1, except
00:32:21it's using
00:32:231% of its capability, whereas Gen
00:32:251's using 75%
00:32:27of its capability. So Gen 1 will improve
00:32:29maybe another 20-30%, but Gen
00:32:312's going to improve 100x.
00:32:33So that could be the robo-taxi, 100x
00:32:35improvement. Well, it's not...
00:32:37Yeah, it could be
00:32:39full autonomy. I think the most important
00:32:41thing is that recognizing R2's coming,
00:32:43R3's coming. The Gen 2
00:32:45architecture on R1 is also building
00:32:47our training models
00:32:49and really building our
00:32:53data set for the
00:32:55same set of cameras that go into R2. So R2
00:32:57is using identical cameras to what's in Gen 2.
00:32:59Right. It's using
00:33:01the same... It's like the platform.
00:33:03But the beauty is
00:33:05it's going to have the benefit of close to two years
00:33:07of learning and improvement. So when R2 launches,
00:33:09it's going to come out of the gate with a very
00:33:11high level of autonomy. Okay.
00:33:13So can I ask you
00:33:15possibly a dumb question?
00:33:17Why NVIDIA?
00:33:19I know they're the hottest game around and
00:33:21$3 trillion valuation and their GPUs
00:33:23are world-class,
00:33:25but I noted that... And again,
00:33:27pardon me for mentioning it.
00:33:29Tesla had NVIDIA, now AMD,
00:33:31Ryzen, and they're
00:33:33doing their own chips.
00:33:35That's on the path to ever-increasing
00:33:37verticality.
00:33:39Are you going to do your own chips?
00:33:41The NVIDIA
00:33:43platform is
00:33:45great for
00:33:47the inference chip in the vehicle.
00:33:49There are a few
00:33:51other choices. We looked at all of them.
00:33:53We felt
00:33:55good about the performance
00:33:57price trade-off.
00:33:59The beauty of the NVIDIA platform is
00:34:01it's a well-developed ecosystem
00:34:03as well for working with the chip.
00:34:05We take the chip and then we have to build a whole
00:34:07rest of the computer around us. We build the board,
00:34:09we design the board, we design how it's going to function.
00:34:13The knowledge of that and the
00:34:15support infrastructure that exists within the
00:34:17NVIDIA ecosystem is really strong.
00:34:19Is the NVIDIA chip part of the joint venture?
00:34:21With Volkswagen?
00:34:23Volkswagen does not
00:34:25include any of our work in
00:34:27AI or autonomy.
00:34:29Okay.
00:34:31But the ECUs?
00:34:33The other ECUs.
00:34:35The other ECUs are part of the joint venture.
00:34:37Okay.
00:34:39I want to come back to that. That's awesome.
00:34:41What about doing your own
00:34:43chips? Is that out of the question?
00:34:45Is that a weird thing to ask?
00:34:47It's not a weird thing to ask.
00:34:49You can say it's weird.
00:34:51No, it's a great question.
00:34:53Say it's weird.
00:34:55It's not something we're focused on.
00:34:57It's a great question.
00:35:01Because of the strength of the supply base
00:35:03that exists around that.
00:35:05There's companies that are really investing heavily
00:35:07in that today.
00:35:09I'm already way over my skis this deep in software stuff.
00:35:11I'll just keep going because I've got a couple more questions.
00:35:15I noted this thing on 9to5Google.
00:35:17You guys confirmed within May that
00:35:19Rivian's using Android
00:35:21Automotive.
00:35:23You also mentioned on the
00:35:25Decoder podcast that
00:35:27this is your full stack.
00:35:29It includes real-time
00:35:31operating system, which I know previously was BlackBerry.
00:35:33Are you still working with
00:35:35BlackBerry on RTOS?
00:35:37No.
00:35:39The real-time
00:35:41operating system is an OS we developed
00:35:43in-house.
00:35:45The name of that OS internally
00:35:47is Elpis, the Greek goddess of hope.
00:35:49That was
00:35:51named when
00:35:53things were still
00:35:55challenging on that
00:35:57development.
00:35:59We've used
00:36:01an Android kernel for what you see in the
00:36:03infotainment platform.
00:36:05But we've
00:36:07forked it, we developed it,
00:36:09and one of the reasons we wanted to use that, which is
00:36:11really links to Linux,
00:36:13is it allowed us to
00:36:15access a really rich
00:36:17ecosystem of applications and
00:36:19makes it easier for the applications world to plug in.
00:36:21You're starting
00:36:23to see native applications enter into the ecosystem.
00:36:25The first was Spotify.
00:36:27We have a great relationship
00:36:29with Google, so you're now seeing YouTube come
00:36:31into the mix. You're seeing Google Casts
00:36:33come into the mix.
00:36:35We just launched, on the other side of the fence,
00:36:37Apple Music.
00:36:39The question you're probably going to ask
00:36:41next or next-next is
00:36:43why we don't have CarPlay.
00:36:45No, we don't.
00:36:47We're finding ways
00:36:49to deliver that a la carte,
00:36:51but we completely control the ecosystem.
00:36:53We have a la carte questions. The Apple one has
00:36:55long been answered, and it takes a lot of time.
00:36:57Last couple.
00:36:59Unreal Engine.
00:37:01I saw the graphics in the car, the cell shading
00:37:03looks cool, but
00:37:05is that it?
00:37:07Again, I hate to be the a-hole here
00:37:09because Johnny is telling me...
00:37:11He's been an owner. For him,
00:37:13the step change is really big. He's like,
00:37:15I haven't been in one
00:37:17in literally 18 months, so I was like,
00:37:19okay, this is pretty cool.
00:37:21What else does Unreal Engine
00:37:23give you, other than the ability to
00:37:25do these cool, slick graphics?
00:37:31It's a great question.
00:37:33There's two things
00:37:35to talk about here. The first is
00:37:37we felt
00:37:39the approach of making
00:37:41everything photorealistic
00:37:43was just becoming stale.
00:37:45It felt
00:37:47almost silly to sit inside the car
00:37:49and then see a photorealistic rendering
00:37:51of it while you're in the car.
00:37:53It's like, oh, there's my car.
00:37:55Not many manufacturers have the colors
00:37:57matching. We, of course, do that, and the wheels match,
00:37:59and whatever you have matches on the car.
00:38:01But the beauty of moving
00:38:03that artistically and graphically
00:38:05beyond photorealistic
00:38:07we think is just much more interesting
00:38:09and provides a more...
00:38:11a stronger
00:38:13point of view in terms of the texture of the experience.
00:38:15That's purely
00:38:17speaking to the aesthetics. That's subjective.
00:38:19What it also does, though...
00:38:21Real quick, that's part of why
00:38:23Rivian people like Rivians.
00:38:25It's not just a photograph
00:38:27of my truck. It's kind of like this
00:38:29softer, gentler, like
00:38:31the gear guard guy, whatever he's called.
00:38:33It's like, my kid loves it.
00:38:35When we got the truck, they gave him a...
00:38:37It allows us to embed
00:38:39personality, and you can see
00:38:41what it does when we render the vehicle.
00:38:43Those are real-time renderings using Unreal.
00:38:45Now, your question is spot on.
00:38:47If we have Unreal rendering capability
00:38:49and it matches... If you're in
00:38:51sport drive mode, the vehicle moves around
00:38:53and configures itself as sport.
00:38:55If you're in off-road, it moves
00:38:57and suspension adjusts. There's a lot
00:38:59to come with
00:39:01software updates that will leverage
00:39:03the fact that we've created
00:39:05a
00:39:07rendering style that can be rendered real-time
00:39:09that applies to
00:39:11the vehicles and applies importantly
00:39:13to the ecosystem around the vehicles.
00:39:15As Johnny said,
00:39:17our security gear guard
00:39:19character
00:39:21exists in many different ways
00:39:23across the vehicle.
00:39:25We believe with the ability to start
00:39:27overlaying more and more content,
00:39:29breaking from
00:39:31the shackles of photorealism
00:39:33and allowing it to be more
00:39:35dreamlike and more
00:39:37inspired, allows
00:39:39the inclusion of things
00:39:41like AR to start to
00:39:43take a bigger role. You can imagine with a
00:39:45really high-fidelity set of cameras,
00:39:47we can see the world around us.
00:39:49You can imagine we can recreate
00:39:51views. Let's say you're off-road, you want to see
00:39:53your vehicle driving
00:39:55in that environment.
