TechCrunch News 07月10日 23:02
Slate Auto: Everything you need to know about the Bezos-backed EV startup
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2025年4月,一家名为Slate Auto的新公司横空出世,凭借其超低价、可定制的电动皮卡震惊了汽车行业。这家秘密运营三年的初创公司获得了Jeff Bezos的资金支持,并选择在密歇根州特洛伊——福特和通用汽车等主要汽车制造商的“后院”——低调发展。TechCrunch率先报道了这家公司的存在、与亚马逊创始人Jeff Bezos的关联及其独特的商业模式。在TechCrunch报道和Slate于4月底的正式发布会之间的几周里,围绕着这家初创公司的原型车在加利福尼亚州出现,引发了广泛关注。尽管其当前的投资方、高管团队、首款产品和商业模式为其提供了有前景的发展道路,但在其计划于2026年末实现量产的过程中,仍面临着诸多潜在的挑战。

🚗 2025年4月,Slate Auto横空出世,是一家专注于制造超低价、可定制电动皮卡车的初创公司,获得了Jeff Bezos和洛杉矶道奇队老板Mark Walter的资金支持。

💡 Slate Auto的电动皮卡车计划以低于20,000美元的价格出售,但由于美国联邦电动汽车税收抵免政策的变化,这一价格策略面临挑战。

🏭 Slate Auto计划在印第安纳州华沙的一家前印刷厂建立其卡车工厂,该工厂占地140万平方英尺,建于1958年。

💰 在发布后不到两个月的时间里,Slate Auto就收到了超过10万份可退款的50美元预订,这表明尽管此前鲜为人知,但该公司的理念已受到广泛关注。

In April 2025, a new company called Slate Auto came out of stealth and shocked the car industry. Not only was this startup focused on making an ultra-cheap, customizable electric pickup truck with funding from Jeff Bezos, but it had also been operating in secret for three years in Troy, Michigan – the backyard of major automakers like Ford and General Motors.

TechCrunch was first to the story, reporting in early April about the company’s existence, its involvement with the Amazon founder, and its curious and unique business model. The weeks between our report and Slate’s official coming out party in late April provided a whirlwind of news, with prototypes of the startup’s truck popping up around California.

Slate is an aberration in the U.S. EV sector, where bankruptcies, failed product launches, and pivots have become commonplace. And while its current backers, executive lineup, first product, and business model provide a compelling path forward, the road is still riddled with potential hurdles as it pushes towards production in late 2026. 

Here’s a timeline that charts out everything you need to know about Slate Auto, from its origin story and backers to its product, business model, and production plans.

April 8 – After a year-long investigation, TechCrunch published a story revealing that a secretive EV startup called Slate Auto had been operating for three years with the financial backing of Jeff Bezos and LA Dodgers owner Mark Walter. 

Unlike other EV startups, Slate had been working on developing an extremely low-cost electric pickup truck that would start at around $25,000. This truck would be deeply customizable, leveraging the experience of many former employees from Harley-Davidson and Chrysler, two companies that have extensive accessories and aftermarket parts businesses.

April 10 – One day later, a photo of a nondescript electric truck started circulating on the r/whatisthiscar subreddit, with Redditors speculating it could be Slate’s mystery EV

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TechCrunch was able to confirm the photo was, in fact, of a prototype of Slate’s truck parked outside the company’s Long Beach, California design center.

April 21 – Slate began putting concept versions of the Slate EV on public streets to generate marketing buzz ahead of its planned launch event on April 24. Curiously, some of them appeared to be styled more like SUVs or hatchbacks, not just pickup trucks. 

TechCrunch was able to confirm the company had developed the EV to have “Transformer-like” modular capabilities, and that this stunt was a way to tease this customization.

April 24 – Slate made its debut at a launch event in Long Beach, California, where it revealed its customizable electric pickup truck. Slate also announced the truck would be available for under $20,000 – with the $7,500 federal EV tax credit. 

The base version of the truck was revealed to be very bare bones, with just 150 miles of range, no power windows, no main infotainment screen, and not even any paint. Slate promised essentially everything about the truck would be customizable, even down to the number of seats and the overall silhouette. 

April 25 – TechCrunch reported that Slate had identified a former printing plant in Warsaw, Indiana as the location for its truck factory. The 1.4 million-square-foot facility was built in 1958 and had been dormant for around two years. 

May 12 – Slate confirmed to TechCrunch it had already surpassed 100,000 refundable $50 reservations for its affordable EV truck. It was evidence that the company’s ideas had caught on with a wide audience, despite no one knowing about Slate just two months prior. 

July 3 – The Trump administration pushed through a massive tax-cut bill that, among many other actions, set a September end-date for the $7,500 federal EV tax credit. That means Slate’s truck will no longer be able to lean on that credit to reach the “under $20,000” starting price the startup was touting. As such, Slate pulled that language from its website before the bill was even signed into law.

July 8 – Slate’s 2023 funding round included at least 16 investors – one of them being Bezos. While most of those investors have still not been identified, Los Angeles-based Slauson & Co. spoke to TechCrunch about why it threw in with the EV startup in that initial funding round, as well as Slate’s Series B.

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Slate Auto 电动汽车 Jeff Bezos 电动皮卡
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