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Tesla Cybertruck gets $10,000 solar panel wrap that gives you more range

A company managed to wrap a Tesla Cybertruck with solar cells that power an on-board battery pack. It costs about $10,000. Is it worth it?

In 2017, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said that he pushed his engineers to look into integrating solar cells on Model 3, but they concluded that it wasn’t worth it at the time.

Solar cell efficiency has since improved, and Tesla developed its own expertise in embedding solar cells through the development of solar roof tiles.

It led to a surprise announcement.

After the launch of the Cybertruck, Musk surprised many when he said that Tesla’s new electric pickup truck would have a solar roof option that would add 15 miles of range per day.

A few years later, Tesla filed for a patent that showed the solar cells would be embedded inside the retractable tonneau cover.

However, Tesla has since brought the Cybertruck to market with no solar roofs or tonneau cover options. A year after the launch, there’s no word about solar options coming to the electric pickup truck.

But now a third party has decided to offer its own solution, and it is even more ambitious: an entire solar cell wrap for the Tesla Cybertruck.

California’s Sunflare Solar is a developer of flexible solar cells that can be used as a wrap. They claim to have wrapped the entire Cybertruck with it to produce up to 1.5 kW of solar power.

For the area, it is a fairly small amount of solar, but it could technically add a similar amount of range, around 15 miles, as Musk claimed the solar tonneau cover would.

The entire Cybertruck solar wrap costs $10,000 and comes with a 5 kW battery inverter to send the energy to the truck.

Electrek’s Take

Top comment by Won'tGetFooledAgain

Liked by 5 people

And you'll have to park it at the far end of lots to avoid door dings and shopping cart hits, both which might well be more probable. The roof solar panels on the Toyota Prius Prime offers very little charging advantage for its cost which is less than a grand.

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I think this is cool, but it’s also gimmicky and comes with massive reliability risk. One of the main features of the Cybertruck is its rugged paintless stainless-steel exterior that you don’t care about scratching that much .

Now, it is replaced by expensive and somewhat fragile solar cells. I don’t know about that.

Also, as always, a car is not the optimal place for solar panels. I do like the idea of solar roofs on super-efficient EVs, like Aptera’s solar car, which can add significant range thanks to the efficiency, but if you want to power your electric vehicle with solar power, the best place to install your solar panels are on your home, not your car.

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Avatar for Fred Lambert Fred Lambert

Fred is the Editor in Chief and Main Writer at Electrek.

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