News

Nascent automaker Slate is putting a lot of faith in the federal EV tax credit sticking around, because with the $7500 subsidy, the company's battery-electric 2027 Truck will cost consumers a ...
The revolutionary is the proposed $20,000 starting price. It's called the Slate Truck, kind of, but the owner can christen it whatever they want with a custom wrap or decal slapped on the side.
“Our truck will be made here in the USA as part of our commitment to re-industrializing America,” Slate’s CEO Chris Barman said onstage while the factory photo was displayed on a screen ...
Last night, a new company called Slate Auto unveiled its first product, a spartan two-seat electric truck with a mere 150 miles of range and a world of possibility. There’s no paint, no ...
The Slate Automotive Truck is built around simplicity, something the company is so serious about this that Truck is the entirety of the model name. The modular platform does get a little bit more ...
Slate Auto, an electric vehicle startup, has just announced its first vehicle, the Slate Truck, set to be delivered next year. On paper at least, the Slate is downright cool. It's a two-door ...
But the new Slate truck is an electric bit of customizable awesomeness that looks about ready to enter production. There are a few questions left to answer before that happens, but it looks more ...
In one of the strangest launches we’ve seen in a while, Slate Auto, the reportedly Jeff Bezos-backed electric vehicle startup, unveiled its first EV, the Slate Truck. Notably, the vehicle is ...
The EV maker has now featured its Cybertruck as a more traditional pick-up truck style, as per Business Insider. Tesla has even reworked the Cybertruck's page on its official website, according to the ...
The Slate EV startup has unveiled its first model, the simply named Slate Truck. True to its name, it’s intended to be a blank slate (the company actually trademarked the name “Blank Slate ...
Lordstown, Bollinger, Canoo — recent history is littered with failed electric-truck startups that nobody will bother to record when the longer timelines are written. And now here comes Slate, ...