Cybertruck Engineering Innovations

Ghost Ryder

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 19, 2021
Threads
25
Messages
1,900
Reaction score
2,376
Location
LA
Vehicles
Tesla MYP, 22 GTPE
Country flag
I hate they made it look like crap
definitely not my cup of tea, but the question is will it sell better, than a regular looking truck? Lightning and Silveratdos are not doing well. Personally I would prefer a mini-Tesla Semi. But you can't make that out of SS.

I appreciate that they are pushing the envelope. If it works, great, if not then they'll learn from the innovations and move on to the next project. They're big enough to have a misstep here and there.
Sponsored

 

nvabill

Well-Known Member
First Name
Bill
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Threads
57
Messages
2,375
Reaction score
1,907
Location
Virginia Beach, Va.
Vehicles
F-150, '22 California Route 1
Country flag
So how do we fix this?

Do we say Tesla's Cybertruck is the first to offer drive-by-wire with no backup plan?

After all, the citation does say, "Steer-by-wire without the use of a steering column was first offered in a production car with the Nissan Infiniti Q50 in 2013."
Does anything really need to be fixed? Was this a Tesla claim or one of over zealous automotive journalists? If the latter and not the former you will drive yourself crazy on their mistakes and bold claims! I have an aviation background and long ago gave up on journalist knowing anything about what they profess to have such a good knowledge for! ?
 

GreaseMonkey

Well-Known Member
First Name
Steve
Joined
Oct 3, 2021
Threads
21
Messages
3,233
Reaction score
5,173
Location
Chicago, IL
Vehicles
24 Mach-E GT
Country flag
I hate they made it look like crap
Offered in white and black wrap for $6,500. I think it looks a lot better in this color.

Ford Mustang Mach-E Cybertruck Engineering Innovations IMG_2659
 

Schmedlack

Well-Known Member
First Name
Joe
Joined
Oct 22, 2020
Threads
0
Messages
282
Reaction score
333
Location
Dundalk, MD
Vehicles
2014 Ford Escape S 1925 Ford Tudor (2-door)
Occupation
Trader
My guess is they might have dual redundant 48V systems in the car (dual DC/DC converters). Probably one to each motor. So if one 48V system had a fault, the other would remain. Then there’s also the 48V battery, which should be enough to pull over. I would assume they’ve thought of many possible failure scenarios. With a distributed electrical system, it might be almost impossible to have complete electrical failure. Unlike most other cars which still use a single point electrical distribution box.
The 48V system is almost OK. There needs to be some provision for owners to use traditional 12VDC accessories. Truck guys need their radar detectors, CB Radios, winches, and snowplows. If you can't install these and other traditional equipment, then it ain't a real truck.
 

nvabill

Well-Known Member
First Name
Bill
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Threads
57
Messages
2,375
Reaction score
1,907
Location
Virginia Beach, Va.
Vehicles
F-150, '22 California Route 1
Country flag
The 48V system is almost OK. There needs to be some provision for owners to use traditional 12VDC accessories. Truck guys need their radar detectors, CB Radios, winches, and snowplows. If you can't install these and other traditional equipment, then it ain't a real truck.
lol I’m sure you will be able to use those things in the truck!
 


Unobtanium

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 22, 2023
Threads
0
Messages
121
Reaction score
56
Location
Midwest
Vehicles
Kia EV6 GT
Country flag
I agree with the steer by wire skeptics. I rather like the variable ratio rack and pinion in my GT, thanks.
 

voxel

Well-Known Member
First Name
Nelson
Joined
Sep 6, 2021
Threads
27
Messages
2,032
Reaction score
1,858
Location
Altamonte Springs, FL
Vehicles
22 Mach-E 4X, 23 GC Limited
Occupation
Software Engineer
Country flag
  • Distributed CAN bus architecture - Everything in the vehicle supposedly runs off gigabit CAN bus network, down to individual lights. This means most wire runs are extremely short and only involve a pair of power and CAN bus wires, eliminating a lot of wiring. This is in contrast to the traditional method where a body control module located in one spot has dozens of wires that run to all parts of the vehicle from it. No more thick harnesses. This is what Jim Farley was talking about when eliminating wiring waste from vehicles. Like other current Tesla models, the Cybertruck also completely eliminates the need for fuses through intelligent power control, which is still unique in the industry.
Is this new to the CT? I thought Tesla vehicles always had very few modules compared to dozens up dozens of modules (50?) in traditional legacy cars (since carmakers basically duct tape different components together).



