The original Roadster hit the street in 2008, after several years of development by an upstart Silicon Valley automaker called Tesla, after Nikola Tesla, the Serbian-American inventor.
Elon Musk had taken all his winnings from selling PayPal to eBay and sunk them into Tesla and another company, SpaceX. He was determined to make electric cars a viable alternative to gas-powered vehicles.
The first Roadsters arrived in 2008, and Musk himself later admitted that they weren't the greatest cars in the world. But they made a statement, and over three iterations, Tesla ironed out the kinks.
The Roadster wasn't an original Tesla design; "glider" chassis were borrowed from Lotus.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe electric drivetrain consisted of a rear-wheel-drive motor, a 53-kilowatt-hour battery pack consisting of 6,000 lithium-ion cells wired together and serving up over 200 miles of range, and a single-speed transmission. The 0-60 mph time was an impressive 3.9 seconds.
Tesla later improved the Roadster, launching the Sport 2.0 version in 2010. I drove it then, and was blown away. The 0-60 mph time improved to 3.7 seconds, but the price tag went up to about $100,000.
About five years, later, Tesla found a Roadster for me to revisit. It's still my favorite Tesla and the one I'd buy.
By the time the Roadster had been officially retired, the battery pack had been upgraded to an 80 kWh capacity.
What the car never lost, even as it got beefier power and more carbon fiber, was blinding straight-line speed and point-and-shoot handing. The car was a joy to steer, so precise was the rack.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe soft top could be quickly removed and stowed in a tiny trunk for open-air motoring.
The Roadster was how we got to know Tesla and understand Musk's ambition.
The car was rudimentary, however. Sure, the powertrain was high-tech. But you still started it with a key.
The interior was bare-bones.
The transmission was basic.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdReadouts were digital, but they were like an early 2000s video game.
The infotainment system just barely got the job done.
Still, if you don't count the Lunar Rover, this is the only Earth-bound car to make it into space. Piloted by "Starman," Musk's personal Candy Red Roadster was mounted atop SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket and sent into orbit in early 2018. It's still up there.
For Roadster lovers, there's currently no two-door on sale from Tesla. But the New Roadster, unveiled in 2017, is on the way. The 0-60 mph time is projected at 1.9 seconds, which would make it the fastest street-legal car available.
Was a great car, still is. It's wonderful that Tesla continues to look after owners, even as it encourages them to think about adding newer Teslas to their fleets.