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Transportation Youtube Technology

YouTuber Simone Giertz Transformed a Tesla Model 3 Into a Pickup Truck (theverge.com) 154

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: Simone Giertz was tired of waiting for Elon Musk to unveil his new Tesla pickup truck, so she decided to make one herself. The popular YouTuber and self-described "queen of shitty robots" transformed a Model 3 into an honest-to-god pickup truck, which she dubs "Truckla" -- and naturally you can watch all the cutting and welding (and cursing) on her YouTube channel. There's even a fake truck commercial to go along with it. Giertz spent over a year planning and designing before launching into the arduous task of turning her Model 3 into a pickup truck. And she recruited a ragtag team of mechanics and DIY car modifiers to tackle the project: Marcos Ramirez, a Bay Area maker, mechanic and artist; Boston-based Richard Benoit, whose YouTube channel Rich Rebuilds is largely dedicated to the modification of pre-owned Tesla models; and German designer and YouTuber Laura Kampf.

Giertz's truck looks exactly like what it is: a Model 3 with the top part of the back half removed. As such, it blurs the line between sedan and pickup, which used to be a popular design style in the 1970s and 80s, until consumers decided that bigger is better. Think Chevy El Camino, or Ford Ranchero. But Giertz smartly added some standard truck accoutrements, like a lumber rack with Hella lights attached to the front, so that it wouldn't look out of place among the Rams and Silverados of the world. It wasn't a project without its obstacles. After stripping the backseat and the trunk of its many parts, the Model 3 refused to start. Ramirez explained that the car was reporting "all of its many faults" to Tesla headquarters via cell connection, or essentially "snitching" on the YouTubers who were trying to modify it. They also ran into problems after cutting through the first beam when the metal started to buckle slightly. Luckily they were able to reinforce the steel and keep going.

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YouTuber Simone Giertz Transformed a Tesla Model 3 Into a Pickup Truck

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  • Looks more like (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @06:04PM (#58784528)

    A Holden ute.

    • Yep, I was going to say that it's a ute. A car-based pickup truck. Closest available in the US in the last 40 years is probably the El Camino or Subaru Baja or BRAT.
      • The Dodge Rampage was available in the early 80s. Buddy had one in high school, with a topper (late 90s).

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
        • Yeah, that was my thought, too. A compact, car-truck cross with front-wheel drive. It's more Rampage than El Camino or Ranchero.

          I remember those, too. Wanted one, at the time. If Musk & Co were to start making these, I'd probably find a way to come up with the payments.
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Yep, I was going to say that it's a ute. A car-based pickup truck. Closest available in the US in the last 40 years is probably the El Camino or Subaru Baja or BRAT.

        Depends, because "Ute" typically refers to SUV, which is basically a bigger car on a truck chassis. (Think Chevy Suburban or Yukon).

        There are also "crossovers" that are a truck on a car chassis - these used to be the smaller "city SUV" that are extremely popular - while they aren't as high, they offer a higher view and more space (typically mini

        • Not quite.

          In Australia, 'ute' was the short form of 'coupe utility', which was a utility vehicle that looked like a coupe (drive to church on Sunday, drive the pigs to market on Monday).
          Almost all Australian utes up to the 1990's were car based (search for Ford Falcon ute and Holden Commodore ute) and often without a separate frame.
          Then we started calling everything a ute that had both a bonnet (hood) and a cargo tray (short of a Mack truck) - including the HiLux, Silverado and Ranger.
          So having a separate f

        • Yeah, nah. Ute does not typically refer to SUV. They are dramatically different vehicle configurations. Nor is it a pickup truck.

          From the comments in the article:

          https://www.carthrottle.com/po... [carthrottle.com]

    • And it's a fairly common thing to do to sedans in the modding communities. You can find BMWs, Volvos or even Porsches [carscoops.com] cut up this way. But this is a Tesla and done by a Youtuber so it's all over the internet now.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      What’s a Ute [youtube.com]?

    • Re:Looks more like (Score:5, Insightful)

      by slinches ( 1540051 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @06:43PM (#58784724)

      All the looks of a Ute, with half the payload capacity and range for 8x the cost. Who wouldn't want that?

