I spent almost my entire career in production, with the last 35 years of it in high volume automotive component assembly. So to me, this is an Interesting read. But it is pretty short on fact, and loaded with speculation. Without knowing exactly what Elon et al has in mind, it is hard to really understand how it will work. That said, their description of the "unboxed" production method doesn't sound all that new to me.
In the Lean Manufacturing course that I took at work about 15 years ago, I recall studying and doing small workshops where one of the processes we studied, was to build sub assemblies off the primary, or parent, assembly line, then introduced the sub assemblies back into the primary assembly line so they could be built into the final product. The concept described in the article seems similar, except they are speculating that the body will be broke down into sub assemblies, and brought together at the end of the process.
For a company that struggles with understanding why the customer is not happy with the final fit and finish, I can see how they may find a process like this not only acceptable, but desirable.
It seems rather amusing when Musk called this "far more advanced than any automotive manufacturing system in the world, by a significant margin,”. It just feels like another dose of Musk hyperbole, that we have heard so many times before. I doubt I will ever forget, when Tesla was preparing to put together a totally robotic assembly line in Fremont. They showed pictures of brand new robots all in rows, as far as you could see.
I think most of us know how that went. It was a massive failure, resulting in the temporary tent assembly line, which was almost entirely hand assembly, and extremely labor intensive, so they could ship cars and pay the bills. Eventually, they put together the new assembly line, but only after major redesign, ending up with a production line that really wasn't much more automated than what you would see in a Toyota or Kia plant.
But they have had their successes too. The mega presses seem to be working for them. They will never know if they don't try. It just doesn't sound all that innovative, to what a lot of companies are already doing. I know it has been a few years since I was in the Fremont assembly plant, but from what I saw at that time, Tesla has a long way to go in fully understanding and implementing lean manufacturing. If they are really looking to reduce cost, perhaps they ought to do that first.