Tesla Semi Looks Like a Bidenmobile Spurred by the Climate Bill

This much is clear: Tesla is going to start delivering Semi trucks on Dec. 1, a full five years after Elon Musk started taking orders for them. The first ones are going to PepsiCo, which will put them to work at a Frito-Lay facility in Modesto, California, and a beverages plant in Sacramento.

From there, details are fuzzy for a product the world has known about since 2017.

Specifications? “500 mile range & super fun to drive,” Musk tweeted last week.

There isn’t a whole lot more information on Tesla’s website, aside from a zero-to-60 acceleration time, which doesn’t rank particularly high on truckers’ priority list. Braking distance, for example, is far more important than beating another big rig off the line, as one ex-trucker pointed out after Musk’s prototype presentation years ago. (It takes 20 seconds to get up to 60 miles per hour, by the way).

How many Semis is PepsiCo getting? Musk and the food and beverage giant haven’t said.