Rad Power Bikes has launched an eight-day flash sale that is taking up to $400 off two particular e-bike models. The greatest of the two discounts is on the RadWagon 4 Cargo e-bike for $1,599 shipped. Down from its $1,999 price tag, we’ve seen this model go for less only two times before – once last summer when costs dropped to $1,399 and four years ago during its initial pre-order and launch sales where prices were seen dropping to $1,299 in special promotions. Today’s deal comes in as a 20% markdown off the going rate, matching our previous mentions from Black Friday and Christmas sales to land at the third-lowest price we have tracked and the second-lowest since its launch.
The RadWagon 4 Cargo e-bike comes equipped with a 750W geared hub motor and a 672Wh capacity battery that allows it to reach top speeds of 20 MPH and travel for up to 45+ miles on a single charge, depending on conditions. It features five levels of pedal assistance with a 12-magnet cadence sensor, as well as custom 22-inch by 3-inch tires, fenders for both tires, a water-resistant wiring harness, a 200-lumen headlight, an integrated taillight with brake light functionality, an integrated rear storage rack, and a backlit LCD display that gives you a battery level indicator, speedometer, odometer, trip odometer, pedal assist level, wattmeter, and a USB port to charge your devices.
The flash sale is also discounting the RadExpand 5 Folding e-bike for $1,499, down from $1,649. It comes equipped with the same motor and battery setup as the above model that provides an identical max speed and travel range. It features four levels of low-profile cadence sensing pedal assist, as well as a water-resistant wiring harness, a standard LED headlight, an integrated taillight with a brake light indicator functionality, an integrated rear storage rack, fenders for both tires, and a simple LED display that provides pedal assist controls and battery charge levels. Its main claim to fame amongst Rad Power’s e-bikes is its space-saving folding frame, with the mechanism located at its center for fast and easy storage or transport when it’s not in use.
Tesla Wall Connector Level 2 EV Charger hits $450 in rare discount
Amazon is offering the Tesla Wall Connector Level 2 EV Charger for $450 shipped. Down from its usual $475 price tag, this is a rare opportunity to save money on this device. It typically rides along its MSRP with any discounts that occur being minor trickles in price by $5 to $15 until particular sales events like Black Friday brings costs down slightly further. Today’s deal comes in as a $25 markdown off the going rate and lands as the third-lowest price we have tracked – $25 above the all-time low.
This EV charger employs a customizable output up to 48A of power that can be adjusted during either indoor or outdoor installation. It comes compatible with all Tesla models and when set at its maximum amperage, you’ll get up to 44 miles of travel range per hour of charging. By connecting it to a local Wi-Fi network, over-the-air firmware updates can be enabled for continual self-improvements as well as remote access control – which you can also get through the Tesla app. Head below to learn more.
Pit Boss Navigator 550 Wood Pellet Grill falls to $200 low
Best Buy is offering the Pit Boss Navigator 550 Wood Pellet Grill with a grill cover for $199.99 shipped. Down from $500, with a $749 MSRP, it spent the first half of 2023 at much higher listing prices before summer brought costs down to their new rates. It also didn’t receive many discounts during the year, having been largely left out of most sales events. Today’s deal comes in as a massive 60% markdown off the going rate and lands as a new all-time low. It even beats Pit Boss’ website where it is still listed at its MSRP.
No gas or propane needed for this grill, which utilizes wood pellets that produce lower emissions than even charcoal. It offers 8-in-1 cooking versatility, allowing you to smoke, bake, braise, roast, grill, barbecue, char-grill and sear all in one convenient machine. You’ll have total control over its settings, particularly through its dial-in digital control board with an LED read-out that offers a temperature range of 180 degrees to 500 degrees Fahrenheit and its electric ignition paired with a fan-forced air accelerator to maintain a clear flame throughout cooking. You can even go full-on caveman style and turn up the heat with the Flame Broiler lever that allows for direct flame searing up to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Its 542-square inches of cooking space can handle your meals for the whole family – a capacity of approximately 26 burgers at once, for example. Head below to learn more.