      • Re:Looks more like (Score:4, Informative)

        by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @06:48PM (#58784760) Journal

        All the looks of a Ute, with half the payload capacity and range for 8x the cost.

        But a lot more acceleration and a lot cheaper to fuel/maintain. Though I'm sure the cost of the mod will more than exceed the savings. I'm equally sure that the YouTube revenue will more than exceed the cost of the mod, so there's that.

        • by TWX ( 665546 )

          All the looks of a Ute, with half the payload capacity and range for 8x the cost.

          But a lot more acceleration and a lot cheaper to fuel/maintain. Though I'm sure the cost of the mod will more than exceed the savings. I'm equally sure that the YouTube revenue will more than exceed the cost of the mod, so there's that.

          Depends on if the modifications lead to premature wear of the base vehicle compared to if it was left stock.

          In the 1960s Ford tried to make a pickup truck where the cab and box were one piece, with a single bulkhead separating them. This unit was still on a truck frame, but even still it flexed too much and the idea was scrapped after only a year or two, and that was with a vehicle designed by a manufacturer.

          If she uses her creation as a truck I don't see it going especially well. The car wanted to collap

          • They have made some reasonably useful unibody pickups since the 60s. The Chevy Avalanche and Honda Ridgeline are probably the most successful ones. Although, those have their own drawbacks as well. Structural rigidity is a huge one. The "sails" that connected the sides of the bed to the cab were necessary structural features until recently. Honda eventually figured out a way to reinforce that area without them, but the added weight makes it no lighter than a traditional body on frame design. I doubt s

          • In the 1960s Ford tried to make a pickup truck where the cab and box were one piece, with a single bulkhead separating them. This unit was still on a truck frame, but even still it flexed too much and the idea was scrapped after only a year or two, and that was with a vehicle designed by a manufacturer.

            Ford Australia invented this type of ute in the 1930's and continued making them until 2017 when they stopped manufacturing in Australia. Holden (our GM subsidiary) did similar. Japanese companies have been doing similar from the 1960's. European companies do them occasionally but their wet weather favours vans instead.

            It only failed in the US because there you like everything big and a car based ute simply wasn't big enough for your tastes.

            Also, when we got the Ford Falcon sedan in 1960, the US derived veh

      • She specifically wanted an electric pickup truck.

        • by TWX ( 665546 )

          She specifically wanted an electric pickup truck.

          So go get an old Tacoma, Mighty Max, Frontier, or S10 and convert one. Put the electric motor where the current transmission sits. Put battery boxes between the framerails under the bed and in the former engine compartment.

          Hell, didn't GM even experiment with some all-electric S10s? Go track one of those down.

          At least then the vehicle would still have a usable payload volume.

      • Who wouldn't want that?

        I question I ask about everyone who buys a penis exten... err large car.

    • by labnet ( 457441 )

      And a link
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] .. and Americans using metric!!!! .. and we couldn't do this in Australia... compliance to drive this thing on the road would be nigh impossible...

      • Metric is fine. Americans don't really hate it, we just hated having to buy two sets of tools to work on stuff. Now that cheap Chinese tools cost less than half the price, we all own both systems.

        25 years ago I used all metric doing quality control in a car parts factory. My measurements were all recorded in mL and grams. Logged in a journal, in blue or black ink. To be fair there was a bit of chemistry to my job, and US chemists moved away from customary units long ago.

        Ultimately it's just numbers and I ra

      • Nonsense. I know someone who built a car more or less from scratch (the engine was a heavily modified production one) and it is road legal in Australia. You have to work with the compliance engineer.

      • From what I understand industry, notably automobile, made a big a shift to metric in the US, with the main lagard being the construction industry. On the streets it is still imperial for the most part.

        Oh, and the federal government is metric based and the imperial units are defined against metric units.

        And a brief history of the metric system: http://www.us-metric.org/a-chr... [us-metric.org]

      • Of course we can do this in Australia.
        Do a search for Torana ute's - none made in the factory and all converted from hatchbacks.
        You just need an certified engineer to sign off on it to make sure it is structurally okay.

        There was also a hand built thing called Utopia - a Supra front end with a Hilux rear end.
        Looked surprisingly good but I can't find a reference for it anymore.

    • A Holden ute.

      At least someones making them now

      • There was a company importing them to the USA but they aren't cheap. If you want the LS V8 model its like $100K.

