It was much closer than I thought it'd be. Probably much lighter being the big reason.
It was much closer than I thought it'd be. Probably much lighter being the big reason.
Meanwhile the Lucid driver is having a massage and can store 3 comfortable adults in the back lol
+1,000. I couldn't agree more. Amazing to me that some many folks focus on 0-60. I want to know what kind of passing power I have on a road when I am already going 75 or so. Will the power fade?So many of these drag-race type events focus just on initial acceleration. What I found interesting about this video was how clearly it showed the Air's spectacular power delivery from higher speeds. This is an area where other powerful EVs tend to stumble and where Lucid absolutely shines. Although this video pitted the Air against a Taycan, there would have been a similar result against any dual-motor Tesla.
We drove a Model S P90D for six years before getting a Model S Plaid. Tesla had to turn to three motors even to approach the high-speed punch that the heavier Lucid gets from its two motors.
All the focus on standing starts that infuses internet discussions on acceleration causes a lot of people to miss a key point: quick acceleration from speed is more useful in real driving situations than standing-start acceleration. And there the Lucid has no peer among EVs or ICE vehicles.
Trying to find a source but I think Porsche doesn’t include the standard 1-foot rollout in their 0-60 times where as Lucid definitely does (as does most of the industry).
That likely means the Taycan can 0-60 in 2.5 while the Lucid takes a little longer than 2.5s (without a 1-foot rollout might mean something like 2.7 or 2.8s)
You can never count out a Porsche even with a HP disadvantage. I say that as a GT owner.
So many of these drag-race type events focus just on initial acceleration. What I found interesting about this video was how clearly it showed the Air's spectacular power delivery from higher speeds. This is an area where other powerful EVs tend to stumble and where Lucid absolutely shines. Although this video pitted the Air against a Taycan, there would have been a similar result against any dual-motor Tesla.
We drove a Model S P90D for six years before getting a Model S Plaid. Tesla had to turn to three motors even to approach the high-speed punch that the heavier Lucid gets from its two motors.
All the focus on standing starts that infuses internet discussions on acceleration causes a lot of people to miss a key point: quick acceleration from speed is more useful in real driving situations than standing-start acceleration. And there the Lucid has no peer among EVs or ICE vehicles.
Not only does the Lucid keep going faster and higher top speed (I myself have been at 170 mph, and would probably never do it again. I had to put some bikers in their place on the highway)+1,000. I couldn't agree more. Amazing to me that some many folks focus on 0-60. I want to know what kind of passing power I have on a road when I am already going 75 or so. Will the power fade?
0-60 is for only for paper, the real world use case of 40-100, Lucid is a beast above everything else.So many of these drag-race type events focus just on initial acceleration. What I found interesting about this video was how clearly it showed the Air's spectacular power delivery from higher speeds. This is an area where other powerful EVs tend to stumble and where Lucid absolutely shines. Although this video pitted the Air against a Taycan, there would have been a similar result against any dual-motor Tesla.
We drove a Model S P90D for six years before getting a Model S Plaid. Tesla had to turn to three motors even to approach the high-speed punch that the heavier Lucid gets from its two motors.
All the focus on standing starts that infuses internet discussions on acceleration causes a lot of people to miss a key point: quick acceleration from speed is more useful in real driving situations than standing-start acceleration. And there the Lucid has no peer among EVs or ICE vehicles.