The savings this week are also continuing to a collection of other markdowns. To the same tune as the offers above, these all help you take a more energy-conscious approach to your routine. Winter means you can lock in even better off-season price cuts on electric tools for the lawn while saving on EVs and tons of other gear.
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Latin America’s electric mobility transition is kicking into high gear, and Brazil-based Vammo is emerging as its battery-swapping champion. The São Paulo startup just closed a $45 million Series B funding round led by Ecosystem Integrity Fund, with backing from Qualcomm Ventures, 2150, Construct Capital, and others – positioning the company to expand across the region’s megacities and build what it calls the backbone of Latin America’s clean transport network.
Founded in 2022, Vammo has rapidly become the region’s leading battery-swapping platform, offering riders an all-in-one ecosystem that bundles electric motorcycles, financing, maintenance, and a growing network of 150 swap stations. Its fleet of 5,000 electric motorcycles already serves riders working for major delivery platforms like Uber, 99, Rappi, and iFood – with a waiting list still forming.
The company says its subscription model lets users access a vehicle and unlimited swapping at 30% lower cost than gasoline alternatives.
It’s a story we’re seeing playing out around the world, with similar cost-savings for battery-swapping electric motorcycles being reported in Asia, Europe, and Africa. Now Vammo is leading that charge in Latin America, and is set to significantly expand operations on the back of its latest funding round.
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Earlier this year, Vammo surpassed its one millionth battery swap milestone.
Unlike many competitors that depend on off-the-shelf components, Vammo builds everything in-house – from battery packs and charging hardware to its own IoT-enabled software platform. That proprietary technology, designed specifically for Latin American conditions, gives Vammo a major head start in the region’s still-nascent battery-swapping race.
With this new funding, the company plans to expand manufacturing and R&D in Brazil, investing more than R$500 million to ramp up production in Manaus and develop new hybrid ethanol-electric motorcycles that combine two of Brazil’s cleanest energy sources.
For riders, the economics are compelling: energy costs per kilometer are about 80% lower than gasoline, and maintenance savings reach 50%. Add Brazil’s 90% renewable electricity grid – the cleanest among G20 countries – and each swapped battery delivers a climate dividend few regions can match.
Electrek’s Take
Battery swapping makes perfect sense in cities where riders need constant uptime and limited space makes charging tricky. Vammo is proving the model can scale in Latin America – and not just in theory. Thousands of riders are already using it daily. As more countries follow Brazil’s example, expect battery swapping to become a cornerstone of clean urban mobility across the continent. São Paulo may soon do for battery-swap bikes what Taipei did for Gogoro – turn a smart idea into an unstoppable movement.
Now, if North America could just catch up with the more developed markets like South America, Africa, and Asia, that’d be really something.
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The moves come shortly after Trump declared that the “rare earth issue has been settled” following what he described as an “amazing meeting” with China’s Xi in South Korea.
As part of a broader agreement between the world’s two largest economies, which included Washington cutting fentanyl-linked tariffs, China said recently announced rare earth export controls would be delayed by one year.
Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he left South Korea that his administration expects China’s decision to delay these rare earth export restrictions to be “routinely extended.”
China’s previous rare earth restrictions, which were announced in early April, are set to remain in place, however.
Beijing on Oct. 9 had threatened to tighten export controls on rare earths and related technologies, seeking to prevent what it described as the “misuse” of rare earth minerals in the military and other sensitive sectors.
Rare earths refer to 17 elements on the periodic table whose atomic structure gives them special magnetic properties. These elements are widely used in the automotive, robotics and defense sectors.
China is the undisputed leader of the critical minerals supply chain, producing roughly 70% of the world’s supply of rare earths and processing almost 90%, which means it is importing these materials from other countries and processing them.
U.S. officials have previously warned that this dominance poses a strategic challenge amid the pivot to more sustainable energy sources.