00:39:57We can start to create
00:39:59really,
00:40:01really high
00:40:03fidelity, high quality
00:40:05memories,
00:40:07but create them in a way that's more
00:40:09powerful than trying to overlay
00:40:11a photorealistic rendering
00:40:13with a camera shot.
00:40:15Rather, create a whole environment that captures
00:40:17the memory, but without photorealism.
00:40:19Scale of 1 to 10, how
00:40:21bummed are Gen 1 owners going to be
00:40:23in a couple of years when the full
00:40:25capabilities are unlocked? The cameras
00:40:27is a big... No, I know.
00:40:29There's a massive step forward.
00:40:31I noticed just the turn signals,
00:40:33like my truck versus the Gen 2
00:40:35truck is like, oh boy.
00:40:37Obviously, you see it for self-driving, it's going to be
00:40:39an enhancement, but in terms
00:40:41of just the overall experience,
00:40:43what we can do with those cameras
00:40:45and what will come in future features
00:40:47is going to be really powerful.
00:40:49To Johnny's point, that's impossible for a Gen 1 owner
00:40:51to upgrade. You can't.
00:40:53That's the hard fork.
00:40:55It's also
00:40:57part of technology.
00:40:59Hey, that's it.
00:41:01Half glass, half full.
00:41:03I'm so annoyed.
00:41:05Eventually, you'll have the classic version.
00:41:07Right. Hey, mine's yellow.
00:41:09See, there you go.
00:41:11If that whole piece on Unreal Engine, what are you talking about?
00:41:13Just go YouTube some Unreal Engine clips
00:41:15and you'll see the level. Unreal Engine is this game
00:41:17it's using gaming, it creates
00:41:19the most amazing universes. I get
00:41:21where you're going.
00:41:23I'm glad you mentioned. If you go
00:41:25YouTube clips of Rivian's driving
00:41:27in Unreal, you see photorealistic
00:41:29renderings of that. We can
00:41:31do that, sure. But imagine we can
00:41:33create environments that are imaginative
00:41:35beyond reality.
00:41:37You can create environments
00:41:39that you can leave behind breadcrumbs
00:41:41and you can create environments that
00:41:43Maybe talk to other
00:41:45trucks. Talk to other vehicles.
00:41:47The opportunity for really rich
00:41:49environments and then the opportunity to
00:41:51take that into in-vehicle
00:41:53games. Are you a gamer?
00:41:55Do you play Sims?
00:41:57I played Sims growing up, yeah, for sure.
00:41:59I don't think he has time to do this podcast.
00:42:01But you have a game, you can have
00:42:03this Twitch generation
00:42:05by their throats, because this is amazing.
00:42:07This is what I get.
00:42:09We barely talk about augmented reality on this podcast.
00:42:11A little bit with... Because it's not real.
00:42:13Well, no, but I saw
00:42:15I drove the new Audi
00:42:17Q6, which
00:42:19for their head-up nav,
00:42:21wow, that's the first
00:42:23really, really good augmented reality
00:42:25I've experienced. So I can imagine with
00:42:27a much more powerful processor what you can do.
00:42:29And with great cameras and with an amazing
00:42:31rendering engine, you can do a lot.
00:42:33And with obviously a lot of compute to power it all.
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00:43:11So I have to ask, I don't want to ask, but
00:43:13it's a hot topic. Gen AI, where is
00:43:15Rivian? What do we see? You mentioned
00:43:17AI a little bit in a
00:43:19few minutes ago, but what will
00:43:21a driver and owner,
00:43:23what do they have to look forward to
00:43:25or be aghast at when it comes to
00:43:27AI? Is there an AI assistant coming?
00:43:29What do you got?
00:43:33I think the reality is
00:43:35it's going to permeate every aspect
00:43:37of every business.
00:43:41From an in-vehicle point of view,
00:43:43things like the way you interact
00:43:45with the vehicle today,
00:43:47we still rely heavily on buttons or
00:43:49multi-touch in our case.
00:43:51Voice has been
00:43:53of limited effectiveness, largely
00:43:55because it's so unnatural the way you have to
00:43:57use voice, the way we've had to use voice
00:43:59historically. So you could say like
00:44:01close the front trunk, but
00:44:03you have to speak in a very specific manner
00:44:05and it's not at all conversational.
00:44:07What we see happening, particularly
00:44:09as it integrates with navigation
00:44:11is the opportunity to completely change
00:44:13how we think about interacting with it.
00:44:15Instead of saying, I need to search for it and type out
00:44:17at least half the name of a
00:44:19specific restaurant for it to
00:44:21autofill the rest of the name of the restaurant,
00:44:23you could say, I'm hungry.
00:44:25The vehicle says, what are you thinking? I don't know, I had
00:44:27Mexican yesterday, today I'm sort of feeling like Indian.
00:44:29Well, what's
00:44:31on the way home? Much more
00:44:33conversational is if you're talking to
00:44:35a person that's like the
00:44:37hyper search engine to find all the right combinations.
00:44:39So trip planning,
00:44:41point of interest,
00:44:45identification, all of that
00:44:47we think is going to be worlds
00:44:49different than what we do today.
00:44:51And you can, it's not
00:44:53hard, like in terms of like
00:44:55the things that are hard for
00:44:57Gen AI to do, that's not one of them.
00:44:59Then you move into
00:45:01diagnostics
00:45:03and diagnostics both for
00:45:05the owner to say, hey, my vehicle
00:45:07is doing this, like what does
00:45:09that mean? The vehicle's ability to
00:45:11work through issues, answer questions real time
00:45:13in vehicle
00:45:15is going to be a massive expansion to what we
00:45:17know today. But we're, customers
00:45:19are not going to see it, but we'll feel it both
00:45:21in terms of the cost to run our business and then
00:45:23ultimately you'll see it as a customer through
00:45:25we hope much faster services
00:45:27like things like
00:45:29what we have for service
00:45:31intake. If you call with issues,
00:45:33the ability for us to
00:45:35very effectively and very
00:45:37rapidly identify and understand
00:45:39the problem and benefit
00:45:41from not just the knowledge in somebody's
00:45:43brain, but in the knowledge collectively across our fleet
00:45:45is really powerful.
00:45:47Predictive diagnostics.
00:45:49We do predictive diagnostics.
00:45:51It's more that... No, it's like, what's a
00:45:53hot issue? Like if suddenly all the call centers
00:45:55are getting this, like the AI is like, hey...
00:45:57This is already happening. So behind the scenes, if you call
00:45:59Rivian Service, we have a
00:46:01digital assistant that's not customer facing
00:46:03but it's our team member facing
00:46:05that we use. If you say, hey, my car
00:46:07is making a clicking noise. You're like, we know.
00:46:09Why didn't you call sooner?
00:46:11We actually have AI-based assistants that are
00:46:13helping our teams. At the NVIDIA conference we went
00:46:15to, Ford gave a whole
00:46:17presentation that I sat through about
00:46:19exactly that. How AI helps the service department.
00:46:21We went to GTC and we were like, what are we doing here?
00:46:23We sure did. A bunch of car guys.
00:46:25This is crazy. It was fun.
00:46:27Good burrito at lunch.
00:46:29I'm going to circle back to that assistant
00:46:31that I know. I'm going to circle back to that assistant piece.
00:46:33Just the very last question while we're
00:46:35in the car talking about software-defined
00:46:37vehicles. I noted, thank
00:46:39God, you guys still have controls on
00:46:41stocks and you mentioned you still got buttons.
00:46:43If anybody is
00:46:45going to put a
00:46:47Prindle shifter
00:46:49on a multi-information
00:46:51display, you're actually very well set up for it.
00:46:53In that R1T, you have a horizontal
00:46:55landscape screen
00:46:57and it's right by my hand. If you could just
00:46:59do that, I could go
00:47:01to reverse to drive.
00:47:03What's your position on
00:47:05reducing parts
00:47:07complexity and going to full digital
00:47:09controls?
00:47:11You can imagine
00:47:13we've had all those debates.
00:47:15We've landed, I mean, you see it in R2.
00:47:17We still have a
00:47:19Prindle on the stock.
00:47:21We believe that's
00:47:23the right, call it
00:47:25end point balance.
00:47:29We took it as far as removing HVAC
00:47:31physical controls. I think
00:47:33you guys gave us
00:47:35feedback on that. With the update
00:47:37though, I got to tell you
00:47:39RJ walked in and said,
00:47:41get the fan off me. We have a fan over there.
