Quick Summary: Tesla Roadster — Giga Texas Production Confirmed
- Source: Lars Moravy (VP Vehicle Engineering) on the ‘Ride the Lightning’ podcast — most concrete production news in years
- Confirmed: Roadster will be built at Gigafactory Texas (Austin) — alongside Cybertruck and Cybercab
- Timeline: Moravy says “you’ll start to see a lot of things unfold in the next months” — effectively rules out a May unveiling Musk had previously suggested
- Why Giga Texas: Giga Press casting · 4680 battery cell production · proximity to SpaceX Starbase (Boca Chica) for SpaceX thruster package development
- SpaceX package: 10 cold gas thrusters — could push 0-60 toward 1 second; braking + cornering augmentation; regulatory and engineering challenges remain
- Competition: Rimac Nevera now holds 1.74s 0-60 record — Roadster’s 2017 specs no longer unique; SpaceX package is the differentiator that must justify the wait
Tesla VP of Vehicle Engineering Lars Moravy confirmed on the ‘Ride the Lightning’ podcast that the next-generation Roadster will be built at Gigafactory Texas in Austin — the most concrete production news the world has received about the car in years. The announcement anchors the project to a physical location and a manufacturing philosophy. However, Moravy’s accompanying statement that “you’ll start to see a lot of things unfold in the next months” effectively resets the timeline, ruling out the May unveiling Elon Musk had previously suggested. The Roadster’s saga continues: one step forward, one shuffle of the horizon.
Why Giga Texas: The Strategic Logic
| Factor | Why It Matters for the Roadster |
|---|---|
| Giga Press casting | World’s largest casting machines produce large frame sections as single pieces — critical for structural rigidity under sub-2-second 0-60 acceleration forces; same technology used for Cybertruck production |
| 4680 battery cell production | Giga Texas is the primary 4680 development and production site — essential for achieving 620-mile range without compromising the Roadster’s lightweight performance architecture |
| SpaceX Starbase proximity | Boca Chica (SpaceX Starbase) is a short distance from Austin — engineering collaboration between Tesla automotive and SpaceX aerospace teams for the cold gas thruster package is significantly easier with both in the same state |
| Flagship product positioning | Giga Texas is Tesla’s global HQ and home to its most disruptive products — Cybertruck · Cybercab · now Roadster; placing the halo car here signals it will be built with the most sophisticated tools at Tesla’s disposal |
The Delay History: From 2017 to “Next Months”
| Date | Event | Status |
|---|---|---|
| November 16, 2017 | Surprise reveal at Tesla Semi event — “one more thing”; cherry-red Roadster rolls out of Semi trailer; 1.9s 0-60 · 620mi range · SpaceX package announced | Target: 2020 delivery |
| 2020 | Original delivery target missed — COVID-19 disruption + supply chain chaos + Model Y production ramp prioritized | Delayed |
| 2021 → 2022 → 2023 | Successive targets missed — Cybertruck development consuming R&D capacity; battery cell prioritization for high-volume models | Delayed |
| Q4 2023 earnings call | Musk: production-intent design complete by end of 2024; production commencing 2025; May unveiling suggested | Hiring ramped up · production jobs posted |
| 2026 (current) | Lars Moravy confirms Giga Texas production — “next months” hint rules out May unveiling; April 2026 unveiling event was scheduled; exec confirms exciting updates | Active — production location confirmed; timeline still fluid |
The 2017 Specs: What Was Promised
| Spec | Claimed Figure | 2026 Context |
|---|---|---|
| 0–60 mph | 1.9 seconds | Rimac Nevera now holds 1.74s — Roadster’s base spec no longer unique; SpaceX package targets ~1.0s |
| 0–100 mph | 4.2 seconds | Still unmatched by any production car |
| Quarter-mile | 8.8 seconds | Would still shatter production car records by a significant margin |
| Top speed | 250+ mph | Exceeds Rimac Nevera (258 mph) — remains at the absolute limit of production car capability |
| Range | 620 miles (200 kWh) | Still unprecedented for a performance EV — no hypercar competitor approaches this figure |
