Rivians, as of now, are costly vehicles. A quick search online reveals numerous accounts of minor collisions leading to a $42,000 fiasco or a $41,000 repair that seems unjustifiable. The individual at the helm of Rivian concurs that this is outrageous and should not occur.
In Park City, Utah, during a private interview on the latest edition of The Drivecast, Rivian Founder and CEO RJ Scaringe stated, “There’s no collision repair that ought to cost tens of thousands of dollars.”
Tune into the full dialogue starting at the point where Scaringe discusses repair expenses below.
The primary factors that contribute to the high repair costs of the R1 are its aluminum construction and the design approach Rivian took for its inaugural vehicle. “We incorporated a one-piece body side, meaning if you harm something like the rear fender, depending on the extent of the damage, you might either perform body work or need to sever part of the panel, and re-weld a new section,” Scaringe explained.
The team acknowledges this is a hurdle, and the aluminum material adds to the complexity. However, they implemented a solution to mitigate the problem. “And actually, as part of our service components for collision centers, we offer subsets of the full panel, so we don’t have to swap the entire body side,” Scaringe mentioned.
Unlike service and sales, which are both conducted in-house and integrated vertically rather than through third parties (i.e., dealerships), Rivian does not possess its own in-house collision facilities. Scaringe commented, “One of the challenges with collision work is you don’t visit Rivian collision centers. It’s actually third parties. The reason a lot of these outrageous figures appear is that the repair centers say, ‘A Rivian? What is that?’ They don’t recognize the vehicle, quote a prohibitively high estimate, the insurance agrees, and things escalate from there.”
Scaringe elaborated, “We have standardized processes, and there’s no collision repair that should rack up tens of thousands of dollars. These are unique anomalies likely stemming from a particular small, independent collision center that has never dealt with a Rivian before, didn’t contact us, or look into the parts, thus quoting a steep figure as they probably didn’t want to take on the job.”
Rivian’s aren’t isolated concerning reports of exorbitant repair costs. A GMC Hummer EV taillight costs a staggering $6,100 for replacement, not including labor. The thought of replacing one of Audi’s contemporary adaptive Matrix LED headlight systems is something most individuals would likely prefer to avoid. Moreover, the multitude of intricate components now integrated into the dashboard of modern vehicles can be quite overwhelming. At least Mercedes is moving back to assembly methods that involve screws rather than adhesives in a return to simpler manufacturing techniques.
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