Home » Tesla Cybercab: This Is It

Tesla Cybercab: This Is It

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Tesla went big on its Cybercab announcement event on Thursday night. It’s been a long-awaited moment, as the EV automaker has been championing autonomous taxis as the ultimate goal of its self-driving technology for years now.

The company’s well-attended livestream finally gave us a real look at the vehicle that’s supposed to herald the future of transportation—in Tesla’s vision, at least. The company revealed a sleek, futuristic-looking vehicle, as you might expect—but with ultimately less daring aesthetics than the polarizing Cybertruck.

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That’s not to say that Tesla gave us something conventional. Far from it, in fact. It’s a two-seater, a coupe, and it’s got scissor doors paired with a drastically-sloping roofline. It’s like no other cab you’ve ever hailed before.

They call it a Robotaxi in the Tweet? Sure. They called it a Cybercab everywhere else.

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Tesla headlines the Cybercab as “faster” and “more affordable.” Why? Well, you won’t be paying a human driver to sit in the seat to haul you around. Beyond that, it notes that the design relies solely on cameras for its self-driving ability. Tesla has long eschewed the use of more expensive radar or LIDAR sensors in its autonomous driving program.

Tesla also states you’ll be able to “call it once” and keep the vehicle “as long as needed,” whether you’re taking short trips or using it all day. Contrast that to a contemporary rideshare or taxi, which is only yours for as long as your trip lasts.

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Two doors, two seats. Weird for a cab.

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Light bars and flat profile wheels—1980s sci-fi was a good predictor of the future. Or did the designers just do what was expected of them?

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Once again, Tesla has flirted with bold price claims. We’re told the Cybercab will be cost less than $30,000 for purchase, and that sales will be open to private individuals, not just fleet buyers. They’re selling the concept of a cheap robot car that hauls you hither and thither, with the added appeal of the aforementioned scissor doors.

The elephant in the room, of course, is a big one. At this stage, Tesla doesn’t have the technology for self-driving taxis that operate without human supervision. The livestream addressed this, with CEO Elon Musk stating he predicts non-supervised self-driving will be available “before 2027.” This would apply not just to the Cybercab, but to the rest of the Tesla fleet as well—Musk noted that the Model 3, Model Y, Cybertruck, et al, will all get Level 4 or Level 5 self-driving capability. Basically, that’s where the car can drive itself under the vast majority of situations without any human supervision or interaction. You know, what we all think self-driving means.

Notably, the livestream mentioned that the Cybercab will have inductive charging capability. This comes as little surprise, as Tesla’s research activity in this area has been public knowledge for some time. As we reported last month, Tesla has filed four patents regarding wireless EV charging technology. Patent drawings and other graphics from the company suggest charging is achieved via a floor-mounted rectangular pad that sits beneath the vehicle. We’ve also seen that provisions appear to have been made on existing Tesla vehicle batteries for this purpose, with connectors for the technology already apparently included on some batteries.

This move makes sense. While it’s possible to build a robotic apparatus to plug in a wired charger to an EV, a wireless charger is altogether simpler to implement. One merely needs to drive the vehicle over the pad to start charging. This would be far simpler and easier for an autonomous vehicle, and require far less maintenance over time.

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We saw a hint at Tesla’s wireless charging tech in a 2023 Investor Day event.

Autonomous cabs promise a multitude of benefits. Namely, there’s no need for a human driver to spend their time schlepping other humans around. This eliminates labor costs if you’re hiring a cab, for example, and also avoids issues like fatigue. Alternatively, if it’s your Cybercab you’re talking about, full autonomy avoids the issue of parking. You can have your vehicle drop you off at your destination, and then it can drive away and come pick you up later. There’s no need to find convenient parking near your destination. You can also work during your commute, which theoretically could let you spend more time at home with your loved ones, plus in theory you could rent out your car to someone without worrying about them driving like crazed loons.

That’s all very fun, of course, it’s just not real. Not quite yet, anyway. But Tesla still firmly believes that it can make it happen, and the Cybercab is the vehicle apparently optimized to operate in this way.

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No rear window, because Tesla ain’t looking back.

Tesla showed approximately 50 of the autonomous vehicles at the event.