00:47:43I need a fan in my face at all times when driving
00:47:45with my wife. Opposites. Now with the
00:47:47presets, it's the greatest thing.
00:47:49What you should do is key it to the
00:47:51phone. Oh, that's going to come.
00:47:53That was always
00:47:55the vision. Eventually, if
00:47:57you have multiple people in the vehicle,
00:47:59your configurations in terms of seat
00:48:01cooled, seat heated, and then
00:48:03of course, the rest of HVAC can immediately
00:48:05music, everything.
00:48:07But I mean,
00:48:09having to move
00:48:11vents on the screen never made any sense
00:48:13to me ever, ever until that moment.
00:48:15I was like, this is it.
00:48:17This is what I've been waiting for. I love that.
00:48:19On the Prindle
00:48:21side, yes,
00:48:23you could save some costs, but we don't see
00:48:25it as a customer benefit.
00:48:27Whereas
00:48:29I think on the HVAC, yes, it's more
00:48:31cost effective. Yes, it cleans up the interior, but we
00:48:33also saw what John just said.
00:48:35There are real
00:48:37advantages that come over time.
00:48:39Okay.
00:48:41Let's get out of the car and talk about
00:48:43software-defined vehicles from a partnership's perspective.
00:48:45You, obviously,
00:48:47the announcement with VW
00:48:49group, again, covered in other podcasts
00:48:51very well.
00:48:53I want to just talk a little bit about
00:48:55this other thing VW did, which is
00:48:57they have a partnership
00:48:59that was announced in February with the Chinese company
00:49:01Xpeng, and it covers
00:49:03two vehicles, midsize.
00:49:05They're going to lead with an SUV.
00:49:07It covers software. It covers
00:49:09some purchasing,
00:49:11part sharing,
00:49:13that kind of stuff.
00:49:15Their
00:49:17cars are coming out in like 2026
00:49:19apparently out of this JV. You guys got something
00:49:21coming out in 2026? Is there any
00:49:23overlap? It seems like the agreements
00:49:25that VW made with this Chinese company
00:49:27and with Rivian, there's some overlap
00:49:29and possibly some efficiencies, to use
00:49:31CEO speak. Is there any
00:49:33way?
00:49:35Why would Volkswagen do both, I guess, is our question.
00:49:37Also.
00:49:39Yeah.
00:49:41I don't want to
00:49:43speak for Volkswagen here, but I would say in
00:49:45general, what
00:49:47we believe is going to happen, and I think you'll
00:49:49start to see more and more examples of this as evidence
00:49:51by your question, is that there'll
00:49:53be digital ecosystems that exist for
00:49:55China, and there'll be digital ecosystems
00:49:57that exist for the rest of the world.
00:49:59For lots of reasons, that'll
00:50:01be the case. I think the
00:50:03digital environments are different
00:50:05between the rest of the world and China.
00:50:07I think the
00:50:09policy and trade
00:50:11relations are likely going to drive
00:50:13it towards that.
00:50:15Importantly,
00:50:17I think the trade characteristics
00:50:19are going to be such that
00:50:21vehicles for China need to be
00:50:23designed and built in China. Vehicles for the rest
00:50:25of the world need to be designed and built
00:50:27outside of China. Literally, in their press statement,
00:50:29this is a for China, made in China
00:50:31statement.
00:50:33You didn't mention customer.
00:50:35Is there a customer difference, do you think,
00:50:37from China and the US,
00:50:39in terms of features
00:50:41and vehicle, just the way
00:50:43it looks, feels, drives?
00:50:47I think there's a greater emphasis
00:50:49on digital assistance.
00:50:51As I'm sure you guys have, we
00:50:53spent a good deal of time in China. We have a number of
00:50:55folks we've spent time with in their vehicles.
00:50:57At some
00:50:59levels, a battery electric vehicle
00:51:01has similar chemistry,
00:51:03similar power electronics, so a lot of
00:51:05the core of what it takes to drive the vehicle,
00:51:07same topology
00:51:09of technologies. In terms of
00:51:11the user experience, though,
00:51:13there's more of an emphasis
00:51:15on your
00:51:17digitally native life
00:51:19and integration with everything
00:51:21from your payments platforms to
00:51:23WeChat, Weibo.
00:51:25All of your digital ecosystem
00:51:27that isn't as pervasive in the rest of
00:51:29the world.
00:51:31That doesn't mean
00:51:33Western companies can't do that in China,
00:51:35but it does mean that
00:51:37to try to
00:51:39graft a digital
00:51:41ecosystem from the rest of the world
00:51:43into China and not
00:51:45fully contemplate just how different
00:51:47that market is in terms of
00:51:49what customers are
00:51:51expecting would be a mistake.
00:51:53And vice versa, I think trying to take a
00:51:55Chinese digital ecosystem to
00:51:57the U.S.,
00:51:59WeChat is not going to be
00:52:01valuable here in the United States.
00:52:03Perhaps there's going to be
00:52:05U.S. alternatives
00:52:07to that or examples of that that start to emerge.
00:52:09Of course, that's
00:52:11why we believe that
00:52:13some of that will happen. It's why it's so important
00:52:15to us that we own the digital ecosystem.
00:52:17I'm sure you can't
00:52:19talk to this, but there's security concerns, too.
00:52:21Uncle Xi, always watching.
00:52:23Yeah, exactly.
00:52:25The cloud's a little different in China.
00:52:27I've talked to other manufacturers where
00:52:29they have to run a certain portion
00:52:31of the GPS through it. It has to be a Chinese
00:52:33native company, the whole thing. I get that piece.
00:52:35I wanted to stay a little bit on the
00:52:37consumer, though, because I did note
00:52:39that I just went to China and drove
00:52:4150 different Chinese EVs, and they all
00:52:43have a digital assistant.
00:52:45You can ask it all, like, I'm hungry,
00:52:47and they'll show you a restaurant.
00:52:49Karaoke in the car, light shows,
00:52:51all big things over there. Ed said, what is in the
00:52:53riving of karaoke? I literally was going
00:52:55into the trunks of these cars, and in the
00:52:57accessory kit along with the charger
00:52:59is a boxed microphone.
00:53:01Karaoke and then
00:53:03autonomous.
00:53:05It was like assistant,
00:53:07strong autonomy, and to be
00:53:09honest, this is a terrible way to
00:53:11paint. I'm ethnically Chinese.
00:53:13Not a lot of focus on
00:53:15driving dynamics at the level I think
00:53:17that we come to expect here, certainly
00:53:19that you've delivered in R1T and R1S
00:53:21so far.
00:53:23Is this going to be,
00:53:25I assume, and you can correct me if I'm wrong,
00:53:27that R2 and R3 and
00:53:29R3X are the vehicles, they're perfectly
00:53:31sized to send to China.
00:53:33This would be the kind of vehicles,
00:53:35but do you think you can be competitive
00:53:37without having strong
00:53:39karaoke machines?
00:53:41Could you replace the flashlight
00:53:43on the door with a microphone?
00:53:45Neo's got this talking Nomi
00:53:47camp speaker karaoke
00:53:49box. For us, we've been
00:53:51really clear that
00:53:53today
00:53:55we're focused on, in terms of major
00:53:57markets, US and Europe with R2
00:53:59and R3. We're
00:54:01watching how it plays out in China
00:54:03to determine whether or not we actually participate
00:54:05in China. I think the environment's very different
00:54:07than, let's say, when Tesla launched into China.
00:54:09The relationships between
00:54:11the US and
00:54:13China are very different. As a result,
00:54:15the
00:54:17openness for us
00:54:19to participate there, it's a different
00:54:21place than it was.
00:54:23I think on top of that,
00:54:25to participate
00:54:27in that space today, it's extremely
00:54:29price competitive.
00:54:31There's a lot of...
00:54:33I forgot that part.
00:54:35It's extremely price competitive and to the point of
00:54:37competing well
00:54:39under cost.
00:54:41There's
00:54:43a pretty
00:54:45rich labyrinth of
00:54:47subsidies that exist for Chinese
00:54:49based companies that also
00:54:51make it quite difficult for a non-Chinese entity.
00:54:53Plus 97 car brands.
00:54:55There's a saturation.
00:54:57What you're saying is very interesting.
00:54:59I'm pulling out that you're still evaluating
00:55:01if you go in at all.
00:55:03I did some research.
00:55:05I saw a Reuters quote
00:55:07from 2021. You said,
00:55:09we wouldn't be serious about building a car company if we weren't thinking about
00:55:11China and Europe as important markets
00:55:13long term. This sounds different from that.
