Battery pack, tires all have air inside.If the passenger compartment seals very well it would need to displace 7000??? pounds of water to float. (All math is rounded aggressively) 7000/8.5 pounds per gallon= 825 gallons of air, so about 132 cubic feet. If the bed also seals well enough to keep water out, that would likely be 62 cubic feet (based on f150 6.5 foot bed), but that would have the water lapping over the edge of the bed. That leaves 70 more cubic feet of air volume...Passenger compartment up to the shoulders of the occupants? Maybe the frunk is also water tight?
I forgot about that... Do maybe outside water height would not be so bad.Battery pack, tires all have air inside.
It's a jeep thing??Most cars and light trucks will serve as a boat with no propulsion and no rudder for a short amount of time. Prepare to be swept downstream with no control where you end up.
Footage from FL showing all the cars caught in storm surge flooding got swept randomly into piles that look like junkyards.
The off-roaders who go in water know that you actually want to flood the vehicle so it doesn't float. You want it to sink so you still have some kind of traction from your wheels. Take the doors off to let the stream in. Take the roof off so you can bail out easier if it gets too deep.
I can't tell. Are the users on that sight really planning on using their Cybertruck as a boat, or are they being sarcastic?