Tesla is recalling 6,197 Cybertrucks with the “Off Road Lightbar” attachment, citing incorrect use of adhesives which could lead the accessory to fall off during vehicle operation.
It’s about 10% of the 63,619 Cybertrucks in existence, which we know about due to another recall from last week (though that one was fixed by a software update).
The Cybertruck has been marketed all along as an off-road capable vehicle, with dedicated off-roading modes and certain available accessories for those owners who want to get out and adventure.
A desirable off-road accessory available on many vehicles are large, overhead lights which offer better and wider visibility of the terrain ahead, getting around rocks or brush or other things that might cast shadows from lower static headlights.
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In the Cybertruck’s case, this takes the form of a wide light bar across the top of the truck’s windshield, right at the “point” in the roof.
It doesn’t come with every truck, and isn’t even available as an option. It’s also not even listed as an accessory on Tesla’s online shop. It’s only available as a retrofit through Tesla’s service network, for which you have to make a service request to get it installed.
Despite that, it looks like a whole lot of Cybertruck owners have gotten it installed. With the information in this new recall stating that potentially 6,197 vehicles are affected, it looks like nearly 10% of existing Cybertrucks have the light bar, which is quite a high take rate for a retrofit item like this.
We know this 10% number because of another recent recall, last week, which recalled every Cybertruck for having too-bright headlights. That one was fixed by a software update, but did tell us that a total of 63,619 Cybertrucks had been sold in total.
But the lightbar recall isn’t such an easy fix, as it’s an actual physical issue, rather than a software one.
It seems that the adhesives Tesla used may have been applied incorrectly by service personnel, leading to a substandard bond to the surface of the vehicle. Tesla updated its service instructions several times to try to fix the problem, but it seems that none of these updates were enough.
In total, Tesla says it found 619 warranty claims related to this issue, and had one field report of the glue not working correctly – though it is not aware of any collisions or injuries associated with the issue. But, conceivably, this could lead to a light bar falling off the vehicle and creating a road hazard for other drivers, so a recall is in order.
To fix the problem, Tesla will inspect any installed lightbars on Cybertrucks and if it finds any indication that the adhesive isn’t bonded fully, it will replace the lightbar with a new one adhered with tape and a “positive mechanical attachment” (that is, bolting it down).
While Cybertruck owners with the light bar installed should make a service appointment to get their light bar inspected, it’s possible to tell if yours suffers from this issue. Tesla says that light bars exhibiting this issue “may create a noise detectable from inside the cabin” or that the light bar may feel loose when touched or have a visible gap between it and the windshield. If your lightbar exhibits any of these issues, then you’ll probably want to make that service appointment sooner rather than later.
As for the headlight recall from last week, we didn’t report on it because, as is the case with many of Tesla’s “recalls,” it was relatively minor and was fixed by a software update. NHTSA really does need another word to distinguish real recalls from ones that are already fixed by an OTA update by the time the recall notice goes out.
But, this lightbar recall today is more serious and needs an actual physical fix, and thus is more deserving of being reported on.
However, last week’s headlight update did still have an interesting piece of information (which we probably should have reported, and so now are reporting here): the total number of vehicles out on the road. That recall covered 63,619 vehicles produced between November 13, 2023 and October 11, 2025. That’s nearly two years, and yet the truck which had been hailed as the harbinger of the future of the automotive industry has averaged just over 30k sales per year in that time period.
While the Cybertruck was the best-selling electric truck for a time after its introduction, it no longer has that title. And, in the last last quarter, the F-150 Lightning, Silverado EV, Sierra EV and R1T all saw rising sales. The Cybertruck, in contrast, is the only electric truck in America that saw lower sales last quarter than in the year prior, despite a big spike in EV sales due to the retirement of EV tax credits.
It’s part of a wider trend of EV sales increasing around the globe, but Tesla sales being left behind – and the reason is mostly due to Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s negative influence.
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