Demand for the angular electric pickup has continued to falter in the first quarter, making room for a new king.

The Tesla Cybertruck has lost the top spot on the list of best-selling electric pickup trucks in the United States. After finishing 2024 as a best-seller, Tesla’s only pickup has fallen to second place in the first quarter of this year.

After the first three months, the Cybertruck had amassed 7,126 registrations. The Ford F-150 Lightning overtook it with 7,913 registrations, according to the most recent data from S&P Global Mobility. The Chevrolet Silverado EV finished the first quarter in third place, followed by the GMC Sierra EV, Rivian R1T and GMC Hummer EV.

  • RangerJosey@lemmy.ml
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    22 hours ago

    I just want a small pickup with a 4cyl. Like a Mazda B series or VW Rabbit pickup.

    I don’t need to tow trains. I don’t need to haul tonnage. I just want a small truck to do normal truck things that I can actually work on when it breaks.

      • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        21 hours ago

        What sold me was the manual crank roll-up windows, which is a no-frills option I’ve wanted back in vehicles for almost two decades now.

      • LastYearsIrritant@sopuli.xyz
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        20 hours ago

        It also doesn’t exist yet. I’m very skeptical that it’s going to be actually offered at the $27,500 price point.

        Deliveries expected in Q4 2026, which means we’ll probably get a few trucks rolling out in their premium price point in early 2027, and maybe get some of the base models in 2028.

        I also don’t see a backup camera screen (might be one in the rear view, but they don’t say) which means it can’t be sold as advertised. They list a whole bunch of customization stuff, which means it’s going to need a lot of modification hard points, how is it going to handle crash tests and rollover tests?

        They’re early specs are wildly out of line with current offerings, which means they either need an unprecedented team of engineers, or it’s not going to be even close to how it’s listed when actually sold.

      • frezik@midwest.social
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        20 hours ago

        We put in a preorder for a Telo. It’s more expensive, but the extra range alone makes it worthwhile.

        My wife drives a Mini EV, which has around the same range as the base Slate. It’s enough to get them to work, but I had to do a long range trip a while back and I’d never choose to do that again.

        • cymbal_king@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          We really like our Ioniq 5 for longer road trips, the new models come with an NACS port too. The lack of good CCS chargers has a draw back, but now it seems a simple adapter can enable supercharging with NACS

          • frezik@midwest.social
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            18 hours ago

            Needed to make two charge stops in the Chicago area. The first stop wasn’t too bad.

            Second stop was a disaster. Went to a dealership, but you had to go inside and ask the staff to turn it on, but they were closed on a Sunday. Went to a casino resort that supposedly had a charger, but they had moved it to the employee-only lot after offering it to the public for awhile. Went to a grocery store, and the app wouldn’t work. Went to another grocery store, and that one finally did it.

            Now, some of that is just bad charging infrastructure that can be fixed, but making two 30 minute stops on this journey isn’t ideal even if the chargers all worked properly. At 100 miles of range, you pretty much have to for this distance, and that’s only one way.

            At around 200 miles of range, I wouldn’t have needed any stops on the way there, but would on the way back. At 350 miles, I could have made it there and back no problem. I think that 350 mile number is the sweet spot. If you calculate off 20% for cold weather and 30% to stay within the ideal 10-80% charge range, then you can still get far enough that you ought to be taking a 30 minute break, anyway.

            • twice_hatch@midwest.social
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              18 hours ago

              That’s why I want a Prius. Plug in at home, burn gas when the battery is flat, still gets 50 MPG highway and city without grid power

      • SinningStromgald@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        I am really interested in seeing how Slate does and the cool things people, and possibly Slate itself, come up with to modify it.

        If I needed a truck it would top my list of options.

    • felbane@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I’m in more or less the same boat, so I’m waiting to see if the Slate truck lives up to the expectations. On paper it seems like a great solution: under 30K, small electric customizable pickup. It remains to be seen if Slate can actually deliver. Hopefully that question is answered before my current vehicle breaks down to the point I can’t fix it anymore.

    • not_that_guy05@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      Plus those were some of the best looking trucks.

      Company name and model is truck or Txxx.

      I want a Nissan hard body 80s early 90s. Small and useful for what I need. I don’t need to compensate for something else if you know what I mean.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Hyundai Santa Cruz.

      I saw one a while ago and had to look them up.

      Not sure how self repairable they are tho

    • solsangraal@lemmy.zip
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      21 hours ago

      i had a b2300 for like 15 years…that or the tacoma i have now would be what i drive in a zombie apocalypse