00:55:15Things have changed in the last...
00:55:17I would make
00:55:19that statement again.
00:55:21We're committed to Europe. We're thinking about
00:55:23China.
00:55:25There are
00:55:27three giant markets and then lots of
00:55:29supporting small markets, but the US, Europe
00:55:31and China are the three big pools of demand.
00:55:33The millions and millions of cars.
00:55:35We're talking many millions of vehicles.
00:55:37That doesn't
00:55:39exclude Africa, doesn't exclude Middle East, doesn't exclude
00:55:41South America, but in terms of big, big markets
00:55:43you need
00:55:45to be, I think,
00:55:47if you want to be a global manufacturer, you need to be strong
00:55:49in at least two of them.
00:55:51The question is whether or not the environment has changed
00:55:53enough in the last three years from when
00:55:55I made that statement
00:55:57that still makes China an interesting market.
00:55:59I was just going to say
00:56:01our Australian fans want R1.
00:56:03Oh, I know.
00:56:05We get lots of those.
00:56:07It'd be so cool.
00:56:09It fits that market really well.
00:56:11Not a huge market, though.
00:56:13We'll keep going.
00:56:15Should we get into the questions?
00:56:17I've got a couple more.
00:56:19Let me stay on a couple.
00:56:21One is
00:56:23I just want to confirm. The VW Group,
00:56:25the partnership, the $1 billion
00:56:27plus $4 billion,
00:56:29it is on electrical architecture,
00:56:31not inclusive of
00:56:33the autonomous
00:56:35stack.
00:56:37There's some efficiencies
00:56:39I think on supply side.
00:56:41It's not
00:56:43platform.
00:56:45R3 looks kind of
00:56:47golf-sized.
00:56:49Maybe R2 is kind of Macan-sized.
00:56:51Is there any hardware,
00:56:53any bodies in white going to be going back and forth?
00:56:55That's not to say
00:56:59something like that couldn't happen, but
00:57:01what we've talked about in terms of
00:57:03the relationship and the partnership is purely around
00:57:05leveraging our software stack
00:57:07and leveraging our
00:57:09topology of VCUs and associated network
00:57:11architecture.
00:57:13As we said, that excludes
00:57:15autonomy today.
00:57:17Importantly,
00:57:19it does open up lots of opportunities.
00:57:21One of the things we learned
00:57:23very much through looking at partnerships at a
00:57:25platform level in the past is by far
00:57:27and away, by orders of magnitude,
00:57:29the most complex part of any platform
00:57:31sharing exercise.
00:57:33It's not mechanical. It's not does it fit
00:57:35down the line. It's how do we get
00:57:37our digital ecosystem,
00:57:39software system, to talk to your system?
00:57:41Because we're going to have the same
00:57:43network architecture, same software stack,
00:57:45it does open up a lot of other opportunities.
00:57:47Those are not part of this deal.
00:57:49What about Scout?
00:57:51This is the one where
00:57:53they showed two things that
00:57:55looked a lot like R1 products.
00:57:57They're Volkswagen.
00:57:59They're 100% Volkswagen.
00:58:01They're getting your
00:58:03seven ECUs and
00:58:05associated software.
00:58:07They're building a factory in South Carolina.
00:58:09Pretty close to Georgia.
00:58:11Their tagline is all-purpose, all-electric,
00:58:13all-American, for the makers and the doers.
00:58:15It literally could be Rivian.
00:58:17Is it redundant?
00:58:19I know you can't speak to anything Scout,
00:58:21but it just seems like...
00:58:23Especially in the face
00:58:25of the joint venture.
00:58:27What's the Scout thing?
00:58:31In terms of our joint venture,
00:58:33it's to support all Volkswagen Group products.
00:58:35That's Porsche,
00:58:37that's Audi,
00:58:39that's Bentley,
00:58:41that's Lamborghini,
00:58:43inclusive of Scout.
00:58:45I think that
00:58:47it's important,
00:58:49coming back to something we talked about
00:58:51at the beginning, just to recognize
00:58:53the need for variety and need for choice.
00:58:57I think it's great
00:58:59that there's going to be something else
00:59:01that's in a space of electrification
00:59:03and active outdoor vehicle.
00:59:05I think the space is really large.
00:59:07I think you could equally say,
00:59:09well, what about Jeep?
00:59:11There's a need to have
00:59:13multiple perspectives here.
00:59:15We don't have a challenge
00:59:17of enough customers.
00:59:19We have a challenge of enough products
00:59:21that meet customers' need to get them
00:59:23to make a choice to go there.
00:59:25We're really happy
00:59:27with what we're building.
00:59:29The way the customers are acting to it,
00:59:31in fact, J.D. Patterson,
00:59:33just issued this morning,
00:59:35they do an annual
00:59:37brand satisfaction, brand appeal.
00:59:39We came out number one last year.
00:59:41This year, we came out number one again,
00:59:43which is awesome.
00:59:47By the way,
00:59:49does everybody know Johnny owns one
00:59:51and talks about it constantly?
00:59:53Sorry.
00:59:55He's a very satisfied customer.
00:59:57I asked my wife,
00:59:59I said, hey, I'm talking to the founder.
01:00:01She said, nice.
01:00:03Tell him I love him.
01:00:05You got to understand what's weird is
01:00:07my wife for years was like,
01:00:09you're not allowed to buy an SUV.
01:00:11No SUV.
01:00:13I only want small little cars.
01:00:15Certainly not a truck.
01:00:17A Jewish lawyer from Philadelphia.
01:00:19What does she want a pickup truck for?
01:00:21A yellow pickup truck.
01:00:23Then Green Bay Packers colors,
01:00:25which she was really pissed
01:00:27when she figured that out
01:00:29Don't become a blithering right wing idiot
01:00:31like another EV CEO.
01:00:37We were going skiing a lot
01:00:39and I wanted something
01:00:41that was just ours.
01:00:43I didn't have to rely on the Chevy
01:00:45you were going to get got damaged.
01:00:47I had an ordering on a Lexus GX.
01:00:49I was like, alright, I'll get a GX,
01:00:51I'll modify it, make it an ultimate off-roader.
01:00:53Went on the tat thing.
01:00:55By the way, a week before I went on the tat thing,
01:00:57my wife called me off because I was like,
01:00:59Rivian's f***ing vaporware, man.
01:01:01This is another fight.
01:01:03The Transamerica Trail.
01:01:05Seabog, who's organizing it on our end,
01:01:07was like, don't go.
01:01:09I was like, I'll go.
01:01:11Thinking it would be a disaster.
01:01:13I literally got home and put a deposit down.
01:01:15I love that.
01:01:17We were skiing and we saw blue.
01:01:19It must have been one of your engineers
01:01:21really early.
01:01:23It was in December of 21.
01:01:25I was like, what is that?
01:01:27That's that thing I drove.
01:01:29I hadn't told her I put a deposit down.
01:01:31She's like, we can get that?
01:01:33I'm like, yeah, we can get that.
01:01:35She won't get out of the thing.
01:01:37We're learning more about your marriage.
01:01:39I'm going back to the customer satisfaction thing.
01:01:41This is, again, a person who...
01:01:43One time, truck of the year,
01:01:45we had a F450 Dually.
01:01:47For whatever reason, she had to drive it somewhere.
01:01:49She got back in the car and she's like,
01:01:51never, I'm never driving anything like that again.
01:01:53I hate it.
01:01:55It's weird.
01:01:57That's a 100 percentile vehicle.
01:01:59My point is,
01:02:01there's something about
01:02:03the R1
01:02:05that people really like
01:02:07that you wouldn't think would like them.
01:02:09She doesn't off-road.
01:02:11She never goes fast in it.
01:02:13She just loves the thing.
01:02:15There's something about
01:02:17the way we developed the product.
01:02:19By the way, I'm paying him.
01:02:21The way we developed the product is
01:02:23we try really hard to have
01:02:25the vehicle feel really connected
01:02:27to you as a customer.
01:02:29Part of that is when you think about generating
01:02:31the features and requirements,
01:02:33not letting that become
01:02:35algorithmic.
01:02:37The moment it becomes algorithmic,
01:02:39it loses that human element.
01:02:41It's hard to explain what makes a Rivian
01:02:43feel so special, but the reality is
01:02:45it's because we have lots of humans
01:02:47that are spending a lot of time coordinating
01:02:49to make sure we're taking similar common perspectives,
01:02:51but making decisions
01:02:53that maybe aren't obvious
01:02:55to creating a spreadsheet
01:02:57of features that have to compete with something else.