What’s weird is that Tesla’s prime autonomous cab would only have two seats and an obviously limited cargo capacity. On the one hand, a great many cab trips do carry just one or two people. On the other hand, it’s a pain enough today when you’re travelling with five friends and have to try and score yourself one of the big Ubers. It would be particularly annoying if this happened every time you were travelling as a trio. In any case, Tesla dodged around this to a degree by simultaneously announcing the Robovan, which apparently has 20 seats and far more space.

Ultimately, the Cybercab is kind of a surprise. That’s what Tesla does well, of course. A regular automaker might have showed us another pod concept with comfy chairs and lots of room inside, but that wouldn’t fit the Tesla aesthetic. What they showed us was something radical, shocking, and questionably practical. Given the way the Cybertruck lit up the discourse, both for better and worse, it seems the Cybercab is following a similar formula. Tesla is as Tesla does, that much is certain.

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Image credits: Tesla

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Geoff Buchholz
Geoff Buchholz
1 month ago

It’s all provocative and designed to get clicks, but the giant wad of boilerplate on the slide at the beginning of the presentation (designed to head off a future SEC investigation) means every single claim should be followed by “… or, y’know, not.”

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
1 month ago

That’s stupid, a sports coupe taxi, when every other specialized taxi vehicle is a boxy shape designed to seat 4 with luggage and many use sliding doors. Here we have 2 seat pod, and Adam Something has great takedowns of pods, with completely unnecessary scissor doors like a bloated Toyota Paseo.

Adam Schluck
Adam Schluck
1 month ago
Reply to  Slow Joe Crow

Yes, because my biggest fear with using a taxi today is that the vehicle just isn’t sexy enough…

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
1 month ago

If I can make 30 grand a year robo-taxiing with a Tesla 3/Y as Musk promised years ago, why would I want one of these without the full drivable car functionality?

Eva
Eva
1 month ago

“You can also work during your commute, which theoretically could let you spend more time at home with your loved ones”

I think its far more likely that if this pie in the sky design did become the norm you would be expected to be working during your commute in addition to your regular work hours. Certainly, the easy reachability of the modern worker has done a lot to erase the boundary between on and off the clock thus far.

Fuzz
Fuzz
1 month ago

It looks like it’s designed for aerodynamics, not ease of use and comfort. Which is weird, considering 95% of it’s miles will be at speeds where good aero doesn’t really help much. Baffling.

JT4Ever
JT4Ever
1 month ago

The angles make it a bit hard to tell, but in a typical taxi location, maybe an airport dropoff area, don’t those doors seem like they will take up a huge amount of airspace or crash into something?

Nick Fortes
Nick Fortes
1 month ago

dum.

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
1 month ago

Just as Boring Company solved the SoCal traffic congestion problems, and Tesla Solar Roof dominates the house roofing market, the CyberCab will dominate the ride share business.

Church
Church
1 month ago
Reply to  Speedway Sammy

Proven track record of success*.

*Success is defined by making stock price go up, not producing actual value.

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
1 month ago
Reply to  Church

Any rube can fraud for a few years but frauding for decades is the mark of a true Master!

Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
1 month ago
Reply to  Church

That does put him ahead of Fisker, who just keeps going bankrupt, but Musk seems to grab a good idea, and then use it as a springboard for bad ideas.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago

Looks like a VW XL1.

Next Friday
Next Friday
1 month ago

I’d hate to have this as my only car if I ever needed to evacuate due to a wildfire, hurricane, tornado, etc. Suppose they’ll come up with a “get me the hell out of here” mode?

BolognaBurrito
BolognaBurrito
1 month ago

What a dumb name. Is everything going to be Cyber____ now, like things were i____ (iRiver, iPod, iRobot…). They are both garbage names.

Droid
Droid
1 month ago
Reply to  BolognaBurrito

i thought the branding in musk’s imagineland was “x”:
tesla model “x”;
space-x;
“x”, the social media formerly known as prince;
x-wife;
etc….or should that be xcetera?

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 month ago
Reply to  Droid

Coming soon: CyberXXX Robot

Dottie
Dottie
1 month ago

Elon and Autonomous vehicle shenanigans aside, I welcome a compact 2 door EV. We need more options like this.