| SpaceX package (optional) | 10 cold gas thrusters — acceleration · braking · cornering · potential hover | The only feature that no competitor can match — regulatory and engineering challenges remain; Musk has elaborated on the package on Joe Rogan |
| Founders Series price | $250,000 (full payment upfront) | Thousands paid in full in 2017 — now waiting 8+ years; even Sam Altman cancelled his reservation |
The SpaceX Package: Why It Must Exist
| Thruster Function | Effect | Challenge |
|---|---|---|
| Forward thrust augmentation | Pushes 0-60 toward ~1.0 second — a figure no tire-only car can achieve; redefines the performance ceiling | Control software must coordinate thruster output with motor torque in milliseconds |
| Reverse thrust braking | Immense braking force beyond what friction brakes alone can deliver — shorter stopping distances than any production car | Fail-safe design required — unintended activation at speed is catastrophic |
| Lateral thrust cornering | Cornering grip beyond tire physics limits — fundamentally changes the dynamic relationship between car and road | Regulatory approval for rocket propulsion on public roads — no legal framework currently exists |
| Hover capability | Musk has claimed short-duration hover is possible — the most audacious claim for any production vehicle | Highest engineering and regulatory hurdle — may not make production version |
The Competitive Landscape: What Changed While Tesla Waited
| Competitor | Key Spec | Implication for Roadster |
|---|---|---|
| Rimac Nevera | 1.74s 0-60 · 20+ world records broken · 1,914 hp | Proves the Roadster’s 2017 specs are achievable — but also means 1.9s 0-60 is no longer unique; BYD 3,000-HP supercar also entering the arena |
| Pininfarina Battista | Shares Nevera powertrain · Italian design · ~1.86s 0-60 | Established the electric hypercar market segment the Roadster was supposed to create |
| Lotus Evija | ~2,000 hp · track-focused · lightweight | Demonstrates that extreme EV performance is now a multi-player market, not a Tesla monopoly |
| Roadster’s answer | SpaceX package — the only feature no competitor can replicate; ~1.0s 0-60 · 620-mile range · rocket-augmented dynamics; must redefine the limits again, not just match them; Musk’s radical vision: ‘safety not the main goal’ | |
Conclusion
Key Takeaways
- Confirmed: Giga Texas production — Lars Moravy on Ride the Lightning; most concrete production news since 2017 reveal; Giga Press + 4680 cells + SpaceX proximity all support the choice
- Timeline: “Next months” — May unveiling ruled out; hiring ramped up · exec confirms exciting updates — active development, fluid timeline
- Delay context: 2017 reveal → 2020 target missed → 2021/22/23 missed → Cybertruck consumed R&D → Cybercab now the priority; Roadster is the project that could afford to wait
- Competition: Rimac Nevera (1.74s 0-60) + BYD 3,000-HP supercar — base Roadster specs no longer unique; SpaceX package is the only answer
- Musk’s vision: “Best of the last human-driven cars” — a celebration of driving before the autonomous era; steering wheel, pedals, visceral performance
- Bottom line: Production location confirmed · timeline still fluid · SpaceX package still the defining question · the Roadster is finally entering its final stretch — but “final stretch” has been said before
Giga Texas is confirmed. The gears are turning. But the Roadster has been “almost ready” before. What’s different now is that the production location is real, the hiring is real, and the competitive pressure from Rimac and BYD is real. The SpaceX package is no longer a nice-to-have — it is the only thing that can make the Roadster’s 8-year wait feel justified. If Tesla delivers it, the car will be unlike anything ever built. If it doesn’t, the Roadster will be a very fast car that arrived very late. The “next months” will tell us which story this is.
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About the Author: Rio is an automotive analyst and technology writer at Tesery, covering Tesla’s product roadmap, performance vehicles, and EV market developments. Tesery is a leading provider of premium Tesla accessories, helping owners get the most from their vehicles.