01:02:59Little things,
01:03:01like a flashlight in the door.
01:03:03Not necessary. You could look at it and say,
01:03:05that's $30 of excess cost.
01:03:07But it's part of
01:03:09a very intentional
01:03:11set of decisions to make the vehicle feel
01:03:13like a bunch of enthusiasts
01:03:15and car people and technologists
01:03:17working together.
01:03:19What's fascinating is I talk to a lot of people
01:03:21about when I was with the
01:03:23Mercedes team with the electric G-Wagon.
01:03:25We were up in Sweden driving it around.
01:03:27I was like, what are you guys benchmarking?
01:03:29They were like, everything out there
01:03:31is all crap, except that Rivian
01:03:33was really good. We actually thought
01:03:35about air suspension for a second.
01:03:37They're going to deny that, but we thought about it.
01:03:39It was so effective.
01:03:41Increasing ground clearance. They really liked it.
01:03:43A lot of people were like, I can't believe this was a first effort.
01:03:45The craziest one was
01:03:47I went on the Range Rover
01:03:49sport launch, and I got a blank guy's name,
01:03:51chief engineer of Land Rover. He's been there 27 years.
01:03:53He goes, you got a Rivian?
01:03:55He goes, we just got a Rivian.
01:03:57I go, what do you think? He goes, we can't believe how good,
01:03:59and in my mind he's going to say, how good it is
01:04:01off-road. This is Range Rover guy going,
01:04:03we can't believe how good the interior is.
01:04:05The quality of the interior
01:04:07for a first product doesn't make any sense.
01:04:09What do those guys know about interiors?
01:04:11I'm just kidding.
01:04:13It's a wild product.
01:04:15Let's go to the lightning round of listener questions.
01:04:17We're going to go with
01:04:19PH Barnhart.
01:04:21Can we expect a native texting app anytime soon?
01:04:23Yes.
01:04:27Is Rivian going to send an R3X
01:04:29to Pike's Peak?
01:04:31That's Mike Drew's show.
01:04:33You should do what Hyundai did,
01:04:35where they had two wild ones, and then
01:04:37put me in one.
01:04:39I was able to go to that.
01:04:41I raced it.
01:04:43I met Gardner two years ago.
01:04:45He wasn't racing, he was supporting
01:04:47the car that won.
01:04:49It's super cool.
01:04:51R3X.
01:04:53It's a perfect car for that.
01:04:55Dean Moner
01:04:57asks, will Rivian have something comparable
01:04:59to Tesla's full self-driving app?
01:05:01When?
01:05:03Will it be available on Gen 1 R1
01:05:05products?
01:05:07We are working towards
01:05:09really being a leader in the
01:05:11self-driving space. Absolutely, but it
01:05:13won't be available on the Gen 1 architecture
01:05:15because of the harbors.
01:05:17I'm not set up for it.
01:05:19I can't pronounce your name.
01:05:21Can we please have
01:05:23app access to control the climate
01:05:25in the third row? As of now, it doesn't
01:05:27automatically turn on when someone is back there.
01:05:29Yeah, another zone.
01:05:31We are adding additional zones.
01:05:33The hardware in the vehicle allows
01:05:35say we have a zone in the front, a zone in the back.
01:05:37We are going to add
01:05:39the ability to split into two more zones.
01:05:41That will be coming, but the third row
01:05:43will link to the second row.
01:05:45Mopardad, who
01:05:47said a bunch of silly stuff, did ask,
01:05:49does Rivian have any plans
01:05:51to build the equivalent of a heavy-duty truck?
01:05:53We do not have plans.
01:05:55Great. I love definitive answers.
01:05:57This is a good one. Several people have asked this one,
01:05:59but this one came from PMacDonald.
01:06:01Any plans to make an R1S
01:06:03XL, a longer SUV
01:06:05like a Suburban vis-a-vis Tahoe?
01:06:07You could use the R1T wheelbase.
01:06:09Yeah, we've thought about it. The size
01:06:11of the market is not very large
01:06:13though. So we've
01:06:15technically very doable, but in terms
01:06:17of where we're focusing, that's something we're focusing on today.
01:06:19Isn't that a money printing machine
01:06:21though? You just put another row
01:06:23in and some carpeting? No, a row.
01:06:25You just make more storage behind the third row.
01:06:27We've looked at shorter ones and longer
01:06:29ones. We looked at a two-row version of R1
01:06:31and a longer three-row, but
01:06:33back to some of the points I made before,
01:06:35the most important thing we can do right now
01:06:37is launch R2.
01:06:39The real AJ Gupta,
01:06:41will we see a native NAX
01:06:43Charger? And as Johnny
01:06:45wants to add. Yeah, I mean since
01:06:47the Supercharger team would bend away,
01:06:49are you guys still
01:06:51on board with NACS?
01:06:53Yeah, we're still
01:06:55on track. It
01:06:57took longer than planned because of some supplier constraints,
01:06:59but the adapter between CCS and
01:07:01NACS is now shipping to customers,
01:07:03which is great. Yeah, you used it three
01:07:05times this weekend. Yes.
01:07:07I love that. Flawless. Amazing.
01:07:09But we are going native and that's going
01:07:11to be coming in the future.
01:07:13So everyone on the Supercharger team getting
01:07:15laid off doesn't affect that?
01:07:17No, because I think it
01:07:19affects the rate
01:07:21at which the Tesla network continues to grow.
01:07:23Yeah.
01:07:25But the network that's installed
01:07:27today, it's a great network.
01:07:29The way I always characterize this,
01:07:31there's a
01:07:33surprising lack of great charging
01:07:35networks in the United States. Yes.
01:07:37And the
01:07:39most important metric, I think, beyond number
01:07:41of locations is uptime.
01:07:43Tesla's at like 98-99%.
01:07:45Our Rivian Adventure Network's
01:07:47over 98%, but everything else
01:07:49is, we have the data, it's startlingly
01:07:51low. Yeah, no, I mean I was...
01:07:53It's so frustrating when you get to a charging location
01:07:55and it doesn't work. Oh, it's crazy.
01:07:57It's horrific. I just can't
01:07:59believe how bad some of the networks are.
01:08:01We were at San Luis Obispo,
01:08:03which has a population of nobody,
01:08:05and there was 16
01:08:07chargers at the hotel, and then
01:08:09they weren't compatible with Rivian, but 0.9
01:08:11miles away, there were 16 Tesla chargers
01:08:13that were compatible. Wow.
01:08:15It was fantastic. I had two Teslas
01:08:17with me. Sorry, two Rivians with me.
01:08:19It was great. So A.J. Gupta, the
01:08:21native NAX charger from Rivian
01:08:23is coming. Joe
01:08:25Hillick, future open
01:08:27air Rango Bronco
01:08:29challenger. Basically, you got
01:08:31an open roof thing coming?
01:08:33We've talked about it. I don't think we've ever...
01:08:35I could
01:08:37relay a little story. Oh, did somebody
01:08:39tell you something? I was sitting in the Vergic Atlantic
01:08:41Lounge in Heathrow, and
01:08:43the guy next to me, I saw on his laptop,
01:08:45he had a picture of some
01:08:47future Rivian, so I was just like listening
01:08:49in, and it was
01:08:51removable roof panels. Yeah.
01:08:53That's a dude fired. Yeah, that's okay. He had no idea.
01:08:55I sat there, and I was
01:08:57just like... Send me the date.
01:08:59It was a couple years ago, but I was just taking
01:09:01notes, and I kept looking at his laptop. I was like,
01:09:03that's cool.
01:09:05Not an
01:09:07answer plan, but something that
01:09:09we think about. We think it'd be cool.
01:09:11My dad really wants one.
01:09:13My dad has told me that if we don't make one, he's
01:09:15going to cut the roof off of his and make it himself.
01:09:17I want to see the plans, because then I'll
01:09:19put steel over it.
01:09:21From, I think, your buddy,
01:09:23or I hope he's your buddy, Kyle Connor has a couple
01:09:25good ones.
01:09:27That's a tough one. How does Rivian decide where to focus
01:09:29engineering spend? For example,
01:09:31a 1025
01:09:33horsepower quad versus more
01:09:35cost savings?
01:09:37Yeah. It's sort of linked to some of the questions
01:09:39we had before on different variants of R1,
01:09:41removable roof option.
