Elon Musk reveals why Cybertruck window smashed
- Published
Elon Musk has revealed why the windows of Tesla's Cybertruck broke during an embarrassing launch incident.
He blamed the mishap on the order in which a demonstration had taken place.
The vehicle was first struck with a sledgehammer in what appeared to be a successful demonstration of its armour body's strength.
But this had caused an unseen crack, Mr Musk revealed, which had subsequently led to the windows smashing when they had been hit with a steel ball.
The futuristic vehicle was unveiled on Thursday in Hawthorne, California, where its stainless steel, angular design drew a mixed response from the audience.
Responding to a fan on Twitter, Mr Musk said the incident could have been easily avoided.
"Sledgehammer impact on door cracked the base of the glass, which is why the steel ball didn't bounce off," he wrote.
"Should have done steel ball on window, then sledgehammer the door. Next time."
Over the weekend, Mr Musk tweeted footage of an earlier demonstration, carried out behind the scenes moments before the launch, showing the windows withstanding the impact of the steel ball.
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Despite the awkward mishap, Tesla announced it had received more than 200,000 "orders" for its Cybertruck following the demonstration. The firm is charging $100 to reserve the vehicle, but the sum is refundable if the customer later changes their mind.
The success of the launch event has caused some speculation on social media the incident, viewed millions of times online, had been orchestrated to go viral.
"It's hard to say if that one infamous moment is why Tesla has been able to get 200,000 deposits on the Cybertruck but all the extra attention certainly didn't hurt," said Jessica Caldwell, from vehicle marketplace Edmunds.
"Moments like that are why Tesla has such a passionate fan base: while most executives are always hyper-rehearsed and polished, Elon Musk has never been afraid to show his human side, for better or worse.
"Tesla's fans are notorious for giving the company the benefit of the doubt and assume the technology will be sorted out by the time the truck actually goes on sale."
- Published17 October 2019
- Published5 September 2019