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Tesla’s head of design shared a photo of the company’s Cybertruck that shows its windshield wipers leave much of it dirty.
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Elon Musk has said in the past that there is “no easy solution” to clearing the massive windshield.
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Earlier this month, Musk said the Cybertruck will be delivered this year — two years later than he originally predicted.
Tesla’s head of design, Franz von Holzhausen, recently shared a picture of a Cybertruck prototype that appears to show its ginormous, single windshield wiper leaves a lot to be desired.
In the first photo we’ve seen of the windshield in use, a close inspection of the picture shows that the lone windshield wiper on the electric pickup truck fails to clear a large swatch of the window.
During Tesla’s Investor Day last week, a pre-production prototype of the Cybertruck was on display. Since, new images of the vehicle keep popping up on social media — highlighting its massive “frunk,” its circular yoke steering wheel, and the massive windshield wiper was hard to miss.
The singular windshield wiper is perhaps the largest Tesla has yet to put on the truck. Unlike most cars, which have wipers that tuck neatly against the hood of the vehicle, the Cybertruck’s lone windshield wiper appears to rest upright along the side of the windshield when its not in use.
It’s unclear whether the windshield wiper from the photo will be included in the final product, as the Cybertruck is still in development. A Tesla spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment from Insider.
Earlier this year, Insider shared photos that appeared to show the same windshield wiper design in a leaked video of the prototype.
In the past, Elon Musk has said there’s “no easy solution” to the vehicle’s massive windshield.
“Deployable wiper that stows in front trunk would be ideal, but complex,” Musk said on Twitter in 2021.
The initial 2019 design for the Cybertruck didn’t even include windshield wipers. Last year, the electric-car maker appeared to experiment with a smaller, switchblade-style windshield wiper that could extend and retract as it was used, Fox News reported.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration does not have standards for the design of windshield wipers, but it does require the device to be able to clear debris from a designated portion of the window in front of the driver’s seat. The initial design also did not include side mirrors, an issue that Tesla was forced to remedy due to FMCSA regulations.
Musk has pushed back the production timeline for the Cybertruck at least three times. Last year, Reuters reported that the delays were due to design changes, citing an individual with knowledge of the issue. Most recently, the billionaire said on Investor’s Day that the car will be delivered this year — about two years later than he had first predicted.
Read the original article on Business Insider