I really hope I am wrong, but there are many things with Elio Motors that seem "odd" to me.
I have been involved at major startup companies. Money is spent, people hired, offices wired, computers installed, and buildings are modified and constructed. There is enormous simultaneous activity at all levels. We never saw a "delay by lawyers ". We worked our butts off to get the company up and running on schedule. We had project plans and schedules. We met with vendors and contractors almost daily. There was noticeable professional activity.
I don't see that here.
Everything I see at Elio, even the mules, is unfinished. The vehicle design is not finished, the web site is unfinished (you can't actually buy a vehicle or get prices on options, etc...), there are no actual dealership locations (only a list of cities), there is no completed engine, there are no actual mileage numbers - only computer estimates, there are no crash test results - only computer simulations, there is no real marketing (no print ads, no New Car shows, etc...), there is an empty plant owned by the Parish (remember when Elio was going to buy it, but that didn't happen), There are machines in the plant - but no tooling, there are agreements with vendors like cooper tires, but no actual contracts to buy...
It all feels like a Giant Junior Achievement project...no wait, they actually get something done.
What I see is a sales pitch with a promise of a vehicle that gets 84 mpg, $6800. I see t-shirts being sold on that promise and I see a company that repeatedly delays the promised production start.
I also see a company that believes in itself, but does not appear to know how or when to get out of it's own way....
If this was GM or Ford or Toyota, they would work round the clock to finalize the design. They would put in place a real marketing strategy and greatly improve the web site (no cheap computer graphics). They would accept that the price could be higher and the mileage less. They would put it into production. They would then work to improve the next generation vehicle.
Ask yourself, "Would Honda put off building a Civcc for 5 years if it didn't meet a mileage goal?" The answer is simple, NO.
People would still buy an Elio if it got 75mpg and costs $7800. So why delay building it? Either the management is really bad, or the goals are messed up. Paul Elio's goal is to design a car that gets 84 mpg and costs $6800. "Cast in stone" is a common phrase from the sales pitch.
This attitude is like doctors saying..."we can cure cancer, but we won't because it's slightly over budget and we can only cure most cancers." When you are near to your goal sometimes you have to cut your losses and move on.
Elio Motors, get out of your own way already. Sometimes Good is Good Enough.