Technology

#Tesla is finally waking up to the realities of being a legitimate car maker

#Tesla is finally waking up to the realities of being a legitimate car maker

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Tesla‘s Battery Day is one of the most anticipated days in the yearly calendar of electric vehicle fans, tech investors, and Musketeers. This year’s event was supposed to be in July, but after a number of delays and vague rescheduling it happened yesterday, and it feels like a bit of a damp squib.

On a shareholder earnings call in January Musk urged the public to “wait until Battery Day” to have their minds “blown.” However, on Battery Day Eve, Musk tempered expectations with a series of tweets that suggested nothing big was really coming until 2022.

Following the tweets, Tesla’s stock price acted appropriately and headed south, a trend which has seemingly continued, even following Musk’s Battery Day announcements. Perhaps the realities of becoming one of the world’s largest carmakers are setting in, and Tesla is realizing rather ironically that it needs to settle down and focus on the long-run if it’s going to create a sustainably profitable business.

[Read: 5 things to know when you’re buying your first electric vehicle]

Before we try and figure out what Battery Day actually means for Tesla and the EV industry writ large, let’s check out three key things that Tesla did announce.

Plaid Model S

It’s been a long time coming, but Tesla’s Plaid Model S is finally here, kinda. We now have some official performance figures and in classic Tesla fashion, a pre-order option on the website, TechCrunch reports.

The Plaid will reportedly have 520 miles of range, accelerate from zero to 60 in under two seconds, and cost $140,000. This puts it directly in the sights of Lucid’s recently announced debut vehicle, the Air, which touts basically the same specification.

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Credit: Tesla – Website