01:09:43There's
01:09:45no shortage of
01:09:47really interesting, exciting, great ideas.
01:09:49That's good.
01:09:51As we've just demonstrated.
01:09:53It's like a buffet table of things we'd love to do.
01:09:55I'm glad though, real quick,
01:09:57because I put on
01:09:59our Slack channel,
01:10:01I was like, God, I hope
01:10:03the R3X has 850, after
01:10:05driving this try.
01:10:07Our cynical staff,
01:10:09why not 8500? I was like, yeah,
01:10:11why not 8500? I love that you guys
01:10:13embrace extreme stuff.
01:10:15I want lower cost.
01:10:17Very specifically the things we do.
01:10:19In the case of R1,
01:10:21it's our flagship product.
01:10:23You're driving a tri,
01:10:25it's quicker than the original quad.
01:10:27The next generation quad is
01:10:29just so
01:10:31incredibly over the top
01:10:33and wonderful. It's great for building
01:10:35brand. Do you need a vehicle that can go 0-60
01:10:37in under 2.5 seconds? It runs a quarter
01:10:39mile in 10.5 seconds.
01:10:41It's faster than a McLaren F1,
01:10:43a Ferrari Enzo.
01:10:45You need a 911 to sell McLarens.
01:10:47It's great for the brand.
01:10:49In terms of getting to the lower
01:10:51cost, that's why I keep coming back to it,
01:10:53R2 is the core focus of the business.
01:10:55A cheaper R1
01:10:57is not going to lower the price
01:10:59down into the
01:11:01sub 45,000 R range, but R2
01:11:03does.
01:11:05Here's a good one. Sam Weissman,
01:11:07when can I put in a reservation for an
01:11:09R3X? Good question.
01:11:11Not yet.
01:11:15Real quick.
01:11:17R2 timing.
01:11:19You guys must be getting closer.
01:11:21Are we 12 months out?
01:11:23Are we 15 months out?
01:11:25It hasn't changed
01:11:27the first half of 2026.
01:11:33I wish it was today.
01:11:35I'm sure you do.
01:11:37I'm convinced you do.
01:11:39You brought it up.
01:11:41Why can't
01:11:43interested parties put down
01:11:45a reservation on R3X?
01:11:49By the way, we debate this internally as well.
01:11:53One of the learnings with launching
01:11:55R1, one of the things we did that made it
01:11:57very hard for us, and of course there was compounding
01:11:59factors that weren't planned, but we launched
01:12:01R1T, R1S, and a commercial van
01:12:03all within the same
01:12:05six month window. It was our
01:12:07first product, and our
01:12:09second product, and our third product all at once. We had three
01:12:11supply chains we were ramping. Then we had a supply
01:12:13chain crisis in 2022.
01:12:15Just the complexity of
01:12:17it's as if you stuffed a whole hamburger
01:12:19in your mouth and you had to try to swallow it.
01:12:23It would have been easier to break it into
01:12:25multiple bites.
01:12:27With this platform, we've said we're going to
01:12:29launch R2 first. We're going to let that be a clean
01:12:31launch. We're going to allow ourselves to
01:12:33make sure it very rapidly
01:12:35gets to ramp and
01:12:37profitability. Then R3
01:12:39comes in. Because of that, it
01:12:41means R3 is not going to launch at the same time as
01:12:43R2. One of the learnings
01:12:45on R1, which we
01:12:47and I've talked about this before,
01:12:49we got it wrong. It's
01:12:51nearly impossible to get it right when you have a really large
01:12:53backlog of demand.
01:12:55If you put an order in,
01:12:57that's your mental clock for saying, I have an order
01:12:59in. You get
01:13:01a little anxious saying, why don't I have it yet?
01:13:03Then we start building cars. You create angry
01:13:05people. Then you start building cars and everyone
01:13:07is like, I have an order, why don't I get it today?
01:13:09You can't press a button and have 200,000
01:13:11cars immediately produced.
01:13:13We said, let's
01:13:15shorten the amount of time from placement of order
01:13:17to deliver a vehicle
01:13:19by just as we're staggering the
01:13:21launch of vehicles, let's stagger the beginning
01:13:23of essentially the line
01:13:25formation, the queue formation
01:13:27for R3. Let's reduce the
01:13:29potential of making people upset.
01:13:31I get notes from people, I waited
01:13:331,133
01:13:35days for my R1.
01:13:37I'm talking to the guy right now.
01:13:39That doesn't feel great.
01:13:41Why the electric door handles from
01:13:43Have You Met, Seen? I'm worried about
01:13:45safety.
01:13:47R2, R3
01:13:49moved to an electronic
01:13:51handle.
01:13:53There's a number of
01:13:55reasons. One is it simplifies the architecture,
01:13:57but it also allows it to be software defined.
01:13:59One of the things we like that we don't
01:14:01have in the Gen 1 is the child
01:14:03locks on the doors are now
01:14:05much easier to execute.
01:14:07It's purely software.
01:14:09Like the window locks.
01:14:11Very similar to window locks.
01:14:13Is the R2 going to
01:14:15have a glass roof, says Keith Tussey.
01:14:17It does.
01:14:19Oh, this is a great one.
01:14:21GMT
01:14:23Minute 5, what is your opinion of
01:14:25subscribing to hardware that's installed in the
01:14:27vehicle? Subscription features
01:14:29in the car, not third party
01:14:31like Spotify, which you pay for.
01:14:33Seat massage.
01:14:35Heated seats.
01:14:37The BMW heated seat fiasco.
01:14:41The way we think about it
01:14:43philosophically is if we're going to charge
01:14:45incrementally for a feature that's software based,
01:14:47it should have
01:14:49incremental cost to us.
01:14:51If it's just us, like a
01:14:53heated seat, like a binary turning it on or turning it off,
01:14:55that feels
01:14:57disingenuous to a customer.
01:15:01The most extreme example of that is
01:15:03as you move into higher levels
01:15:05of autonomy, there's a very
01:15:07high set of costs associated with developing
01:15:09those higher levels of autonomy.
01:15:11That's where we see the
01:15:13most pricing potential. We think customers are actually
01:15:15pretty smart at this.
01:15:17Whether they fully understand
01:15:19exactly what the costs are
01:15:21or not, they can tell if you're
01:15:23charging for something you shouldn't be charging for,
01:15:25like a heated seat turning on or off,
01:15:27or charging something that is appropriately
01:15:29and has ongoing engineering cost
01:15:31or
01:15:33data cost or something associated
01:15:35with it that warrants some incremental
01:15:37charge. That's the framework
01:15:39we look at it through.
01:15:43I think the other
01:15:45question that underlines that
01:15:47is how is the
01:15:49customer model
01:15:51going to evolve? Are we going to move to a world where
01:15:53more and more features are
01:15:55purchased through recurring subscriptions
01:15:57or do people prefer to pay up front?
01:15:59What we've seen is generally
01:16:01people still like to
01:16:03pay for it all up front, put it into the financing
01:16:05charge, and don't nickel and dime me on
01:16:07a bunch of different things.
01:16:09I think the challenge on a
01:16:11few areas is going to be
01:16:13where there's high variable costs
01:16:15associated with it. Charging of
01:16:17vehicles, that's something
01:16:19we're very comfortable with. When you charge the vehicle, you pay
01:16:21for it. Autonomy
01:16:23is one that there's levels of comfort
01:16:25growing. We're not currently charging for autonomy,
01:16:27but eventually, as we move to higher levels,
01:16:29we anticipate doing so.
01:16:31Outside of that, we're
01:16:33in date, of course, because there's real variable
01:16:35costs associated with it. Outside of those,
01:16:37I think there's massive
01:16:41inflation of
01:16:43what the auto industry has
01:16:45projected as revenue associated
01:16:47with it. I think it's easy to
01:16:49do a spreadsheet and be like, I'm going to charge everybody
01:16:51$1,000 a year for software services,
01:16:53but customers are just going to reject it.
01:16:55I can tell you, because Motor Trend
01:16:57has been part of a streaming network,
01:16:59a subscriber video on demand.
01:17:01We can tell you a lot about that and
01:17:03where it goes wrong.
01:17:05The other thing to keep in mind is that
01:17:09competitive forces
01:17:11naturally drive things
01:17:13as methodically
01:17:15to some fraction
01:17:17of their... some element
01:17:19that relates to their cost.
01:17:21If something doesn't have a true cost associated
01:17:23with it, and if I'm competing with you to sell,
01:17:25my marginal cost
01:17:27to give the feature away
01:17:29is zero.
