- Joined
- Mar 7, 2020
- Messages
- 6,064
- Reaction score
- 8,434
- Location
- Naples, FL
- Cars
- Model S Plaid, Odyssey
- DE Number
- 154
- Referral Code
- 033M4EXG
My brother is a huge EV fan who follows innumerable sources about the industry and its cars. He has a 2018 Tesla Model 3, admires what Musk has done with Tesla but worries about his growing megalomania and bizarre behavior, and mostly loves his Model 3. It was my brother who first told me about a fledgling company called Lucid Motors and encouraged me to become an early reservation holder in 2018.
He just came down from Atlanta to sit our house for 2 weeks while we traveled, and he was beside himself with anticipation at getting to drive our Model S Plaid and our Lucid Air Dream Performance for extended periods.
His verdict at the end of two weeks: he likes some things more about the Plaid, but the Lucid is the car he would want, primarily because of its chassis and suspension setup. Potholes are consuming the streets and highways in Atlanta, and he finds his Model 3 has become a bone shaker. He has been planning to buy a Model Y but was holding off until (he hoped) Tesla introduces an air suspension for it. (Sandy Munro claims to have spotted mounts for air suspension components in the wheel wells of the Model Y.)
He thought the air suspension in the Model S would address the issue. Instead, he was taken aback by how much more compliant and more planted the suspension in the Air was.
As is somewhat the case with me, he found Tesla's software to be in much finer fettle than Lucid's. Unlike me, he found the steering yoke tolerable but still concluded after two weeks with it that he would never come to prefer it over a steering wheel.
He was amazed at how much better a job Lucid did of interior packaging than Tesla did with an identically-sized sedan and readily admitted the Lucid's interior materials, styling, and fit and finish were on a different plane altogether than the Tesla's. However, both cars are out of his price range, so these things are of only academic concern to him.
What he was really hoping to find was that the Plaid would convince him that the Model Y could be the car he wants next if it acquires an air suspension. The comparison of what Lucid has done with its coil spring suspension versus what Tesla has done with an air suspension convinced him he will need to look beyond Tesla for his next EV.
He just came down from Atlanta to sit our house for 2 weeks while we traveled, and he was beside himself with anticipation at getting to drive our Model S Plaid and our Lucid Air Dream Performance for extended periods.
His verdict at the end of two weeks: he likes some things more about the Plaid, but the Lucid is the car he would want, primarily because of its chassis and suspension setup. Potholes are consuming the streets and highways in Atlanta, and he finds his Model 3 has become a bone shaker. He has been planning to buy a Model Y but was holding off until (he hoped) Tesla introduces an air suspension for it. (Sandy Munro claims to have spotted mounts for air suspension components in the wheel wells of the Model Y.)
He thought the air suspension in the Model S would address the issue. Instead, he was taken aback by how much more compliant and more planted the suspension in the Air was.
As is somewhat the case with me, he found Tesla's software to be in much finer fettle than Lucid's. Unlike me, he found the steering yoke tolerable but still concluded after two weeks with it that he would never come to prefer it over a steering wheel.
He was amazed at how much better a job Lucid did of interior packaging than Tesla did with an identically-sized sedan and readily admitted the Lucid's interior materials, styling, and fit and finish were on a different plane altogether than the Tesla's. However, both cars are out of his price range, so these things are of only academic concern to him.
What he was really hoping to find was that the Plaid would convince him that the Model Y could be the car he wants next if it acquires an air suspension. The comparison of what Lucid has done with its coil spring suspension versus what Tesla has done with an air suspension convinced him he will need to look beyond Tesla for his next EV.
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