Although to be honest the Cybercab should really be that big van scaled down to typical minivan size imo. Way better for ingress and egress and easier to accommodate people with disabilities and/or those holding a million groceries in one arm because they refuse to take two trips.

RataTejas
RataTejas
1 month ago
Reply to  Dottie

Canoo was the perfect cybercab

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
1 month ago

So it’s a not-terrible-looking sporty coupe, that you can’t drive yourself because it has no steering wheel, marketed as a cab, but it can’t really do that because it’s a sporty coupe. Just when you think Tesla couldn’t miss the point by any wider margin…

NosrednaNod
NosrednaNod
1 month ago
Reply to  Mark Tucker

If it doesn’t need a steering wheel, why does it need a screen?

Mark Tucker
Mark Tucker
1 month ago
Reply to  NosrednaNod

Advertising space.

Highland Green Miata
Highland Green Miata
1 month ago

I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that the problem with this idea is that in a human driven cab, there’s someone there to notice when the passenger area has trash and other….substances in it. No such luck here. The ick factor will be a real issue depending on how long they expect these to be on the road at a time.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

The part they don’t show is where the cab gasses passengers into unconsciousness and revives them on arrival thereby limiting the amount of damage humans can do during transit.

Adam Schluck
Adam Schluck
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Um, tell me you find that a feature and not a flaw. Transportation and a nap.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

I shudder to think about a future where if we want to get around we’ll all hail a Tesla. Hail Tesla, Hail Tesla! Has a certain ring to it.

EPGCivic
EPGCivic
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Get over yourself.

Seattle-Nerd
Seattle-Nerd
1 month ago
Reply to  EPGCivic

cmon man, no need for that response to a joke

EPGCivic
EPGCivic
1 month ago
Reply to  Seattle-Nerd

If I wanted that particular rhetoric in the comments I’d read Jalopnik.

BeemerBob
BeemerBob
1 month ago

For those who would benefit from a robo-taxi,(senior citizens, people with mobility issues), how the heck are they supposed to get in that thing? 1 person does not need a bus size contraption to take them to the doctor’s office or to Walmart.

My Goat Ate My Homework
My Goat Ate My Homework
1 month ago

Seems like its designed to be a driven car, but they are showing it in this format to support years old claims by Musk about autonomous taxis.

This is just part of the show that they need to do to keep investors thinking the real big thing is just over the horizon.

Marty Densch
Marty Densch
1 month ago

“Tesla also states you’ll be able to “call it once” and keep the vehicle “as long as needed,” whether you’re taking short trips or using it all day.”

Wouldn’t that be up to the owner? Or is Tesla planning its own nation-wide taxi company?

StupidAmericanPig
StupidAmericanPig
1 month ago

I think the cyber cab will have fusion power once the self driving becomes available since they both seem perpetually 2 years away.

Taco Shackleford
Taco Shackleford
1 month ago

Brake lights in the bumper? I thought Tesla was supposed to not do the stupid things GM does. I bet the reverse light go on when you unlock it too.

EVDesigner
EVDesigner
1 month ago

Tesla finally figured out how buses and general public transit work. Congrats techbros.

Pajamasquid
Pajamasquid
1 month ago

Having multiple friends and family members who enjoy one’s presence might be a foreign concept to Elon, but it’s a harsh reality for us unwashed masses who might need more than two seats

Adam Schluck
Adam Schluck
1 month ago
Reply to  Pajamasquid

2 or 20, why would anyone need anything in between?

Alexk98
Alexk98
1 month ago

he livestream addressed this, with CEO Elon Musk stating he predicts non-supervised self-driving will be available “before 2027.”

So going off of Musks track record with FSD/Autopilot, we’ll see it in 2040?

Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
1 month ago
Reply to  Alexk98

He’s going to send one to Mars where it will drive itself.

Evo_CS
Evo_CS
1 month ago

That would be safer for all of us.

Maymar
Maymar
1 month ago

I could buy the two-seater cab if it had the footprint of a smart, but taking up more space with less utility than an Uber Corolla seems ill-planned. Big taxi cities tend to have road space limitations, right?

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago

Cybercab looks a little pinched. Moving along, ring me in a decade when it ‘might be’ approaching production with limited fsd.

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