Tesla Roadster Gets A Slightly Slower 2.1 Second 0-60 Estimate

Authored by tflcar.com and submitted by brainhulk
image for Tesla Roadster Gets A Slightly Slower 2.1 Second 0-60 Estimate

Tesla CEO Elon Musk originally announced the Tesla Roadster with a 1.9 second 0-60 time.

The Tesla Roadster has a new quoted 0-60 time of 2.1 seconds, unless buyers get a rocket thruster package, called the ‘SpaceX Package’.

Tesla also claims a 620-mile range and 250 mph top speed.

The Tesla Roadster may go on sale in late 2020 or 2021, after the Model Y crossover.

The 1.9 second 0-60 time is possible with the “rocket thruster option”.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk recently dropped another piece of information on the impending Tesla Roadster. Rather than making the 0-60 mph sprint in 1.9 seconds, as we previously thought, the Roadster will only manage it in 2.1 seconds.

That is still neck-snappingly fast, and Musk hasn’t stopped there. Along the way, we’ve also seen specs including a 620-mile range, out-of-this-world handling, and so on. The real kicker, though, is that the 1.9 second figure is still possible, per one of Musk’s tweets. However, you have to spec the cold air ‘rocket’ thruster option, otherwise known as the SpaceX package:

2.1 sec 0-60 mph is base model before adding rocket thruster option — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 27, 2019

In CleanTechnica’s side-by-side comparison of the Tesla Roadster to the Ferrari SF90 Stradale, Musk clarified the rocket thruster piece of the puzzle. Now, we have reported on the rocket thrusters before, along with the Roadster’s 250 mph top speed.

Before throwing rocket thrusters into the equation, we are curious to see how much the Tesla Roadster performs under its own power. The two-door, triple-motor electric halo will undoubtedly be stupid quick. What’s more, the price is pegged around $200,000, which is substantially cheaper than, say, the (slower) SF90 Stradale.

Electrek‘s Editor in Chief Fred Lambert points out that the thruster option will replace the back seats. So, keep that in mind, since picking that option would make your Tesla Roadster a bit less practical. Although, with a 2.1 (or 1.9) second 0-60 electric rocket, you’re not really in the game for practicality, are you?

Let us know what you think of the upcoming Tesla Roadster in the comments below.

scud7171 on June 28th, 2019 at 14:02 UTC »

620 mile range? That’s the crazy part for me.

qejewfioefioooiwoi on June 28th, 2019 at 13:33 UTC »

There is some debate as to if he just mistakenly said the 0-100 km/h time. The Tesla website still shows 2.1 for 0-100 and 1.9 for 0-60.

narcistic_asshole on June 28th, 2019 at 13:02 UTC »

Still not as fast as a civic with nitrous. Nothing is faster than a civic with nitrous