01:17:31Our belief is
01:17:33that competitive forces will drive
01:17:35the non-cost
01:17:37items in the vehicle to zero because
01:17:39you'll want to generate incremental features.
01:17:41Whereas the things that
01:17:43have cost, the asymptotic
01:17:45end is going to be cost
01:17:47plus some margin.
01:17:49You offer these features
01:17:51today that become expected.
01:17:53Software is
01:17:55known for this.
01:17:57Ignore vehicles. A lot of the things
01:17:59we paid for early days
01:18:01became free over time.
01:18:03We used to pay for
01:18:05what's your search engine?
01:18:07Or a spreadsheet.
01:18:09These things just become free, and they make money in other ways.
01:18:11I was going to say, also, part of what I think has really
01:18:13made Tesla owners love their Teslas and Rivian
01:18:15owners love their Rivians is you wake up
01:18:17and your car is better. It's just such a
01:18:19good feeling rather than
01:18:21like, I'm paying on this car, and every day
01:18:23I just know it's getting worse. It's like, my car
01:18:25is getting better. I remember famously
01:18:27the one I always talk about with
01:18:29Tesla was when
01:18:31geofencing suddenly appeared
01:18:33on the Model S.
01:18:35You had to raise the suspension
01:18:37every time you got to the driveway. Suddenly, it did it
01:18:39automatically. It's like, whoa!
01:18:41And then with...
01:18:43Well, a little bit less.
01:18:45With my truck,
01:18:47it had 270 miles of range.
01:18:49I went to bed, and in the morning, it had 285.
01:18:51That was pretty cool.
01:18:53Then camp mode, and the Halloween modes,
01:18:55and all these things.
01:18:57I still remember my kid
01:18:59freaking out about the zombies walking around.
01:19:01Halloween mode this year is going to be...
01:19:03It better be.
01:19:05Take note.
01:19:07I just did a review of all the costumes for this week.
01:19:09It's breaking news.
01:19:11We only got five left.
01:19:13This is probably Johnny masquerading as R1T638.
01:19:15Will Rivian
01:19:17bring back Compass Yellow?
01:19:19PTS, come on.
01:19:21Not planning on it.
01:19:23We'll pay for it.
01:19:25I'd say we have new colors coming.
01:19:27Colors like Compass Yellow,
01:19:29they're
01:19:31understandably lower take rate colors.
01:19:33We actually see those
01:19:35as opportunities to have a really fun color,
01:19:37make it for some time.
01:19:39The take rate is going to be a few percent.
01:19:41But then use that color slot, if you will,
01:19:43for something else.
01:19:45Keep it spicy.
01:19:47We have some really cool colors that are coming that will replace Compass Yellow.
01:19:49When you have to upgrade to your Gen 2,
01:19:51you'll have a cool choice.
01:19:53It might be R3X.
01:19:55I'm just letting you know. We're really happy with that truck.
01:19:57Jalopy Jockey.
01:19:59When will Rivians get bi-directional charging?
01:20:01Oh, yeah.
01:20:03That's a nuanced question.
01:20:05It is.
01:20:07There's a lot of misinformation.
01:20:09I'm going to take a minute to help
01:20:11clear this up.
01:20:13There is bi-directional charging
01:20:15where the conversion of AC
01:20:17to DC happens in the vehicle.
01:20:19When you plug your car
01:20:21into your house, AC is coming from
01:20:23your house, it gets converted to DC,
01:20:25the DC goes into the vehicle.
01:20:27But it's not as if
01:20:29when you say bi-directional charging is on, you just plug
01:20:31the car into the house and it works.
01:20:33You need a box that goes to the house
01:20:35that allows...
01:20:37That's a transfer switch.
01:20:39It's not as the graphic of
01:20:41my car just plugs in and everything works.
01:20:43The Gen 1
01:20:45vehicles and the Gen 2 R1 vehicles
01:20:47already allow for bi-directional DC
01:20:49charging, meaning DC can go from the vehicle
01:20:51to the house, the house has a box
01:20:53that converts the DC to AC, and we're
01:20:55developing a product.
01:20:57We've talked about it a few times. We haven't really made
01:20:59a big deal of it, but soon we'll talk more about it.
01:21:01That's a bi-directional DC
01:21:03charger. It's a DC charger that sits in your house
01:21:05because it's DC at a higher rate,
01:21:07so it charges at
01:21:09more than 20 kilowatts
01:21:11into the vehicle. It can also send 20 kilowatts
01:21:13into the house.
01:21:15But that's a DC,
01:21:17that's an off-board charger.
01:21:19R2 will have an on-board
01:21:21bi-directional AC charger, but for
01:21:23packaging reasons, you don't want to put a 24 kilowatt
01:21:25on-board charger in the vehicle
01:21:27so it's more like 10, 11 kilowatts,
01:21:29which is why you see most vehicles have
01:21:31for their on-board charger something on
01:21:33the order of 10 kilowatts, and it's just cost.
01:21:35It's just how big of an AC to DC
01:21:37converter do you want in the vehicle.
01:21:39When we launch the
01:21:41bi-directional DC charger as a product,
01:21:43which will work for Rivians and non-Rivians alike,
01:21:45every Rivian we've ever built
01:21:47will be capable of doing bi-directional charging.
01:21:49But it requires
01:21:51the bi-di. Great answer.
01:21:53Great question. Thank you for dropping that in.
01:21:55We just had some GM Energy
01:21:57show
01:21:59their bi-di.
01:22:01Bi-directional DC.
01:22:03Actually,
01:22:05our power electronics team
01:22:07is based in Torrance, and we're developing
01:22:09a bi-directional charger there.
01:22:11Great. Awesome.
01:22:13S404 wants to know
01:22:15when Rivians will be
01:22:17in Saudi or the UAE?
01:22:19And then just other markets.
01:22:21It's funny you ask about Saudi and UAE.
01:22:23There's a ton of Rivians that are already over there.
01:22:25The gray market, what do you call it?
01:22:27Yeah.
01:22:29I think they have some money there.
01:22:31I don't know. They can ship them.
01:22:33It's such a great signal to us that we need
01:22:35to turn on that market officially because there's
01:22:37hundreds of vehicles that somebody's purchased
01:22:39here, like put on a plane
01:22:41or maybe on a boat, but often
01:22:43a plane, which is not a cheap plane to get.
01:22:45And their own plane. And flown them over
01:22:47with no service infrastructure or service
01:22:49support. The nav doesn't work out there, right?
01:22:51There's no way. It's not set up for it.
01:22:53But the fact
01:22:55that customers want the vehicle that badly,
01:22:57that kind of hunterism is really encouraging to us.
01:22:59I mean, there's a huge, as you know,
01:23:01there's a huge off-road culture there.
01:23:03So anything that's a great off-roader, they want.
01:23:05Yeah, especially the combination of off-road
01:23:07and premium. And big power.
01:23:09Yeah. Driving experience and nice interior.
01:23:11So coming soon?
01:23:13Something we're working on, yeah.
01:23:15Nice. Oh, good question.
01:23:17All right, we're in the final three.
01:23:19We'll ask him anyways.
01:23:21What's the hardest part about not having
01:23:23dealerships?
01:23:25Do you have experience centers?
01:23:27To be fair, that was a longer question, saying
01:23:29what was your decision-making process about going
01:23:31direct-to-consumer, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
01:23:33But then I thought, you know.
01:23:37Boy, that's a lot there.
01:23:39So the challenge with a dealer
01:23:41model is, of course, you don't control
01:23:43the dealer. So the messaging can be
01:23:45inconsistent. Pricing can be inconsistent.
01:23:47You're generally paying between
01:23:4910% and 15% of the
01:23:51price to the dealer to sell
01:23:53for you. So it's your outsource sales.
01:23:55That's a pretty heavy
01:23:57margin stack.
01:23:59We think of it as a significant
01:24:01structural cost disadvantage to sell
01:24:03indirect, to pay someone
01:24:05essentially to sell for you.
01:24:07But aside from all that,
01:24:09it misses the opportunity
01:24:11to build different go-to-market
01:24:13strategies. And
01:24:15if you'd asked me this question
01:24:17in 2021 in the heart of COVID,
01:24:19we were of the view that
01:24:21we could get away with very, very little
01:24:23physical infrastructure. And we've now
01:24:25come to the conclusion we need some,
01:24:27but certainly
01:24:29not near the level of physical
01:24:31infrastructure that exists for traditional
01:24:33large volume brands. So you take
01:24:35some of the large U.S.