  • by Zorro ( 15797 ) on Tuesday June 18, 2019 @06:19PM (#58784606)

    It can can carry one bale of hay or TWO whole bags from Whole foods!

    • It can can carry one bale of hay or TWO whole bags from Whole foods!

      Yawn . . . I can put one paycheck in my glove compartment, which has the same value as TWO whole bags from Whole foods!

    • by steveha ( 103154 )

      It can can carry one bale of hay or TWO whole bags from Whole foods!

      I just watched her video, and found out a few things. The roof rack is very strong... it's part of the structural support of the newly hacked-up car; and her use case will be to put plywood and/or lumber on the roof rack and haul it to her shop for her projects.

      She wanted some kind of pickup truck, and she doesn't ever want to own a fossil fuel car; she only wants to drive electric.

      A real pickup truck can haul more stuff and/or heavier stu

  • I saw it at a conference probably 2 years ago. Major university campuses throughout California are being forced to transition their entire vehicle fleet to alt fuels. There aren't any non-experimental sub-$100k electric/hybrid pick-up trucks or vans available in the States yet, so UC Irvine bought a couple Kia Soul EVs, tore out the back seats, threw down a tough bed, protected the windows, and done. I think they had roof-racks for pipes, conduits, and ladders as well.

    Couldn't have cost that much and now th

    • by _merlin ( 160982 )

      Yeah, but Kia probably don't make their vehicles as difficult to mod as Tesla.

  • I mean, I have a zit on my ass that I use for an excuse to not vacuum for a week. What am I missing?

    Seriously, you go girl. Never heard of you before your tumor, and have been a fan ever since.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      A brain tumor, which she had removed, and then came back and she's been in radiation treatment for the regrowth.

      Having the energy to put into fun engineering projects after all that is commendable.

  • Probably violated a EULA or something.

  • So now she's making shitty trucks? Sound about right. I still sort of like her, but not enough to subscribe to her channel. She sold her boat!
    • I'm subscribed. She's a builder of things, and she is also goofy and easy on the eyes.

      She did a series of videos on DIY astronaut training, and in the last one she took a ride on the Vomit Comet. The look of pure joy on her face during the flight was priceless.

  • "popular YouTuber and self-described "queen of shitty robots"" I guess it's all about the eyeballs for those YouTube 'influencers'. But some of us can't afford such wasteful projects . . .

    Wednesday, 1966: As I was out for a stroll I saw a particularly striking vehicle cruising a Chicago street on this sunny morning. A big white Caddy ambulance with very unusual modifications. I knew that this car was meant for me, but it had already passed. Aha, it was stuck at the next red light so I ran up to it and yelle

    • by Al Al Cool J ( 234559 ) on Wednesday June 19, 2019 @01:09AM (#58786212)

      I don't know what you're going on about. Simone only drives electric vehicles. She has a tiny little electric Comuta car built in the 80s, but it's not very practical. What she really wanted is a reliable functional electric pickup truck that she can use for work. Since no such thing existed, she got some friends and colleagues together, and built one. It's not the kind of thing you can just buy off the street through a chance encounter.

  • "Ramirez explained that the car was reporting "all of its many faults" to Tesla headquarters via cell connection, or essentially "snitching"

    I like it when my cars snitch on people who try to cut it into spare parts.
    They also snitch on people keying them or doing other damage.
    They should all do that.

    • by Ksevio ( 865461 )
      She also keyed the car at the start so I guess the next video will be the Tesla police coming by
  • This is all fine and dandy until she gets rear-ended by someone too busy trying to find the right GIF to insert into a text to pay attention to the stopped car . . . . Honda released the second generation Ridgeline, and the amount of engineering needed to take a Pilot, cut away the rear of the vehicle, carve out a bed, and still make it safe is amazing. Personally, I like my body the way it is, and I wouldn't drive in that "truck" anywhere except for the farm.

  • Not so much an El Camino or Ranchero. Closer to the Subaru Brat or Chevy Luv.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
  • As such, it blurs the line between sedan and pickup, which used to be a popular design style in the 1970s and 80s, until consumers decided that bigger is better.

    Consumers did not make that decision. Congress did by taxing that style of vehicle in favor of larger pickups with worse mileage.

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