  • 400V/800V switchable pack architecture - The 123 kWh battery pack normally runs in 800V mode for driving, which makes it incompatible with existing Superchargers that only go to 450V. So Tesla invented a switch that splits the pack in two, making two 400V halves in parallel while charging. This works opposite of the Hummer EV which is normally 400V and switches to 800V for charging. It's unknown whether the Cybertruck will allow 800V CCS charging, if so it could break a charging speed record. Here's the switch:
Interesting. They didn't go with the Hyundai approach. Not sure this device will magically make supercharging faster (doubt it... cables are amp-limited and stall is still 400V).
 

voxel

Well-Known Member
First Name
Nelson
Joined
Sep 6, 2021
Threads
27
Messages
2,032
Reaction score
1,858
Location
Altamonte Springs, FL
Vehicles
22 Mach-E 4X, 23 GC Limited
Occupation
Software Engineer
Country flag
I agree with the steer by wire skeptics. I rather like the variable ratio rack and pinion in my GT, thanks.
Tesla will try stuff - like the yoke and removing signal stalk and shifter stalk... then revert back. I prefer the steering wheel and signal stalk. The shifter stalk is useless... the screen version on the S and X work great. Sadly Telsa is sticking with no signal stalk.
 
OP
OP
Mach-Lee

Mach-Lee

Well-Known Member
First Name
Lee
Joined
Jul 16, 2021
Threads
262
Messages
11,344
Reaction score
24,963
Location
Wisconsin
Vehicles
2022 Mach-E Premium AWD
Occupation
Sci/Eng
Country flag
Is this new to the CT? I thought Tesla vehicles always had very few modules compared to dozens up dozens of modules (50?) in traditional legacy cars (since carmakers basically duct tape different components together).
I don't think it's completely new, but they are taking it further with more individually addressed CAN bus nodes. And faster speeds.
 

AZBill

Well-Known Member
First Name
Bill
Joined
May 26, 2021
Threads
12
Messages
1,987
Reaction score
2,314
Location
Arizona
Vehicles
MME CA Route 1, Hummer EV SUT, Escalade IQ
Occupation
Retired
Country flag
The 48V system is almost OK. There needs to be some provision for owners to use traditional 12VDC accessories. Truck guys need their radar detectors, CB Radios, winches, and snowplows. If you can't install these and other traditional equipment, then it ain't a real truck.
The C8 Corvette uses 48V and they provide a dc-dc converter to 12v, for accessories.
 

nvabill

Well-Known Member
First Name
Bill
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Threads
57
Messages
2,375
Reaction score
1,907
Location
Virginia Beach, Va.
Vehicles
F-150, '22 California Route 1
Country flag
The C8 Corvette uses 48V and they provide a dc-dc converter to 12v, for accessories.
Are you sure about that? Without looking into this too deeply I found the OEM battery for the 2023 C8 Corvette is;
ACDELCO GOLD 30 MONTH WARRANTY BCI GROUP 48 BATTERY
GM Part # 88866271
ACDelco Part # 48G at 12 volt.
Also the alternator and starter both are listed as 12 volts?
Ford Mustang Mach-E Cybertruck Engineering Innovations 640X640
 
Last edited:

Ghost Ryder

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 19, 2021
Threads
25
Messages
1,900
Reaction score
2,376
Location
LA
Vehicles
Tesla MYP, 22 GTPE
Country flag
Tesla will try stuff - like the yoke and removing signal stalk and shifter stalk... then revert back. I prefer the steering wheel and signal stalk. The shifter stalk is useless... the screen version on the S and X work great. Sadly Telsa is sticking with no signal stalk.
Good news is that there is an aftermarket stalk that is quick and easy to install if you want one.
 

RonTCat

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ron
Joined
Jul 21, 2020
Threads
27
Messages
1,135
Reaction score
2,979
Location
USA
Vehicles
Mach-E wannabuy
Country flag
Absolutely. Tesla supposedly sent all OEMs and suppliers a PDF titled "How to engineer a 48V vehicle" which contains discussions about what does and doesn't work and what pitfalls Tesla ran into while designing 48V parts. Frankly, I am surprised Tesla doesn't just become a parts supplier for 48V components.
In reply, the OEMs prolly sent Tesla their manual from 2000 about how to do a 48V system, lol.
 
 







Top