01:24:37manufacturers. They have 4,000 or 5,000
01:24:39sales locations.
01:24:41And that's an unnecessarily
01:24:43large network of brick-and-mortar
01:24:45op-ecs
01:24:47that doesn't show up necessarily
01:24:49directly on the P&L of the manufacturer,
01:24:51but shows up indirectly in the form of this
01:24:53thick cost associated with that sales
01:24:55process. So we think our
01:24:57delivery model, our sales model, costs
01:24:59about one-tenth that of
01:25:01the dealer model.
01:25:03All that said, most importantly is we get to control
01:25:05the message. And when you go through the dealer
01:25:07infrastructure, you do
01:25:09have the challenges of working
01:25:11for others.
01:25:13Real quick, that's also part of why there's no
01:25:15CarPlay, is you control the look and
01:25:17feel of the ribbon at all times.
01:25:19It's not like Apple decides, ah, new color scheme.
01:25:21Now, the advantage if you were to sign
01:25:23up a big dealer group is you have a lot of
01:25:25sales locations very quickly.
01:25:27And so it's a lower capex way
01:25:29to launch, but long-term
01:25:31it's a
01:25:33meaningful
01:25:35structural cost disadvantage.
01:25:37Okay.
01:25:39Skip the Florida
01:25:41one. Yeah? Okay. All right, so we'll go
01:25:43to the last question.
01:25:45Did Tesla make things
01:25:47easier or harder for
01:25:49Rivian? I think
01:25:51definitely easier. I mean, Tesla's
01:25:55whether you, regardless
01:25:57of whether you like Tesla products or not,
01:25:59one has to
01:26:01give them full credit for helping to make
01:26:03electric vehicles cool. A hundred percent.
01:26:05You know, it's hard to remember
01:26:07maybe now, but in
01:26:092007, 2008
01:26:11people thought of electric
01:26:13vehicles, they conjured up the idea of like a golf
01:26:15cart. Yep. And Tesla
01:26:17did an amazing job at disproving
01:26:19that and showing they can be really fun.
01:26:21I've got it, it was probably 2013
01:26:23or 14, but it was after we had named the Model
01:26:25S car of the year. Yeah, yeah. I was at a
01:26:27round table with Wolfgang Dürrheimer
01:26:29who at the time was the CEO of Audi
01:26:31and he said like, yeah, I think the Model
01:26:33S is pretty cool. And I
01:26:35put it in the write-up I did
01:26:37and that like got him in trouble. That was
01:26:39like, you know, pre-diesel
01:26:41gate, but that was like not cool
01:26:43at Volkswagen at the time to say that.
01:26:45You know, and
01:26:47yeah, so it's definitely Tesla.
01:26:49A hundred percent. Okay.
01:26:51Made it easier. Well, I mean
01:26:53I can't believe it, we actually made it through most.
01:26:55We covered almost everything I wanted
01:26:57to talk about. Well, actually there was one question in here
01:26:59because you are
01:27:01an admitted Porsche fan.
01:27:03Yeah. So...
01:27:05Everyone on this podcast eventually is a Porsche
01:27:07fan. Every car enthusiast
01:27:09has
01:27:11an affinity for Porsche. I tried not to be
01:27:13but yeah. And it's funny, every
01:27:15car company leader
01:27:17Oh yeah. They all
01:27:19have a soft spot in their heart for 911.
01:27:21They have a 911. They own one.
01:27:23I can give you a list of like
01:27:25board members, CEOs,
01:27:27heads of design that have
01:27:29showed me on their phone. Farley's got one.
01:27:31Ralf's got one. Ralf's is a secret.
01:27:33I didn't say Ralf, who?
01:27:35The other Ralf.
01:27:37SR20Hatchback asks
01:27:39what model Porsches do you like?
01:27:41Was there a specific Porsche that inspired
01:27:43the original Rivian
01:27:45sports car idea?
01:27:47I grew up
01:27:49in love
01:27:51with old classic Porsches
01:27:53and 356s
01:27:57worked on them
01:27:59and when you work on that type
01:28:01of vehicle, you end up working across a range
01:28:03of vehicles. I had a Porsche 914
01:28:05with 911 turbo
01:28:07suspension, brakes.
01:28:09The beautiful thing about those cars is the mounting points
01:28:11for a lot of this is all very similar.
01:28:13I have a 914. You do?
01:28:15I do. What do you have for an engine in it?
01:28:17It's being held hostage at the moment.
01:28:19It's a 1970.
01:28:21It's a 1.7.
01:28:23It's a long, slow restoration. A great project
01:28:25would be to put a
01:28:27two motor per axle system into
01:28:29a 914. Like a 500
01:28:31horsepower 914 would be pretty cool.
01:28:33With 1,800 pounds maybe?
01:28:35Actually, with the batteries.
01:28:37Yeah, but still at 2,500 pounds
01:28:39it would be... My friend
01:28:41just put a V8 Hayabusa motor
01:28:43into a 914.
01:28:45It's insane. It's like 300 horsepower
01:28:471,700 pounds.
01:28:49Undriveable might be the word.
01:28:51Yeah.
01:28:53This is a real question.
01:28:55Do you have a secret
01:28:57Porsche that you don't tell anybody about?
01:28:59No, I don't have a secret Porsche.
01:29:01It's true that in 2009
01:29:03when you were starting, we had a different name
01:29:05back then. Yeah, we had a few different
01:29:07iterations. The original thought was
01:29:09a sports car company.
01:29:11Not a...
01:29:13I guess not a surprising
01:29:15way to think about starting a business.
01:29:17To build the brand, launch something that's really
01:29:19exciting. This is what Tesla
01:29:21did very successfully with how
01:29:23they launched Roadster.
01:29:25We were working on a strategy that
01:29:27very much looked like that. Launch a sports car,
01:29:29build a brand, launch more mass market vehicles.
01:29:31We stopped that and
01:29:33completely pivoted off of that.
01:29:35Because of a bit of an aha
01:29:37realization for us, in some
01:29:39ways, just almost like accepting of
01:29:41what we sensed for a while.
01:29:43That strategy had already been done.
01:29:45That's what Tesla did.
01:29:47When we
01:29:49shelved that program and then began
01:29:51thinking about what we were going to build and what we were going to launch,
01:29:53that period
01:29:55of a year was one
01:29:57of the most important creative moments in Rivian's
01:29:59trajectory because we defined the brand
01:30:01that you now see, the product portfolio
01:30:03you're seeing.
01:30:05That was in 2010-11?
01:30:07That was like
01:30:092011-12.
01:30:11Okay.
01:30:13Yeah, it was
01:30:15definitely asking
01:30:17ourselves the question, what does the world
01:30:19need? How do we create a company that's
01:30:21of actual value
01:30:23in terms of product and in terms of pushing
01:30:25technology forward?
01:30:27Going with that, probably a pure
01:30:29sports car play is out of the question,
01:30:31but like, you know, Storado,
01:30:33911 Dakar, those are
01:30:35pretty fast and pretty off-roady.
01:30:37Like an R3X.
01:30:39Or like a 914
01:30:41with two motors in it.
01:30:43No roof.
01:30:47Do you have a sports car in you?
01:30:49Imagination candy.
01:30:51I think the R3X
01:30:53is the car that I would
01:30:55say is what I think will become
01:30:57our sports car. Of course, it's
01:30:59a four-door vehicle with five seats, but it's
01:31:01that with a tri-motor is
01:31:03hard to imagine a better
01:31:05combination because it's going to be great on-road.
01:31:07I just
01:31:09took that tri-motor
01:31:11pre-production that Ed and I drove this week,
01:31:13I just took it up Angelus Crest
01:31:15and like, I did a
01:31:17600-mile road trip in it and I was like,
01:31:19yeah, my truck's just, I don't have
01:31:21to worry about it. Up Angelus Crest, I was like,
01:31:23damn it. It's really fun.
01:31:25Imagine that propulsion
01:31:27package in something that's much smaller.
01:31:29Yeah, great. Let's go.
01:31:33Well, we're very generous.
01:31:35We got extra time with you.
01:31:37We'd love to have you back.
01:31:39Maybe closer to R2,
01:31:41R3, R3X launch.
01:31:43Anytime, you're welcome. Thank you
01:31:45so much. Thanks for having me. This was great.
01:31:47Enjoyed it. Thank you.
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